Copyright 1998-2002
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved
Israel: Ethnic cleansing is now official
government policy
By Jean Shaoul
3 December 2002
Use this version to print
| Send this link by email
| Email the author
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and his
ministers have openly declared that Palestinians must be
driven out to make way for Jewish settlements in land
occupied illegally since the 1967 war.
Sharon and his cabinet utilised the November 15 ambush of
Israeli security forces in Hebron by Islamic Jihad and the
ensuing gun battle that killed 12 members of the Israeli
armed forces and injured 15, as well as three of the
Palestinian attackers, to make their announcements.
Sharon himself called for “territorial contiguity” between
Kiryat Arba, a settlement overlooking Hebron, the tiny
Zionist enclaves and the Tomb of the Patriarchs, a religious
site venerated by both Moslems and Jews, inside the city.
Palestinians living between the settlement, the enclaves and
the Tomb would be forced to leave their homes to make way
for the settlers—a policy known throughout the world as
ethnic cleansing. He told army commanders in Hebron that
Israel had to “take advantage of the opportunity” to
“minimise the number of Palestinians living among Jewish
settlers” and establish “Jewish points of presence”. He
described this as “an appropriate Zionist response” to such
attacks.
Sharon’s newly appointed foreign affairs minister and main
leadership rival, Benyamin Netanyahu, was even more
explicit. “We are going to cleanse the whole area and do the
work ourselves.” he declared.
Israeli security forces immediately imposed a curfew,
arrested and blindfolded at least 40 Palestinians, bulldozed
the homes of Palestinian families and uprooted their olive
groves.
This gave the ultra-nationalist settlers the green light to
establish an “outpost”—the basis for a new settlement—on the
vacant land and daub it with the racist slogan “Death to
Arabs.” The settlers own language echoed the government’s
calls for ethnic cleansing. The leader of the Hebron
settlement, Zvi Katsover, said, “We have to cleanse the
ground to ensure an Israeli territorial continuity between
Kiryat Arba and Hebron.” A thousand new homes are to be
built in the area. “I trust Sharon to implement the
project,” he added.
At a rally in Hebron, Benny Elon, leader of the ultra-right
wing Moledet (Homeland) party, declared, “There won’t be
just a Jewish neighbourhood here. There will be a Jewish
town here.”
According to the New York Times, “In a turbulent
crowd, they [the settlers] pounded on the doors of nearby
Palestinian houses and then smeared the pale stone with blue
graffiti: ‘Every Arab killed for me it’s a holiday,’ and,
over and over, ‘Vengeance’.”
Later the government issued an order for the demolition of a
further 15 Palestinian homes on the route from Kiryat Arba
to the Jewish enclave in Hebron.
The expulsion of communities from their homeland, like
genocide, is recognised as a crime against humanity. The
1948 International Declaration of Human Rights and other
international covenants, including the 1949 Fourth Geneva
Convention, outlaw expulsions, population transfers,
resettlement and forced relocation of any kind.
But the statements by Sharon and Netanyahu elicited no
response from Israel’s main backer, the United States, or
any other Western power. And even the liberal media did
little more than report the words of Sharon and Netanyahu.
Not one of the editorial writers of the New York Times
or Britain’s Guardian has seen fit to comment on
Israel’s explicit advocacy of ethnic cleansing.
The deafening silence on Sharon’s gross abuse of human
rights is particularly marked, given that it takes place
against the backdrop of the trial of former Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic before the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The
Hague. The central purpose of The Hague tribunal is to find
Milosevic guilty of having politically sanctioned the ethnic
cleansing of Albanians from the Yugoslav province of
Kosovo—to confirm the existence of a “chain of command”
between the Serb irregular forces in Kosovo and Belgrade,
and so justify the US-led bombardment of Yugoslavia.
That trial has cost millions of dollars, lasted more than
nine months and taken evidence from more than 100 witnesses.
Despite this, to date the prosecution has failed to
demonstrate that Milosevic himself either masterminded the
ethnic cleansing or ever explicitly ordered the expulsion of
the Albanian population of Kosovo.
There would be no such difficulty were Sharon to be brought
to trial for his treatment of the Palestinians, or if
Netanyahu joined him in the dock. The Israeli government has
explicitly issued instructions to the armed forces and
publicly announced policies that are universally recognised
as constituting ethnic cleansing. Yet the world’s statesmen,
the United Nations, the press and mainstream political
commentators keep silent.
The West’s political blind spot serves to underline the
hypocrisy of their claim to have gone to war against
Milosevic based on moral considerations. The break-up of
Yugoslavia was desired by the Western powers in order to
secure control of the strategically vital Balkan region.
As the World Socialist Web Site explained in its
statement of May 24, 1999, “Why is NATO at war with
Yugoslavia? World power, oil and gold”:
“The immediate material gains that might be plundered from
Kosovo are dwarfed by the far greater potential for
enrichment that beckons in regions further to the east where
the NATO powers have developed immense interests over the
past five years.... [T]he dismantling of the USSR has
created a power vacuum in Eastern Europe, Russia and Central
Asia that makes a new division of the world inevitable. The
principal significance of Yugoslavia, at this critical
juncture, is that it lies on the Western periphery of a
massive swathe of territory into which the major world
powers aim to expand.”
