Paradigm Lost: From Two-State Solution to One-State Reality
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The two-state solution is doomed; the one-state reality is here to stay
Why have Israelis and Palestinians failed to achieve a two-state solution to the conflict that has cost so much and lasted so long? In Paradigm Lost, Ian S. Lustick brings fifty years as an analyst of the Arab-Israeli dispute to bear on this question and offers a provocative explanation of why continued attempts to divide the land will have no more success than would negotiations to establish a one-state solution.
Basing his argument on the decisiveness of unanticipated consequences, Lustick shows how the combination of Zionism's partially successful Iron Wall strategy for dealing with Arabs, an Israeli political culture saturated with what the author calls "Holocaustia," and the Israel lobby's dominant influence on American policy toward the Arab-Israeli conflict scuttled efforts to establish a Palestinian state alongside Israel. Yet, he demonstrates, it has also unintentionally set the stage for new struggles and "better problems" for both Israel and the Palestinians. Drawing on the history of scientific ideas that once seemed certain but were ultimately discarded, Lustick encourages shifting attention from two-state blueprints that provide no map for realistic action to the democratizing competition that arises when different subgroups, forced to be part of the same polity, redefine their interests and form new alliances to pursue them.
Paradigm Lost argues that negotiations for a two-state solution between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River are doomed and counterproductive. Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs can enjoy the democracy they deserve but only after decades of struggle amid the unintended but powerful consequences of today's one-state reality.
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Paradigm Lost - Ian S. Lustick
Paradigm Lost
Paradigm Lost
From Two-State Solution to One-State Reality
Ian S. Lustick
Copyright © 2019 University of Pennsylvania Press
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.
Published by
University of Pennsylvania Press
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112
www.upenn.edu/pennpress
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
ISBN 978-0-8122-5195-1
For Terri, the love of my life,
and to the memory of my brother David
Sounded like the truth
Seemed the better way
Sounded like the truth
But it’s not the truth today
—Leonard Cohen
Man plans and God laughs.
—Yiddish proverb
Contents
1.Flaw in the Iron Wall
2.The Cost of Holocaustia
3.The Lobby and the Cocoon
4.Dead Solution Walking
5.The One-State Reality and Its Future
Notes
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Flaw in the Iron Wall
Introduction
Zionists saw more clearly than anyone else the catastrophe facing the Jews of Europe and the need for a refuge. Their campaign to transform all or most of Palestine into a Jewish state succeeded in 1948. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict arose from that success and from two refusals. The first, when Israel refused to allow three-quarters of a million Palestinian Arabs to return to their homes, created the Palestinian refugee problem and ensured deep and continued challenges to its peace and security. A second and far more protracted refusal stretched over decades following the Six-Day War of 1967. In this period, Israel prevented a Palestinian state or entity of any kind from being established in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Israel thereby destroyed the one option available for a negotiated compromise capable of ending not only the Palestinian-Israeli dispute but also the larger Arab-Israeli conflict. This second decades-long refusal and its consequences are the focus of this book.
The odds of a two-state solution (TSS) were never favorable, but opportunities to negotiate were present from soon after the 1967 war to the collapse of the Oslo peace process in 2000. By the early twenty-first century, however, it became impossible to explain how a TSS could materialize and deeply implausible to expect one. TSS diehards still say that splitting the country into two states can be done and that the establishment of a single state is impossible. In principle, two states might someday emerge in Palestine. But the hard truth is that such an arrangement will not and can no longer come about from negotiations. Partly by design and partly by accident, Israeli policies have established another hard truth. There is today one and only one state ruling the territory between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, and its name is Israel. To be sure, the government of Israel rules different territories and groups of people between the sea and the river
according to different laws and norms and with different degrees of authority and regularity. But if a state is defined to mean an entity with ultimate control over the security of life and property, then no inhabitant of this area, whether in Tel Aviv, Nablus, Haifa, or Gaza, lives in any state other than Israel. So, not only is one state that rules large Jewish and Arab populations in Palestine/the Land of Israel not impossible, it is also reality. It already exists.
No blueprint for the resolution of the Zionist-Palestinian Arab or Israeli-Palestinian conflict has had better prospects for success than the creation of two-states for two peoples in one land.
Such an arrangement would have protected the most cherished objective of the Zionist movement—a viable, recognized state in the Land of Israel inhabited by a large majority of Jews—while providing Palestinians with the protection and satisfaction of a viable state. The failure to achieve some version of that scheme before it became impossible to achieve through negotiations is a great historical and political tragedy that requires much deeper examination and an explanation compelling enough, perhaps, to push Israeli-Palestinian politics in a new direction.
