Israel’s War On "Democracy" (and why Americans should care)
by Conn Hallinan
From
its birth more than 60 years ago, Israel has always presented itself as
“an oasis of democracy in a sea of despotism,” an outpost of pluralism
surrounded by tyranny. While that equality never fully applied to the
country’s Arab citizens, Israel was, for the most part an open society.
But today political rights are under siege by right-wing legislators,
militant settlers, and a growing religious divide in the Israeli army,
all of which threaten to silence internal opposition to the policies of
the government of Benjamin Netanyahu.
Since that may include a war with
Iran—and the probable involvement of the U.S. in such a conflict—the
move to stifle dissent should be a major concern for Americans.
The U.S. media has reported on
growing tensions between Israeli women and the ultra-orthodox Haredim
over the latter’s demand for sexual segregation of schools, public
transport, and public life. But while orthodox Jews spitting on
eight-year old girls for being “immodestly dressed” has garnered the
headlines, the most serious threats to democratic rights have gone
largely unreported, including a host of proposed or enacted laws. Some of these include:
*A law
that allows Jewish communities to bar Arab families from living among
them. Arabs make up about 20 percent of the population.
*A law that makes it illegal to advocate an academic, cultural or economic boycott of Israel, including settler communities.
*A law that would limit the power of the Supreme Court.
*A law
that bars any state institutions, including schools and theaters—from
commemorating the “Nakba,” or “catastrophe,” the term Palestinians use
to describe the loss of their lands in the 1948 war that established
Israel.
*A law that prohibits Palestinians from living with their Israeli spouses within Israel proper and denies them citizenship.
*A law that drops Arabic as an official language.
*A law that requires anyone obtaining a driver’s license to swear loyalty to the state.
*A law
that would limit the number of petitions non-governmental organizations,
including peace and human rights groups, could file before the Supreme
Court.
*A law
that forces human rights and peace groups to limit the money they can
receive from abroad, and forces them to go through burdensome
registration requirements.
Tzipi
Livni, former foreign secretary and head of the Kadima Party, told the
Knesset that Arab states were “trying to become a democracy, while
we—with these bills—are headed toward dictatorship.”
Most of
these laws are being pushed by Israel’s rightwing Likud and Yisreal
Beiteinu parties, but the proposal to drop Arabic comes from the Kadima
Party. Ram-rodding many of these laws are Lukid’s so-called “fantastic four”: Danny Danon, Yariv Levin, Tzipi Hotovely, and Ofir Akunis.
“We are
in the process of reducing freedom of speech and the freedom of
association, and we are infringing on the right to equality, especially
vis-à-vis the Israeli Arab,” Mordechai Kremnitizer, a professor of law
and vice-president of the Israel Democracy Institute told the Financial Times.
“We are also weakening all the elements in society that have the
function of criticizing the governments, including the courts.
Israeli
society is filled with sharp divisions on everything from war with Iran
to growing economic inequality. Israel has the highest poverty rate out
of the 32-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development,
and ranks twenty-fifth in health care investment. The poverty rate for
Israeli Arabs is between 50 and 55 percent.
Starting
in the 1980s, Israel began dismantling its social safety net, a trend
that Netanyahu sharply accelerated when he served as finance minister in
2003. While slashing money for housing, education, and transport, he
cut taxes for the wealthy and corporations.
Most of
all, however, Israeli governments poured the nation’s wealth into
colonizing the West Bank, Gaza, and the Golan Heights, where, according
to Shir Hever of the Alternative Information Center based in Jerusalem,
Israel has spent about $100 billion. A vast network of bypass roads,
security zones, and walled settlements siphoned off money that could
have gone for housing, education and transportation in Israel. Special
tax rebates and rent subsidies for settlers added to that bill. Some 15
percent of the Israeli housing budget is
used to support four percent of its population in the Occupied
Territories. Add to that the 20 percent the military budget sucks up,
and it seems increasingly clear that the settlement endeavor is no
longer sustainable.