The statement continued, “Involved in the reintegration of
the territory of the former USSR into world capitalism is
the absorption, by massive Western transnational companies,
of trillions of dollars in valuable raw materials that are
vital to the imperialist powers. The greatest untapped oil
reserves in the world are located in the former Soviet
republics bordering the Caspian Sea (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan,
Turkmenistan). These resources are now being divided among
the major capitalist countries. This is the fuel that is
feeding renewed militarism and must lead to new wars of
conquest by the imperialist powers against local opponents,
as well as ever-greater conflicts among the imperialists
themselves.”
The same base economic and political considerations that in
reality shaped the hostility of the Western powers towards
Milosevic’s regime now determine their acquiescence in face
of Sharon’s criminal actions. In short, nothing must be
allowed to get in the way of the drive by the US and the
major imperialist powers to secure control of the oil riches
of the Middle East. On occasion Sharon’s actions against the
Palestinians have been criticised because they have been
considered counterproductive by Washington at a time when it
is seeking to secure the support of the Arab regimes for war
against Iraq. But fundamentally the US views Israel as the
dominant military power in the region and its main and most
reliable proxy.
Israel was founded in 1948 on the basis of the forcible
expulsion of tens of thousands of Palestinians as the
precondition for establishing a religious state with a
Jewish majority population. Ever since it has repeatedly
resorted to expulsion, population transfer, resettlement and
forced relocation of the Palestinians.
In the aftermath of World War II and the Nazi holocaust, the
United Nations voted in 1947 for the partition of Palestine
into separate states for the Jews and the Palestinians.
During the 1947-49 war between the Jews and the Arab states
that followed, the actions of Zionist terror gangs played a
major role in driving the Palestinians from their homes. In
all, some 700,000 Palestinians became refugees in other
countries and were not allowed to return to Israel.
According to the UN, the original refugees and their
descendants now number some four million. Many of those who
remained were expelled from their homes and resettled
elsewhere within Israel. The Law of Return, passed in 1950,
and the Citizenship Law of 1952 granted every Jew the right
to immediate citizenship upon arrival in Israel.
In 1967, after the defeat of the Arab states in the June
war, there was another population transfer. About 250,000 of
the 1948 refugees who had lived in refugee camps in the West
Bank and Gaza for 20 years fled.
Afterwards, there were attempts by successive governments to
implement a forced transfer. The Israeli forces expelled
Palestinians living near the cease-fire lines and destroyed
their villages and towns. Kalkilya was only the most
well-known example. The Israeli authorities offered
financial incentives and free transportation to Palestinians
who were willing to leave, but there were few takers. Some
of the refugees in the Gaza Strip were transferred to camps
in the Jordan valley. The security forces demolished the
homes of suspected militants and those of their families and
neighbours and deported them to Lebanon.
In 1982, following the invasion of Lebanon, hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians and Lebanese moved north to the
suburbs of Beirut to avoid the war and Israeli control of
southern Lebanon. An international investigation by six
jurists, including the cofounder of Amnesty International,
found Israel guilty of attempted “ethnocide” and “genocide”
against the Palestinian people. The report stated that there
were no valid reasons “under international law for its
invasion of Lebanon, for the manner in which it conducted
hostilities, or its actions as an occupying force.”
Ever since 1967, Israel has illegally built settlements in
the territories captured in the June war. More than 200,000
settlers now live in 200 settlements in the West Bank and
Gaza, while a further 180,000 live in what was once East
Jerusalem and its environs. The settlement policy, which
escalated after the 1993 Oslo Accords, involved demolishing
Palestinian homes, seizing their land by military or legal
means, and driving the Palestinians from the towns and
villages.
Sharon’s government incorporates or rests on ultra-orthodox
and settler-based political movements that explicitly
advocate ethnic cleansing under the guise of “population
transfer”. The Moledet (Homeland) party is the ideological
successor to the proscribed far-right Kach movement of the
late Rabbi Meir Kahane. Its leader Rehavam Ze’evi was, until
his assassination in October 2001, a minister in Sharon’s
government. More recently, Gamla, a group founded by former
Israeli military officers and settlers and funded by
American Jews, published detailed plans for the “complete
elimination of the Arab demographic threat to Israel” by
forcibly expelling all Palestinians, including Palestinians
in the Occupied Territories and Palestinian citizens of
Israel within a three- to five-year period.
It is these extreme right-wing elements who now determine
official government policy.
To the extent that the policies of ethnic cleansing have now
become acceptable to the Israeli government, then the same
applies to the US and its allies. Washington’s support for
Sharon signals that no crimes against humanity are too gross
for the US to contemplate in the name of “the war on
terrorism”. It is a warning of the kinds of methods that the
Bush administration will employ to subjugate the Middle East
region and so gain control of its oil riches.
See Also:
Readers: The WSWS invites your comments. Please send e-mail.
To cancel this news gleaning service reply with "unsubscribe" in the subject header, or "re-subscribe" to resume