Although the TSS is dead, its ghost remains, not as an inspiring blueprint for action but as distracting dogma. The ghost of the TSS haunts the conflict and obscures the reality that all of Palestine is controlled by one state, and the name of that state is Israel. With the false but seductive promise of its own resurrection, the TSS diverts attention from key questions about the nature of the Israeli state today and about whether or how the nature of its rule over the different territories included within it could change. The mirage of the TSS justifies the treatment of an increasingly oppressive status quo as a necessary but temporary evil. It prevents those who favor a democratic future from working effectively to bring that about while abetting those who favor nondemocratic outcomes.
The false belief in a negotiated TSS survives because advocates and opponents both cherish it as a useful fiction, the former as a yearned-for fantasy and the latter as a usefully conjured nightmare. The baleful legacy of the TSS—which blocks useful thinking about the future and abets the unannounced consolidation of a regime based on discrimination and coercion—can only be counteracted by an equally strong understanding of the structural barriers in Israel—cultural, psychological, and political—that crippled its chances for success. These obstacles are much more fundamental than the widely appreciated difficulties posed by more than 620,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank (including expanded East Jerusalem) and other well-documented processes of de facto annexation.
They include the historical consequences of Zionism’s initial failure to address Arab requirements, the way that the Holocaust and its lessons
were eventually construed and enshrined in Israeli political culture, and the drastic distortion of Israeli politics resulting from an American foreign policy implemented mainly in conformity with the demands of the Israel lobby in the United States. This book examines the contribution of each of these obstacles to the failure of the TSS, leading up to an exploration of how that analysis can guide new thinking about the future of all the people living between the river and the sea, no matter what their ethnicity, religion, or citizenship status.
From the late 1960s to the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, I was an active participant in the TSS project and considered it a worthy struggle. Certainly, the TSS would have brought its own problems, but these would have been more manageable than those in its absence. A Palestinian state could have been established and could have coexisted peacefully alongside Israel, but the opportunity to establish it was historically perishable and is no longer available.
Neither Zionists nor Arabs were ever uniformly and sincerely committed to a TSS. Certainly, Israeli leaders are not the only ones who contributed to failure of the TSS project. Nevertheless, given Israel’s overwhelming political and military power vis-à-vis the Palestinians, and its virtually complete control of developments on the ground in the West Bank and Gaza, the TSS’s failure to launch was primarily a function of Israel’s behavior.
This disproportionate responsibility is obvious not just in hindsight. It was obvious a hundred years ago that getting Palestine’s Arabs to reconcile with a Jewish state in their country would be difficult if not impossible. Most Zionists early in the twentieth century knew it was completely unrealistic to imagine that the indigenous population of Palestine would welcome the colonization of their country and its deliverance into the hands of another people. I don’t know of a single example in history,
said Vladimir Jabotinsky, leader of the right wing of the Zionist movement, where a country was colonized with the courteous consent of the native population.
¹ Jabotinsky’s political foe on the Zionist Left, David Ben-Gurion, agreed. There is no solution to the question of relations between Arabs and Jews. . . . And we must recognize this situation. . . . We as a nation want this country to be ours; the Arabs, as a nation, want this country to be theirs.
² At the inception of the movement, Zionists well knew that if the Arabs of Palestine were ever to accept Zionism, it would be the result of bitter resignation after decades of fierce resistance.
That prescience—and scenario—comports with the dismal fate of other states founded by Europeans in heavily populated non-European countries (Rhodesia, South Africa, French Algeria, etc.). So, the real question is not why Palestinian Arabs have not been more accommodating to a TSS but rather why Israel did not exploit any possibility to bring it about. Why did Israeli governments repeatedly reject opportunities to move decisively in that direction when a stable partitionist outcome was most available or least improbable, which is to say between 1967 and 2000? Why instead did Israeli governments systematically implement policies designed to prevent a viable Palestinian state from ever being realized?
