Dishonest Broker: The U.S. Role in Israel and Palestine
by Nasser Aruri
South End Press: Cambridge MA, 2003,
265 pp.
This book is about the so called "peace process" in the Middle East since
1967. It is a revised and updated version of an earlier book, "The
Obstruction of Peace: The United States, Israel, and Palestine," and
includes material right up to the end of 2002. As such it is very useful
not only as an introduction to the topic--especially for readers too young
to remember Gerald Ford, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Alexander Haig etc.--but also
as a guide to current events. Lenin mocked idealist philosophers of his day
for muddling the issues by putting new window-dressing on 300-year-old
failed ideas. We can say the same about every one of the U.$.-backed
"peace" initiatives, from Carter's Camp David to Bush's Road Map. Watching
the evening news after reading Dishonest Broker can lead to some serious
deja vu.
As its name implies, Dishonest Broker debunks the pretense that the
United $tates acts as an independent, neutral peacemaker in the Middle
East. In fact, United $tates' leaders have publicly admitted they support
I$rael as a defender of Amerikan interests in the region. "[Israel ] is a
force in the Middle East that actually is a benefit to us," then-President
Ronald Reagan said in 1981. "If there were not I$rael there with that
force, we'd have to supply that with our own, so this isn't just altruism
on our part" (p. 39). Reagan was just reiterating the strategy laid down in
the Nixon-Kissinger Doctrine (ca. 1970), which placed the Amerikan "hose
and water" in the hands of I$raeli "fireman" (p. 20). Or, as a spokesman
for the I$raeli foreign office smugly put it: "The United States has come
to the conclusion that it can no longer respond to every incident around
the world, that it must rely on a local power, the deterrent of a friendly
power as a first line of defense to stave off American intervention. Israel
feels it fits this definition" (p. 19).
Because of its support for I$rael as a proxy force against independent Arab
nationalist forces, the United $tates has continually sided with I$rael on
fundamental issues. A partial list:
* Despite occasional mutterings from the White House that new I$raeli
settlements on Palestinian territory are "not helpful," the United $tates
has encouraged continued settlement. The settler population has doubled
since the beginning of Oslo "peace process," while the U.$. government
relaxed restrictions on Amerikan aid going to building settlements and did
nothing about tax-exempt private subsidies (p.xiii).
* Despite rhetoric of "evenhandedness" and "reciprocity," the United $tates
hypocritically upholds I$rael's "right to self-defense" while denying the
Palestinians the same right (much the same way it applies this double
standard to itself, reserving the right to pre-emptive strike while
justifying the invasion of Iraq--or the bombing of a pharmaceutical plant
in Sudan etc.--on the grounds that others are thinking about maybe
producing some weapons long standard in the Amerikan arsenal). While I$rael
received $80-$90 billion in U.$. aid from 1948 to 2000, and continues to
receive more than $5 billion yearly--much of it in the form of Apache
helicopters and jet technology used to bomb heavily populated civilian
areas--the Wye River Agreement (to take one example) placed restrictions on
Palestinian "possession, manufacture, or importing of weapons" (p.121; see
also MIM Notes 252). While I$rael supplies settlers with arms then used in
provocative attacks against Palestinians--which clearly violates numerous
U.$.-brokered agreements but has elicited no response from the United
$tates--I$rael has repeatedly occupied and razed towns in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip on the pretext that the Palestinian Authority has not cracked
down on "terrorists" (pp.119-122).
* Despite claims that the Oslo "peace process" put off "final status
issues" such as the sovereignty of Jerusalem, no challenge to the status
quo of I$raeli domination can survive long in the Amerikan political scene.
When the elder George Bush said Jerusalem would be included in a settlement
ban (1990), which was consistent with official U.$. policy, Republicans and
Democrats (1) denounced Bush, accusing him of undermining the "peace
process." Congress passed a resolution stating that "Jerusalem is and
should remain the capital of I$rael& [and] must remain an undivided city"
(pp. 128-135).
