The issue of Arab Jews: Manipulating a Justified Cause
RSIS
presents the following commentary The issue of Arab Jews: Manipulating a
Justified Cause by James M. Dorsey. It is also available online at this link.
(To print it, click on this link.). Kindly forward any comments or feedback to
the Editor RSIS Commentaries, at RSISPublication@ntu.edu.sg
________________________________________
No.
202/2012 dated 31 October 2012
The issue of
Arab Jews:
Manipulating
a Justified Cause
By James M. Dorsey
Synopsis
A recent
United Nations conference on the rights of Jews forced to flee Arab countries
in the wake of the establishment of the State of Israel focuses attention on a
long overlooked consequence of the Middle East conflict. It also complicates
the revival of Palestinian-Israeli peace negotiations.
Commentary
THE PLIGHT
of Palestinians uprooted and driven out of large chunks of historic Palestine
to make way for a Jewish state lies at the core of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
That epochal dispute dominated policies towards and perceptions of the Middle
East for much of post-World War Two history.
Efforts to
achieve a definite resolution have foundered, but have produced a de facto
status quo that serves the interests of two key parties to the conflict: Israel
and Hamas, the Islamist group that controls the Gaza Strip. Neither truly wants
the creation of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel, preferring
instead a long-term ceasefire that would allow for economic growth in the hope
that time will gain them a strengthened negotiating position.
Battle of
narratives
This
month’s brief flare up of Palestinian rocket attacks against Israel and Israeli
counterstrikes hardly detracted from this understanding. On the contrary the
attacks enabled Hamas to burnish its credentials as a resistance movement and
fend off criticism from more militant Palestinian factions that accuse it of
having gone soft and allowed Israel to project it as a continued terrorist
threat, maintain its refusal to formally do business with Hamas and ensure that
the peace process remains in a deep coma.
To further
undermine the centrality of the Palestinian issue that has been significantly
diminished by the wave of popular
revolts sweeping the Middle East and North Africa as well as the split between
Hamas and the Al Fatah-led Palestine Authority on the West Bank, Israel
supported by Jewish leaders is equating Palestinian rights with those of Arab
Jews who once lived in the Arab world but were forced to leave their homelands.
It is a move perceived by Palestinians and even a minority of Jews as a cynical
manipulation of a justified cause.
The Israeli
move adds one more dimension to the Palestinian-Israeli battle of narratives
that has served to camouflage the real intentions of Israel and Palestinian
leaders since the inception of an Palestinian-Israeli peace process. It is part
of a larger campaign that aims to reduce, if not delegitimise Palestinian
rights by opposing Palestinian efforts to upgrade their status at the United Nations
and calling for the dismantling of UNWRA, the UN agency responsible for the
welfare of Palestinian refugees. The move further seeks to mend chinks in the
armour of US public support for Israel.
At the core
of the battle of narratives lies a definition of rights that has allowed both
parties to ensure that peace negotiations do not produce the kind of painful compromises on both
sides needed to achieve a definitive resolution of their deep-seated conflict.
Like
everything else that is on the negotiation table, the solution to the plight of
Palestinian refugees as well as that of Arab Jews is evident to all.
Palestinians would get an independent state of their own alongside Israel and
be compensated for losses suffered in territories that are part of the Jewish
state. Similarly, Arab Jews would be compensated for their losses. Few, if any,
Palestinians are likely to want to physically return to Israeli rule and even
fewer Arab Jews would opt for a return to their ancestral homelands.
Devil in the
details
Nevertheless,
the devil is in the details. Palestinians would settle for compensation and a
state of their own but insist on
doing so on the basis of an Israeli recognition of their right to return to
their ancestral homes. Such recognition would amount to Israeli acknowledgement
of Palestinians being the original owners of historic Palestine. In effect, it
would deny Israel’s narrative that it represents the resurrection of the Jewish
state in lands that always belonged to the Jews.
To reinforce
that narrative and reject the Palestinian right of return, before raising the
rights of Arab Jews Israel has insisted in recent years that Palestinians
upgrade their recognition of Israel’s right to exist by acknowledging its right
to exist as a Jewish state – a demand that transcends accepted diplomatic
protocols. In doing so, it prepared the ground to use Arab Jewish rights as a
tool to further undermine Palestinian demands for recognition of their right to
return, by rejecting Palestinian suggestions that Arab Jews too should have the
right to return to their Arab countries of origin rather than Israel.
The Israeli
effort to portray the Palestinian-Israeli conflict as one of competing refugee
claims also serves to counter Palestinian efforts to upgrade their United
Nations observer status to that of a non-member state as well as a rupture in
crucial American Christian support for Israel. Palestine Authority officials
are confident that the UN General Assembly will next month vote in favour of
the upgrade. Israel is likely to argue that Palestinian rights cannot be viewed
independently of those of Arab Jews.
As
Palestine pushes for recognition, leaders of the Presbyterian Church this month
urged US Congressional leaders to reconsider aid to Israel because of its
alleged violations of human rights. In seeking to shift the conflict’s
paradigm, the Israeli focus on Arab Jewish rights calls into question the
emphasis on the Palestinians of one important faction of the bedrock of US
support for Israel.
Palestinian
issue at stake
The
campaign for recognition of the rights of Arab Jewry could not come at a more
politically opportune moment for Israel. It reinforces pro-Israeli support in
Congress to limit the definition of a Palestinian refugee to those who were
physically displaced when the Jewish state was created in 1948. The definition
would deprive a majority of Palestinians born after the founding of Israel of
any possibility to put forward a claim. It coalesces with proposals in Congress
to equate Arab Jewish rights to those of Palestinians.
At the
bottom line, the absence of a credible peace process has created a vacuum in
which the very definition and importance of the Palestinian issue is at stake.
It is a process in which Israel is benefitting from an Arab world that
increasingly is preoccupied with either regime survival or post-revolt
transition, a deeply divided Palestinian polity, and an international community
that mistakenly believes that Palestine has taken a permanent backseat to more
pressing issues such as Iran and the calls for political change.
Palestine
may well for now be on the backburner; it is however unlikely to remain there.
James M.
Dorsey is a Senior Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
(RSIS), Nanyang Technological University and the author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer blog.
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