Israeli Decisions and the Decision Not to Decide
Even a partial list of missed or torpedoed opportunities for movement toward a solution based on trading land for peace illustrates the unrelenting pattern.³ In 1967 in the first weeks after the Six-Day War, Palestinian notables from the West Bank wanted to negotiate the establishment of a Palestinian entity that would coexist peacefully with Israel. Israeli military, intelligence, and policy officials drafted half a dozen proposals to the government that responded positively to the Palestinians by permitting public meetings to discuss and promote the idea. Every one of these proposals was ignored or rejected by Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, who was supported by Prime Minister Levi Eshkol. Instead, the military government was instructed to ban Palestinians from engaging in any public political activity. Despite inclinations on the part of a number of senior ministers, the Labor-led coalition governments of Eshkol, Golda Meir, and Yitzhak Rabin, from 1967 to 1977, steadfastly abided by a decision not to decide
—the phrase used standardly to describe policies by each of these prime ministers to avoid having to determine the final disposition of the territories occupied by Israel in 1967. As a result, during the first decade of the occupation, the political status of the West Bank and Gaza drifted toward de facto annexation.
In 1968, King Hussein of Jordan told Israeli leaders that he would negotiate a bilateral peace treaty if Israel withdrew from the West Bank. Israel responded with an informal offer to withdraw from two-thirds of the territory but keep the rest—including a greatly expanded Jerusalem—as part of Israel. That ended negotiations.⁴
In 1969, U.S. secretary of state William Rogers announced a plan sponsored by the Four Powers (the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, and France) to achieve a comprehensive peace between Israel and its neighbors that would include return of the West Bank to Jordan, with minor territorial adjustments, and transformation of Jerusalem into a united city with shared municipal government. Israel flatly rejected
the plan as an attempt on the very existence of Israel.
⁵
In 1971, Israeli diplomats prepared a response to peace offers made by Egyptian president Anwar Sadat in the context of an initiative launched by UN secretary-general Gunnar Jarring. The plan they submitted to Prime Minister Meir was a unanimous recommendation for Israel to achieve a comprehensive peace by returning the Golan Heights to Syria and the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt and by withdrawing from the Gaza Strip, most of the West Bank, and East Jerusalem. Known as the Yakinton Plan, it was summarily rejected by the prime minister.⁶
In 1972, the Jordanian king offered Israel a peace agreement that would have included the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in a federated Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.
Despite disagreement from some ministers, Meir’s government rejected the plan and shortly thereafter endorsed the Galili Plan, which called for extensive infrastructural investment, increased land acquisition including private purchases, and expanded settlement of the West Bank and in the southern approaches to the Gaza Strip.⁷
In 1973 in the American-sponsored negotiations following the Ramadan/Yom Kippur War, Israel returned portions of the Golan Heights and Sinai to Syria and Egypt, respectively, as interim steps toward comprehensive peace agreements. However, despite personal appeals by President Richard Nixon in July 1974, the new Israeli government of Yitzhak Rabin refused any withdrawals from parts of the West Bank that would have set in motion a similar process with Jordan and the Palestinians.
No one can guarantee that any of these opportunities, no matter how enthusiastically pursued by Israel, would have produced the kind of stable, if imperfect, peace between Palestinians and Israelis that partitionists imagine. But it is obvious that the option of peace based on a two-state framework never got a decent chance, first and foremost, because of Israel’s decisions and policies. Especially in the first decade of the occupation, Israeli governments had considerable latitude to pursue territorial compromise. Arab demands that Israel cede areas it had conquered in 1948 had effectively ended. Polls regularly showed that wide sectors of Israeli society opposed the absorption of large Arab populations from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and were therefore willing to entertain territorial compromise. From the mid-1970s on, Israel had unquestioned military superiority over all its potential enemies, including a regional monopoly on nuclear weapons, that allowed Israeli governments to operate from a position of confidence in the country’s security. It was also always clear that any Israeli government committed to territorial compromise would have enjoyed the generous and enthusiastic support of the international community.
Meanwhile, the Arab world’s readiness for a peace based on territorial compromise and a political solution to the Palestinian problem was registered by the emergence of the acceptance front,
including Jordan, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Tunisia, and Morocco. These countries, supported by Palestinians in the occupied territories and a growing number of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) leaders, accepted Security Council Resolution 242, which recognized the right to peace and security by all states in the region and was based on the principle of trading lands occupied by Israel in 1967 for peace. As all scholars of the conflict agree, even the Egyptian and Syrian attacks in 1973 on Israeli forces in the Golan Heights and the Sinai were designed to convince Israel of the importance of negotiating withdrawals from these territories while encouraging the United States to take a more active role as a peacemaker.