Wealth
disparity—a handful of families control 30 percent of Israel’s GDP—was
partly behind last summer’s social explosion that at one point put some
450,000 people into the streets of Haifa, Tel Aviv, and Jerusalem
demanding reductions in rent and food prices. But so far, organizers of
those massive demonstrations have avoided making the link between
growing income inequality and Israel’s policies in the Occupied
Territories. Many of these new laws are aimed at organizations that have
been trying to do precisely that.
There are other divisions as well. Israelis are split down the middle over whether to attack Iran—43
percent yes, 41 percent no—but 64 percent support the creation of a
Middle East nuclear free zone, and 65 percent feel that neither Israel
nor Iran should have nuclear weapons. Those are not exactly the home
front sentiments that a government wants when it is contemplating going
to war.
Besides
the avalanche of right-wing legislation coming out of the Knesset,
Israel is increasingly at war with itself over the role of religion in
daily life, a conflict that is playing out in one of Israel’s core
institutions, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).
Two years
ago, soldiers of the Kfir Brigade, a unit deployed in the West Bank,
unveiled banners declaring they would refuse orders to remove settlers.
By international law, all settlements in the Occupied Territories are
illegal, but Israel claims that only unregistered “outposts” are against
the law and subject to removal. The soldiers held signs that read, “We
will not expel Jews.” Six of them were arrested and spent 30 days in the
stockade.
The
soldiers were graduates of army-sponsored “hesder yeshivas” that allow
orthodox soldiers to divide their time between active service and Torah
study. Settler rabbis rallied around the six and even provided money for
some of the soldiers’ families.
Writing in the progressive Jewish weekly, the Forward,
Columnist J.J. Goldberg says that a “secret report” in 2008 warned that
such “yeshiva graduates comprise 30 percent of the junior officer corps
and rising. In a decade they will be the military’s senior commanders.
If a peace agreement is not reached in 15 years or so, Israel may no
long have an army willing to carry out its side.”
A
majority of Israelis support some kind of compromise to achieve a
settlement with the Palestinians, but in the most recent set of talks,
the Netanyahu government made
it clear that Israel will not surrender any settlements, any part of
Jerusalem, or the Jordan Valley. In essence, Palestinians would be
forced to live in isolated enclaves surrounded by networks of restricted
roads and over 120 settlements. The Netanyahu proposal not only
violates numerous United Nations resolutions and international law, no
Palestinian government that accepted such an offer would survive for
long.
But
Israelis who protest an offer that is widely seen as little more than a
way to kill the possibility of serious negotiations may find themselves
treated in much the same way as Israel has dealt with its Arab citizens.
Those who agitate against the current government may find themselves hit with the new libel law
that no longer requires plaintiffs to prove they were damaged and
increases awards six-fold. Bloggers, who lack institutional support, are
particularly fearful of the new law. Organizations critical of the
government that try to raise money from sources outside the country
could face huge fines.
According
to Hagai El-Ad, director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel,
there is growing resistance within Israel to the attempt to silence
critics, as well as pressure from abroad, including the American Jewish
community. Even a pro-Netanyahu hawk like the Anti-Defamation League’s
Abraham Foxman warns “the very democratic character of the state is
being eroded.” That resistance has delayed some of the more odious
proposals, but the “fantastic four” and their allies are pushing hard to
get them on the books.
Why
should Americans care? Because if Netanyahu silences his domestic
opponents, he will have carte blanche to do as he pleases. And if Tel
Aviv attacks Iran, it will be very difficult for the U.S. to keep clear
of it. For starters, the IDF will be firing U.S.-made cruise missiles,
flying American-made F-15s, and dropping “made in the USA” bunker
busters. With the exception of the monarchs from the Gulf states, no one
in the Middle East—or most of the world—is going to give Washington a
pass on this one.
Does
America need another war? If it doesn’t protest the assault on democracy
in Israel, it may get one, whether it likes it or not.
Conn M. Hallinan
is a columnist for Foreign Policy In Focus, “A Think Tank Without
Walls, and an independent journalist. He holds a PhD in Anthropology
from the University of California, Berkeley. He was also a college provost at UCSC, and retired in 2004. He is a winner of a Project Censored “Real News Award,” and lives in Berkeley, California. www.dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com