What ‘Destruction of Israel’?
by alethoNetanyahu’s 'destruction of Israel' mantra should not be taken seriously. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)
By John V. Whitbeck | Palestine Chronicle | April 29, 2014
When,
in response to the threat of potential Palestinian reconciliation and
unity, the Israeli government suspended “negotiations” with the
Palestine Liberation Organization on April 24 (five days before they
were due to terminate in any event), Prime Minister Netanyahu’s office
issued a statement asserting: “Instead of choosing peace, Abu Mazen
formed an alliance with a murderous terrorist organization that calls
for the destruction of Israel.”
In
a series of related media appearances, Netanyahu hammered repeatedly on
the “destruction of Israel” theme as a way of blaming Palestine for the
predictable failure of the latest round of the seemingly perpetual
“peace process”.
The
extreme subjectivity of the epithet “terrorist” has been highlighted by
two recent absurdities – the Egyptian military regime’s labeling of the
Muslim Brotherhood, which has won all Egyptian elections since the
overthrow of Hosni Mubarak, as a “terrorist” organization and the
labeling by the de facto Ukrainian authorities, who came to power
through illegally occupying government buildings in Kiev, of those
opposing them by illegally occupying government buildings in eastern
Ukraine as “terrorists”. In both cases, those who have overthrown
democratically elected governments are labeling those who object to
their coups as “terrorists”.
It
is increasingly understood that the word “terrorist”, which has no
agreed definition, is so subjective as to be devoid of any inherent
meaning and that it is commonly abused by governments and others who
apply it to whomever or whatever they hate in the hope of demonizing
their adversaries, thereby discouraging and avoiding rational thought
and discussion and, frequently, excusing their own illegal and immoral
behavior.
Netanyahu’s assertion that Hamas “calls for the destruction of Israel” requires rational analysis as well.
He
is not the only guilty party in this regard. The mainstream media in
the West habitually attaches the phrase “pledged to the destruction of
Israel” to each first mention of Hamas, almost as though it were part of
Hamas’s name.
In
the real world, what does the “destruction of Israel” actually mean?
The land? The people? The ethno-religious-supremacist regime?
There
can be no doubt that virtually all Palestinians – and probably still a
significant number of Native Americans – wish that foreign colonists had
never arrived in their homelands to ethnically cleanse them and take
away their land and that some may even lay awake at night dreaming that
they might, somehow, be able to turn back the clock or reverse history.
However,
in the real world, Hamas is not remotely close to being in a position
to cause Israel’s territory to sink beneath the Mediterranean or to wipe
out its population or even to compel the Israeli regime to transform
itself into a fully democratic state pledged to equal rights and dignity
for all who live there. It is presumably the latter threat – the
dreaded “bi-national state” – that Netanyahu has in mind when he speaks
of the “destruction of Israel”.
For
propaganda purposes, “destruction” sounds much less reasonable and
desirable than “democracy” even when one is speaking about the same
thing.
In
the real world, Hamas has long made clear, notwithstanding its view
that continuing negotiations within the framework of the
American-monopolized “peace process” is pointless and a waste of time,
that it does not object to the PLO’s trying to reach a two-state
agreement with Israel; provided only that, to be accepted and respected
by Hamas, any agreement reached would need to be submitted to and
approved by the Palestinian people in a referendum.
In
the real world, the Hamas vision (like the Fatah vision) of peaceful
coexistence in Israel/Palestine is much closer to the “international
consensus” on what a permanent peace should look like, as well as to
international law and relevant UN resolutions, than the Israeli vision –
to the extent that one can even discern the Israeli vision, since no
Israeli government has ever seen fit to publicly reveal what its vision,
if any exists beyond maintaining and managing the status quo
indefinitely, actually looks like.
As
the Fatah and Hamas visions have converged in recent years, the
principal divergence has become Hamas’s insistence (entirely consistent
with international law and relevant UN resolutions) that Israel must
withdraw from the entire territory of the State of Palestine, which is
defined in the UN General Assembly resolution of November 29, 2012,
recognizing Palestine’s state status as “the Palestinian Territory
occupied since 1967” (including, significantly, the definite article
“the” missing from “withdraw from territories” in the arguably ambiguous
UN Security Council Resolution 242), in contrast to Fatah’s more
flexible willingness to consider agreed land swaps equal in size and
value.
After
winning the last Palestinian elections and after seven years of
responsibility for governing Gaza under exceptionally difficult
circumstances, Hamas has become a relatively “moderate” establishment
party, struggling to rein in more radical groups and prevent them from
firing artisanal rockets into southern Israel, a counterproductive
symbolic gesture which Israeli governments publicly condemn but secretly
welcome (and often seek to incite in response to their own more lethal
violence) as evidence of Palestinian belligerence justifying their own
intransigence.
Netanyahu’s
“destruction of Israel” mantra should not be taken seriously, either by
Western governments or by any thinking person. It is long overdue for
the Western mainstream media to cease recycling mindless – and genuinely
destructive – propaganda and to adapt their reporting to reality, and
it is long overdue for Western governments to cease demonizing Hamas as
an excuse for doing nothing constructive to end a brutal occupation
which has now endured for almost 47 years.
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