For Israel, losing the battle for hearts and minds is worse than failing to defeat Hamas
Screenshot
of The Economist’s 23 March 2024 cover
By James M. Dorsey
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Israel hasn’t
just lost the battle for hearts and minds in much of the world, including
significant constituencies in Western countries.
It has scored a significant own goal that has rendered it
all but impossible to achieve a key element of Israel’s quest for Middle
Eastern and Muslim recognition.
For much of its history, Israel has sought recognition not
only of its existence as anchored in international law but of the Jewish
state’s ‘right to exist,’ a concept non-existent in the legalities governing
diplomacy and inter-state relations.
Recognition of Israel’s right to exist rather than its de
jure existence means endorsement of the narrative that Jews are the legitimate
claimants to historic Palestine, even if they have not constituted a majority
of the territory’s population for at least 1,600 years.
Moreover, Israel’s quest rejects the legitimacy of competing
national narratives as part of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, with the Palestinian state expressing the national aspirations of a
displaced people.
By demanding recognition of Israel’s right to exist, Israel
wants Palestinians to abandon their claims to the land and legitimise their
displacement in the 1948 and 1967 Middle East wars.
US House of
Representatives recognizes Israel’s right to exist in November 2023 vote
The 1993 Oslo Accords between Israel and the Palestine
Liberation Organisation (PLO) that led to the creation of the internationally
recognised Palestine Authority fudged the issue by framing it as Israel’s
“right to exist in peace and security” rather than its “right to exist” as a
matter of principle.
Yet even that could prove a difficult sell in future
negotiations without a significant degree of reciprocity.
Given Israel’s Gaza war conduct, the tens of thousands of
Palestinian deaths, the devastation of the Strip’s infrastructure, and the
blood-curdling language that has gone mainstream in official and public Israeli
discourse, Palestinians will demand an equal right to “exist in peace and
security.”
To be sure, Hamas’ October 7 attack that killed some 1,200
people, mostly civilians, sparked the Gaza war. Throughout the war, the group
has made statements and acted with equally blood-curdling disregard for innocent
lives, whether Palestinian or Israeli and a lack of empathy for the plight of
their own or the other.
A comparison of war-related mass Israeli anti-government
protests in 1982 and today tells the story of hardening positions.
In September
1982, 400,000 protesters in Tel Aviv called for a state commission of inquiry
into the Sabra and Chatila massacre. Credit: GPO
In 1982, some 400,000
Israelis took to the streets to protest the slaughter by a Lebanese
Christian militia of at least 800 Palestinians in Beirut’s Sabra and Shatila
refugee camps under the watchful eyes of the invading Israeli military.
This weekend’s protests in Israel, the largest in Israeli
history with 750,000 people pouring into the streets of Tel Aviv and other
Israeli cities, were about the lives of Hamas-held hostages with little if any
reference to the high number of the war’s Palestinian casualties.
To be fair, there were no hostages in Israel’s 1982 invasion
of Lebanon.
Moreover, the most
recent Israeli public opinion poll suggested that a majority of Israelis
had no confidence in Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister
Yoav Gallant’s management of the war but would not be opposed to the war if
hostage lives were not at stake.
Credit:
Anadolu Ajansi
Even so, the weekly protests constitute a public recognition
that negotiations and a ceasefire rather than military action are likely to
bring hostages home alive.
Hamas’
summary execution earlier this month of six hostages before Israeli troops
could rescue them drove the point home.
As a result, Mr. Netanyahu’s insistence on military action
and willingness to sabotage US-Qatar-Egypt-mediated ceasefire talks is as much
designed to ensure the continuation of the war as it is to thwart the notion
that what applies to the hostages is equally valid for resolving the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
For now, many Israelis and Jews have yet to connect the
dots. To prevent that, Mr. Netanyahu and his cohorts have worked hard to paint
a picture of a global environment populated by anti-Semites in which Israel is
surrounded by forces seeking its destruction.
“We are surrounded by a murderous ideology led by Iran’s
axis of evil. In recent days, despicable terrorists have murdered six of our
hostages in cold blood and three Israeli police officers. The murderers do not
distinguish between us; they want to
murder us all, until the very last one — right and left, secular and religious,
Jews and non-Jews,” Mr. Netanyahu said in response to Sunday’s
killing of three Israelis in a secure zone of the King Hussein / Allenby Bridge,
one of three border crossings linking Jordan and the West Bank.
Screenshot
poster of The Temple Emmanue/ Steicker Cultural Center
French Jewish intellectual Bernard-Henri Levy echoed Mr.
Netanyahu’s view of a
hostile world in which Jews and Israel stand alone. It’s a worldview that
exists in a vacuum. It fails to recognise that refusing to grant others the
dignity and rights one claims for oneself bears risks.
Echoing Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Levy recently told The Wall
Street Journal that the world’s response to Hamas’ October 7 attack “was a very
big surprise. I expected at least a moment of real solidarity in the face of
this enormous crime.”
Instead, the perpetrators were “blessed, excused, and
praised.” The victims were “accused, cursed and held responsible for their
fates…. A big part of the world was longing for something like Oct. 7, dreaming
of it,” Mr. Levy said.
To be sure, anti-Semitism has long been on the rise even
before Hamas’ October 7 attack and the Gaza war fueled by far-right politicians
and groups with histories of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
From left to
right: France’s Marine Le Pen, Binyamin Netanyahu, Hungary’s Victor Orban,
Donald J. Trump, and Italy’s Giorgia Meloni. Credit: The Economist
Interestingly, these are forces
Mr. Netanyahu and his ultra-nationalist cohorts often feel closest to.
By the same token, nothing, including Israel’s 17-year-long
siege of Gaza, creeping de facto annexation of the West Bank, and humiliating
repression of expressions of Palestinian national identity, justifies Hamas’
October 7 killing of innocent civilians.
Similarly, Hamas’ stubborn resistance in Gaza, the
burgeoning armed resistance in the West Bank, and this weekend’s King Hussein
Bridge attack suggest that disproportionate collective punishment neither
solves Israel’s security problems nor enhances Israel’s international standing.
Worse than that, Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Levy’s vision of a
conspiratorial world that is out to get the Jews and Israel in which
Palestinians with equally legitimate aspirations are non-existent threatens to
lead Israel, Israelis, and Jews down a dangerous path and potentially towards a
self-fulfilling prophecy.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Adjunct
Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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