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Written by Jonathon Cook via Jewish Peace News Jonathon Cook via Jewish Peace News
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Category: News News
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Published: 30 September 2010 30 September 2010
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Last Updated: 30 September 2010 30 September 2010
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Created: 30 September 2010 30 September 2010
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Rela Mazali and Racheli Gai add:
We'd like to draw special attention to the role of the military and
related "security" outfits, and their connection to the US. The myriad
US companies making a killing off of the occupation have, of course,
inherent interest in keeping it going.
"The ranks of Israel’s career soldiers, and associated security services
such as the Shin Bet secret police, have ballooned during the
occupation.
The demands of controlling another people around the clock justifies
huge budgets, the latest weaponry (much of it paid for by the United
States) and the creation of a powerful class of military bureaucrat.
While teenage conscripts do the dangerous jobs, the army’s senior ranks
retire in their early forties on full pensions, with lengthy second
careers ahead in business or politics. Many also go on to profit from
the burgeoning “homeland security” industries in which Israel excels.
Small specialist companies led by former generals offer a home to
retired soldiers drawing on years of experience running the occupation.
Those who spent their service in the West Bank and Gaza Strip quickly
learn how to apply and refine new technologies for surveillance, crowd
control and urban warfare that find ready markets overseas. In 2006
Israel’s defence exports reached $3.4bn, making the country the fourth
largest arms dealer in the world."
http://www.counterpunch.org/cook09282010.html
Too Heavy a Price for Israeli Elites?
JONATHAN COOK: Reasoning Against Peace / Counter Punch
September 28, 2010
With the resumption of settlement construction in the West Bank
yesterday, Israel’s powerful settler movement hopes that it has scuttled
peace talks with the Palestinians.
It would be misleading, however, to assume that the only major obstacle
to the success of the negotiations is the right-wing political ideology
the settler movement represents. Equally important are deeply entrenched
economic interests shared across Israeli society.
These interests took root more than six decades ago with Israel’s
establishment and have flourished at an ever-accelerating pace since
Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip after the 1967 war.
Even many Israeli Jews living within the recognised borders of Israel
privately acknowledge that they are the beneficiaries of the seizure of
another people’s lands, homes, businesses and bank accounts in 1948.
Most Israelis profit directly from the continuing dispossession of
millions of Palestinian refugees.
Israeli officials assume that the international community will bear the
burden of restitution for the refugees. The problem for Israel’s Jewish
population is that the refugees now living in exile were not the only
ones dispossessed.
The fifth of Israel’s citizens who are Palestinian but survived the
expulsions of 1948 found themselves either transformed into internally
displaced people or the victims of a later land-nationalisation
programme that stripped them of their ancestral property.
Even if Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, signed away the rights
of the refugees, he would have no power to do the same for Israel’s
Palestinian citizens, the so-called Israeli Arabs. Peace, as many
Israelis understand, would open a Pandora’s box of historic land claims
from Palestinian citizens at the expense of Israel’s Jewish citizens.
But the threat to the economic privileges of Israeli Jews would not end
with a reckoning over the injustices caused by the state’s creation. The
occupation of the Palestinian territories after 1967 spawned many other
powerful economic interests opposed to peace.
The most visible constituency are the settlers, who have benefited
hugely from government subsidies and tax breaks designed to encourage
Israelis to relocate to the West Bank. Peace Now estimates that such
benefits alone are worth more than $550 million a year.
Far from being a fringe element, the half a million settlers constitute
nearly a tenth of Israel’s Jewish population and include such prominent
figures as foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman.
Hundreds of businesses serving the settlers are booming in the 60 per
cent of the West Bank, the so-called Area C, that falls under Israel’s
full control. The real estate and construction industries, in
particular, benefit from cut-price land -- and increased profits -- made
available by theft from Palestinian owners.
Other businesses, meanwhile, have moved into Israel’s West Bank
industrial zones, benefiting from cheap Palestinian labour and from
discounted land, tax perks and lax enforcement of environmental
protections.
Much of the tourism industry also depends on Israel’s hold over the holy sites located in occupied East Jerusalem.
This web of interests depends on what Akiva Eldar, of the Haaretz
newspaper, terms “land-laundering” overseen by government ministries,
state institutions and Zionist organisations. These murky transactions
create ample opportunities for corruption that have become a staple for
Israel’s rich and powerful, including, it seems, its prime ministers.
But the benefits of occupation are not restricted to the civilian
population. The most potent pressure group in Israel -- the military --
has much to lose from a peace agreement, too.
The ranks of Israel’s career soldiers, and associated security services
such as the Shin Bet secret police, have ballooned during the
occupation.
The demands of controlling another people around the clock justifies
huge budgets, the latest weaponry (much of it paid for by the United
States) and the creation of a powerful class of military bureaucrat.
While teenage conscripts do the dangerous jobs, the army’s senior ranks
retire in their early forties on full pensions, with lengthy second
careers ahead in business or politics. Many also go on to profit from
the burgeoning “homeland security” industries in which Israel excels.
Small specialist companies led by former generals offer a home to
retired soldiers drawing on years of experience running the occupation.
Those who spent their service in the West Bank and Gaza Strip quickly
learn how to apply and refine new technologies for surveillance, crowd
control and urban warfare that find ready markets overseas. In 2006
Israel’s defence exports reached $3.4bn, making the country the fourth
largest arms dealer in the world.
These groups fear that a peace agreement and Palestinian statehood would
turn Israel overnight into an insignificant Middle Eastern state, one
that would soon be starved of its enormous US subsidies. In addition,
Israel would be forced to right a historic wrong and redirect the
region’s plundered resources, including its land and water, back to
Palestinians, depriving Jews of their established entitlements.
A cost-benefit calculus suggests to most Israeli Jews -- including the
prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu -- that a real solution to their
conflict with the Palestinians might come at too heavy a price to their
own pockets.
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Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Judith Norman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
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