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CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
— it is a virtual reflex for governments to plead security concerns when
they undertake any controversial action, often as a pretext for
something else. Careful scrutiny is always in order.
Israel’s so-called
‘security fence’, which is the subject of hearings starting today at the
International Court of Justice in The Hague, is a case in point.
Few would question
Israel’s “right” to protect its citizens from “terrorist” attacks like
the one yesterday, even to build a security wall if that were an
appropriate means. It is also clear where such a wall would be built if
security were the guiding concern: inside Israel, within the
internationally recognized border, the Green Line established after the
1948-49 war. The wall could then be as forbidding as the authorities
chose: patrolled by the army on both sides, heavily mined, impenetrable.
Such a wall would maximize security, and there would be no international
protest or violation of international law.
This observation
is well understood. While Britain supports America’s
opposition to the Hague hearings, its foreign minister, Jack Straw, has
written that the wall is “unlawful.” Another ministry official, who
inspected the “security fence,” said it should be on the Green Line or
“indeed on the Israeli side of the line.” A British parliamentary
investigative commission also called for the wall to be built on Israeli
land, condemning the barrier as part of a “deliberate” Israeli “strategy
of bringing the population to heel.”
What this wall is
really doing is taking the Palestinian lands. It is also — as the
Israeli sociologist Baruch Kimmerling has described Israel’s war of
“politicide” against the Palestinians — helping turn Palestinian
communities into dungeons, next to which the Bantustans of South Africa
look like symbols of freedom, sovereignty and self-determination.
Even before
construction of the barrier was under way, the United Nations estimated
that Israeli barriers, infrastructure projects and settlements had
created 50 disconnected Palestinian pockets in the West Bank. As the design of the
wall was coming into view, the World Bank estimated that it might
isolate 250,000 to 300,000 Palestinians, more than 10 percent of the
population, and that it might effectively annex up to 10 percent of the West Bank
land. And when the government of Ariel Sharon finally published its
proposed map, it became clear the wall would cut the West Bank into 16
isolated enclaves, confined to just 42 percent of the West Bank land
that Mr. Sharon had previously said could be ceded to a Palestinian
state.
The wall has
already claimed some of the most fertile lands of the West Bank. And, crucially, it
extends
Israel’s control of critical water resources, which Israel and its settlers can
appropriate as they choose, while the indigenous population often lacks
water for drinking.
Palestinians in
the seam between the wall and the Green Line will be permitted to apply
for the right to live in their own homes; the Israelis automatically
have the right to use these lands.
“Hiding behind
security rationales and the seemingly neutral bureaucratic language of
military orders is the gateway for expulsion,” the Israeli journalist
Amira Hass wrote in the daily Haaretz. “Drop by drop, unseen, not so
many that it would be noticed internationally and shock public opinion.”
The same is true of the regular killings, terror and daily brutality and
humiliation of the past 35 years of harsh occupation, while land and
resources have been taken for settlers enticed by ample subsidies.
It also seems
likely that Israel will transfer to the occupied West Bank the 7,500
settlers it said this month it would remove from the Gaza Strip. These
Israelis now enjoy ample land and fresh water, while one million
Palestinians barely survive their meagre water supplies virtually
unusable. Gaza is a cage, and as the city of Rafah in the south is
systematically demolished, residents may be blocked from any contact
with Egypt and blockaded from the sea.
It is misleading
to call these Israeli policies. They are American-Israeli policies —
made possible by unremitting United States military, economic and
diplomatic support of Israel. This has been true since 1971 when, with
American support, Israel rejected a full peace offer from Egypt,
preferring expansion to security. In 1976, the United States vetoed
a Security Council resolution calling for a two-state settlement in
accord with an overwhelming international consensus. The two-state
proposal has the support of a majority of Americans today, and could be
enacted immediately if Washington wanted to do so.
At most, the Hague
hearings will end in an advisory ruling that the wall is illegal. It
will change nothing. Any real chance for a political settlement — and
for decent lives for the people of the region — depends on the United
States.
Noam Chomsky,
professor of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
is the author of “Hegemony or Survival: America’s Quest for Global
Dominance.”