Aruri correctly argues throughout the book that the reason for setting
aside fundamental "final status issues" was to ensure their de facto
resolution in favor of I$rael. He quotes an advisor to I$raeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin: "The intention all along was for the interim
agreement to be very near the final settlement" (p. xv).
As mentioned above, reading Dishonest Broker sheds light on a lot of
contemporary "reporting" and "debate" in the bourgeois press. We'll close
this review by highlighting two examples.
"Blame it on Arafat." Apologists for Zionist colonialism often
excuse I$rael of any culpability for Palestinian suffering by pointing to
Arab leaders' own duplicity, vacillation, thuggishness, etc. "Jordan
illegally annexed portions of the West Bank in 1949," they say ( as did
I$rael, a fact these blowhards never mention). "Arab states do not grant
resident Palestinians their rights" (ignoring why so many Palestinians are
in exile). "Arafat is corrupt and anti-democratic."
Aside from the fact that the sins of Arab leaders do not absolve I$rael,
which bears principal responsibility for Palestinian dispossession, these
"arguments" ignore I$raeli and Amerikan complicity in keeping this kind of
sell-out, neocolonial leadership in power. So you say there's no secular
opposition in Arab countries, Mr. State Department Intellectual? You should
have thought of that when you backed the Shah of Iran, the Saudi Monarchy,
Egypt's Sadat, etc.
Arafat is a clear, almost farcical example of this. From the beginning of
the Oslo "Peace Process," Arafat and the Palestinian Authority have been
dependent on the United $tates and I$rael for power and international
prestige. Aruri points out that before Oslo, "Arafat had become, together
with his organization, increasingly irrelevant... The stark choice before
him was either to be involved in the 'peace process' or to risk being
bypassed altogether" (p. 84). The Palestinian Authority has no real
authority to control its own economy or security. It has at best the
trappings of statehood--and often not even those, as it cannot issue its
own passports or currency (pp. 95-96).
This situation took a particularly ridiculous turn in the younger Bush's
much-heralded June 2002 speech on Palestine. "Bush's speech called on the
Palestinians, who were trapped in their homes for weeks and months under
prolonged [I$rael-imposed] curfews, to change their leaders and 'build a
practicing democracy,' & to conduct 'multiparty elections by the end of the
year' & and of course to stop terrorism. Even the New York Times remarked
on June 25, 2002: 'How the Palestinians can be expected to carry out
elections or reform themselves while in a total lockdown by the I$raeli
military remains something of a mystery'" (p. 207).
Throughout the book, Aruri makes the correct point that the United $tates
and I$rael have consistently undermined internationalist forces in the
Middle East while promoting narrow nationalists (see e.g. pp. 51-59).
The United $tates and I$rael after the cold war. The common wisdom
after the collapse of the Soviet Union was that I$rael would be less
important to the United $tates' geopolitical plans. Aruri shows that this
has proven empirically incorrect: I$rael and the United $tates are as close
if not closer than before. He gives several important reason why: first,
the United $tates interests in the region have not fundamentally changed;
second, I$rael has continued to do an effective job of selling itself to do
Amerika's dirty work. This includes serving as a laboratory for Amerikan
"anti-terror" tactics (p. 47).
The kernel of truth in the common wisdom is that there is nothing unique
about I$rael marketing itself as a thug--contrary to anti-Semitic
demagogues who say I$rael runs the U.$. government. Pakistan for example is
angling to trade its help fighting Al Qaeda for U.$. support in its
conflict with India.(2) This is a problem built in to imperialism: major
powers look to defend their interests by any means necessary, while
bourgeois nationalists from smaller countries look to cut deals with the
major powers to their benefit and to the detriment of their neighbors.
Notes:
1. Including George Mitchell, later chair of the "evenhanded" Mitchell
Commission (pp. 181-184).
2. MIM Notes 260, 15 June 2002.
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