Sharons
Preemptive Zeal
By Neve Gordon
CommonDreams.org
21 September, 2003 by
No more than a month ago I sat with a
friend drinking coffee at the Hillel Café in Jerusalem. Today
it is a shattered edifice, with blood stains on the floor. Indeed, this
was the first thought that crossed my mind after hearing the news about
the horrific suicide attack that left another 7 Israelis dead and 45
wounded. I could have been there, I said to myself.
It is a frightening
thought, one that has crossed the mind of many an Israeli, particularly
since the eruption of the second Intifada in September 2000 -- a period
in which 244 suicide attacks have been carried out. Just as disturbing,
though, is the thought that this bloody reality has been accepted by
the Israeli public as part of their daily routine; so much so that the
same people who are terrified to leave their homes now consider Israels
gory mode of existence as their karma, as if the political realm were
in some odd way predetermined.
But politics, as
the great Jewish thinker Hannah Arendt repeatedly stated, is the realm
of freedom, where humans actually have the opportunity to begin something
new through speech and deed. Even in the epochs of petrifaction
and foreordained doom, she claimed, the faculty of freedom, which
animates and inspires all human activities and is the hidden source
of production of all great and beautiful things usually remains
intact.
What Israelis and
Palestinians have been witnessing in the past few weeks is a concerted
effort to destroy the road that might have led the two peoples out of
a foreordained doom and into a new beginning. Notwithstanding the impression
some people might have, this myopic effort has been led by Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, not only by Hamas. His strategy is one of preemptive strikes.
Approximately two
months ago, the different Palestinians factions decided to implement
a houdna (ceasefire in Arabic) and to stop attacking Israeli targets.
Despite the fact that numerous militant groups operate without a central
command in the Occupied Territories, for almost a month and a half the
houdna managed to hold up. While one assault was perpetrated in the
West Bank by a small splinter group, the violence had subsided and it
appeared as if serious negotiations would resume.
Then, suddenly,
as if out of the blue, the Israeli military invaded Askar refugee camp,
killing four Palestinians, including two members of Izzeddin Al-Qassam,
Hamas military wing. The operation was a preemptive strike, the
Israeli spokesman explained.
The Palestinians
decided not to retaliate.
Less than a week
later, on August 14, Israeli troops entered Hebron and killed a member
of the Islamic Jihad. Another preemptive attack. Only this time the
Palestinians did respond, and on August 19 a suicide bomber exploded
inside a public bus. Israel, in turn, used its forces to carry out a
series of extra-judicial executions, and now a month after the preemptive
assault on Askar camp, the streets between the Jordan Valley and the
Mediterranean Sea are once again covered with blood.
The logic of preemptive
strikes, however, does not merely inform Sharons policy of extra-judicial
executions; it is the logic that has informed his actions throughout
his military and political careers.
Three examples will
have to suffice: the Jewish settlements, the Lebanon War, and the separation
wall.
Sharon is considered
by many to be the father of Israels unruly settlement project.
He earned this title while serving as Minister of Agriculture during
Menachem Begins first government. Sharon had hoped to become Defense
Minister and was disappointed when Ezer Weizmann received the appointment,
but minor details of this kind have never stopped him from pursuing
his goals.
Weizmann opposed
the settlement project and opined that Israel should withdraw from the
territories within the framework of a peace accord. Sharon, on the other
hand, believes in the Greater Israel, and, in order to preempt the possibility
of any future agreement based on land for peace, he initiated, as the
chair of the governments Settlement Committee, a massive settlement
enterprise. Whereas Israel built 20 settlements between 1967 and 1976,
within less than four years Sharon managed to build close to 50 new
settlements, totally changing the landscape of the West Bank.
In August 1981,
Sharon became Defense Minister. Four years earlier, he had told an Israeli
reporter that the Arab states are swiftly preparing for war, and
we are sitting on a barrel of explosives wasting our time on nonsense.
The Arabs, he continued, will launch a war in the summer
or the fall. The war did not come, at least not until Sharon assumed
office.
The story of how
Sharon led Israel into Lebanon, hoping to establish a puppet government
in order to preempt attacks from the north, is by now well known. When
Israel finally withdrew its forces 20 years later, thousands of civilians
and soldiers lay buried in the ground, hundreds of thousands of people
had been displaced, and much of Lebanon was in shatters, but Sharon
held on to the logic of the preemptive strike.
Not unlike the settlement
project, Lebanon War, and extra-judicial executions, the separation
wall should also be conceived as a preemptive attack. While Sharon declares
that the wall is being built solely for security reasons, he neglects
to say that it is not being erected on the 1967 borders, and is actually
being used as an extremely effective mechanism to expropriate Palestinian
land and create facts on the ground so as to preempt any future agreement
between Israel and the Palestinians. Its effect is not less violent
than the assassinations and suicide bombings. Already in this early
stage, the wall has infringed on the rights of more than 210,000 Palestinians,
some of whom now live in ghettos between the wall and Israel.
The crux of the
matter is that Sharons preemptive logic undercuts all form of
dialogue and negotiations. Its rule of thumb is violence, and then more
violence, whether it manifests itself as a military attack or as an
aggressive act of dispossession. So while it may seem that the bloody
routine is in some way preordained, it is actually Sharons preemptive
zeal alongside Hamas' and Islamic Jihads fundamentalism that has
clouded the horizon and concealed, as Arendt might have said, the possibility
for a better future.
Neve Gordon teaches
politics and human rights at Ben-Gurion University and can be reached
at [email protected]