- Details
-
Written by Jeff Halper Jeff Halper
-
Category: News News
-
Published: 17 November 2008 17 November 2008
-
Last Updated: 17 November 2008 17 November 2008
-
Created: 17 November 2008 17 November 2008
-
Hits: 4300 4300
As Obama comes into office, he will encounter a global reality
very different from that of eight years before: a multilateral one in
which a weakened and isolated US must find its place. He will discover
that much of America's isolation comes from the view that the
Occupation of the Palestinian territories is, in fact, an
American-Israeli Occupation. If restoring a weakened American economy
depends on repairing relations with the rest of the world, he will
learn that without resolving the Israeli-Palestine conflict he will not
create those conditions in which the US will be accepted once more into
the wider global community.
To be more specific, the Israel-Palestine conflict directly affects Americans in at least five ways:
·
It isolates the US from major global markets, forcing it to embark on
aggressive measures to secure markets rather than peaceful
accommodation;
· It thereby diverts the American economy
into non-productive production (tanks not roads), making it dependent
upon deficit spending which only increases dependency upon foreign
financing while diverting resources into the military rather than into
education, health and investment;
· Support for the Israeli
military costs US taxpayers more than $3 billion annually at a time of
deepening recession and crumbling national infrastructure;
·
It leads to an American involvement in the world that is mainly
military, thus begetting hostility and resistance which produce the
threats to security Americans so greatly fear; and
· It ends
up threatening American civil liberties by encouraging such legislation
as the Patriot Act and by introducing Israeli "counterinsurgency"
tactics and weaponry developed in the West Bank and Gaza into American
police forces.
For many peoples of the world, the Palestinians
represent the plight of the majority. They are the tiny grains of sand
resisting what most Americans and privileged people of the West do not
see. They are a people who are denied the most fundamental right: to a
state of their own, even on the 22% of historic Palestine that Israel
has occupied since 1967. For the majority of humanity that lives in
economic and political conditions unimaginable in the West, the
suffering caused by Israel's occupation – impoverishment and a total
denial of freedom that can only be sustained by total American support
– is emblematic of their own continued suffering. Israel's oppression
of the Palestinians with the active backing of the US shows
demonstrably the existence of a global system of Western domination
that prevents others from achieving their own dreams of political and
economic well-being.
Like a bone in the throat, the issue of
Israel's occupation can be neither ignored nor by-passed. To make
things even more difficult, it is doubtful if a two-state solution is
still possible, since Israeli settlement activity has largely
eliminated that option. Whatever the eventual solution, if this most
destabilizing of conflicts is not addressed, the US – even under Obama
– will remain mired in conflicts with Muslim peoples and reviled by
peoples seeking genuine freedom. Neither the US nor Israel will find
the security they claim they seek. We live in a global reality, not a
Pax Americana. The logic of the Bush Administration has run its course.
No longer can the US throw its weight around in a War Against Terror.
No longer can its involvement be purely military. The new logic that
will accompany Obama into office can be summarized in one word:
accommodation. And the US will not get to first base until it achieves
accommodation with the Muslim world, which means ending the Israeli
Occupation.
What happens to the Palestinians takes on a global significance.
Clearing the bone in the throat – that is, ending the Israeli
Occupation and allowing the Palestinians a state and a future of their
own – should be a top priority of the next American administration.
Indeed, America's attempt to restore its standing in the world depends
on it. In the global reality in which we live, the fate of Americans
and Palestinians, it turns out, are closely intertwined.
(Jeff Halper is the Director of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions. He can be reached at <
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.>.)
The
Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions is based in Jerusalem and
has chapters in the United Kingdom and the United States.
Please visit our websites:
www.icahd.org
www.icahduk.org
www.icahdusa.org