In 1974, the PLO made its first official statement in favor of an independent fighting national authority
on any part of Palestine relinquished by Israel, quickly moderating its tone by removing the word fighting
and agreeing that the Palestinian entity could be achieved by political as well as military means.⁸
In 1977 the PLO’s legislative body, the Palestinian National Congress, described its goal as an independent Palestinian state
without characterizing that objective as a transitional stage toward a secular democratic state in the whole of Palestine.
⁹
In August 1981, Saudi crown prince Fahd (soon to become king) proposed a comprehensive peace agreement with Israel based on establishing a Palestinian state in the territories occupied in 1967. Over the next decade the PLO, strongly influenced by West Bank and Gaza sentiment in favor of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel, moved with increasing clarity toward acceptance of the TSS. In 1988 that acceptance was made official.
In 2002 Saudi Arabia revived the Fahd proposal by launching its own initiative, a plan endorsed by the Arab League for ending the Arab-Israeli conflict based on establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza. Though by this time it hardly mattered, Arab League summits held in 2007 and 2017 reaffirmed support for the proposal.
In other words, from the late 1960s on, Israel had significant opportunities to negotiate with both Palestinian and Arab world representatives who had made clear their readiness to sign and implement a comprehensive peace based on trading occupied territories for a TSS.
Of course, the same power position that gave Israel the discretion to compromise also gave it the option of pursuing instead larger territorial and ideological ambitions. By stonewalling responses to negotiating opportunities while facilitating settlement expansion in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, Prime Ministers Eshkol, Meir, and Rabin had for a decade protected the Labor Party from grappling with internal disputes between hawks and doves. These prime ministers also forestalled threats by coalition partners (in particular the National Religious Party) to bring down the government should it seriously pursue options for peace with the Palestinians. But the drift toward de facto annexation and suppression of Palestinian political mobilization also encouraged Israelis to believe that their country could keep most or even all of the lands captured in 1967. Ten years of the decision not to decide
thereby preserved opportunities for governments desirous of permanently incorporating the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to act decisively toward that end. In 1977, opportunities to do so were fully exploited by the openly antipartitionist governments of Likud prime ministers Menachem Begin (1977–1983) and Yitzhak Shamir (1983–1984, 1986–1992). Proudly committed to extending Jewish sovereignty
over the whole Land of Israel,
these governments implemented massive programs of settlement and infrastructural development to bind the territories to Israel while preventing emergence of any Palestinian state west of the Jordan River. While often seeking to camouflage their objectives with ambiguous formulas and complex negotiations over procedures or terms of reference, these governments as well as the those led by Benjamin Netanyahu (1996–1999, 2009) never seriously entertained any future for the country that would or could feature a viable Palestinian state.¹⁰
The Labor Party next led an Israeli government in 1992, by which time it had become vastly more difficult to negotiate a TSS. Instead of simply
having to overcome risks to the ruling coalition and the risk of losing an election—obstacles that had pushed Labor Party governments in the 1960s and 1970s to the decision not to decide
—the Rabin government of 1992 also faced daunting risks of violent challenges to the regime by settlers and their supporters, outbreaks of intra-Jewish political conflict if not civil war, and threats to the legitimacy of state authority. From a purely political point of view, a TSS had become an order of magnitude more difficult to pursue than it would have been in the first decade of Israel’s rule of the West Bank and Gaza.¹¹
It is certainly true that Arab and Palestinian elites were at times inept, ambiguous, or insincere in their proposals for peace with Israel.¹² They were certainly never united. However, from the beginning of the occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, Israel made it difficult, if not impossible, for the moderate Arabs whom Jabotinsky had predicted would emerge to organize or persuade wider segments of their own community, or of the Arab and Muslim worlds, that pursuing compromise with Israel was a realistic option. Banning all political activity by Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza was part of Israel’s determined policy to exclude Palestinians under its control from any role in the determination of their political future. Although at one point the military government tried to set up a Village Leagues
organization of puppet Palestinian strongmen willing to work for the Israeli government rather than against the occupation, the scheme lasted less than a year, at which point Israel reverted back to its traditional policy of discrediting as a terrorist any Palestinian leader with a mass political following.
Until January 1993, Israel treated the PLO as a terrorist organization. Until that date, it was illegal for Israelis even to meet with PLO members. In the West Bank (including East Jerusalem), Arab newspapers were heavily censored. Any sites of organized activity with the potential to become political, such as local governments, professional associations, student groups, unions, and religious institutions, were subject to intensive surveillance and strict regulation. The incarceration rate in the occupied territories became the highest in the