‘Palestine’ in perspective
09/06/2012 16:36
The unflattering comparison that Mitt Romney drew between the accomplishments of Palestinian may have some merit.
Mitt Romney delivers speech in Jerusalem Photo: Jason Reed / Reuters
“A Newsweek investigation reveals abuses at almost every level of the
Palestinian Authority. Many top ministers staff their offices with
cronies, dole out valuable contracts without oversight and create their own
monopolies, which crush competition and drive up prices paid by hard-pressed
consumers. The courts are powerless... 14 separate police forces enforce the
whims of PA officials rather than laws aimed at protecting ordinary
Palestinians.” – Newsweek International, June 19, 2000
“If you trawl through
comparative global economic and social statistics, it is not difficult to paint
a bleak picture of Arab failure, based on a broad pattern of underperformance in
investment, productivity, trade, education, social development and even culture
[sic]. The total manufacturing exports of the entire Arab world have recently
been below those of the Philippines (with less than one-third the population) or
Israel (with a population not much bigger than Riyadh’s” – The Economist, July
23, 2009
In a recent Washington Post op-ed, entitled “The Palestine Romney
doesn’t know,” Zahi Khouri – who identified himself as a proud
American/hardworking businessman/job creator/faithful Christian/Palestinian –
took serious umbrage at the unflattering comparison that Mitt Romney, on his
recent visit to Jerusalem, drew between the accomplishments of Palestinian
society relative to those of Israeli society.
The most charitable way to
characterize his attempt to contradict Romney’s assertion would be to dub it
“highly partisan.”
Indeed, whether the result of deliberate distortion or
innocent ignorance, the entire article was a gross misrepresentation of facts,
both past and present.
Gross misrepresentation of facts
THE WEAKNESS of Khouri’s arguments is apparent
from the very outset. He launches into his endeavor to invalidate the
foundations of Israel’s achievement, which has placed the country on the cutting
edge of human endeavor in science and technology in fields as diverse as
medicine, telecommunications, irrigation and water treatment, by trying to
belittle its contribution to... citrus farming.
So while Khouri is
correct that the Jaffa orange (also known as the “shamouti”) was developed
originally by Arab farmers, his allegation that the prestige of the Jaffa brand
has been “expropriated” by the Jews seems somewhat inappropriate.
In his
“Report on Immigration, Land Settlement and Development” in Palestine (1930),
compiled for the British authorities – a document in no way sympathetic to the
Zionist enterprise – Sir John Hope-Simpson wrote the following on the topic of
the “Origin of orange cultivation”: “The cultivation of the orange, introduced
by the Arabs before the commencement of Jewish settlement, has developed to a
very great extent in consequence of that settlement. There is no doubt that the
pitch of perfection to which the technique of plantation and cultivation of the
orange and grapefruit have been brought in Palestine is due to the scientific
methods of the Jewish agriculturist.”
Clearly then, although it seems
that citrus growing was originated by the Arabs, it was the Jews who developed
it into a major industry.
So even if Khouri’s claim that “Jaffa oranges
are a Palestinian [read “Arab”], not Israeli [read “Jewish”], trademark” has a
smattering of historical truth to it, we are still left to puzzle over why other
Arab countries on the eastern Mediterranean coast – such as Lebanon and Syria –
where Jaffa oranges are grown, never developed the industry in the same way as
the Israelis did.
The heritage of humous
ALMOST COMICALLY, Khouri tries to attribute an absurd
misconception to Romney, of which he then tries to disabuse him. He accuses
Romney of being “duped into thinking that oranges, falafel and humous – staples
of Palestinian cuisine for generations – are Israeli products.”
It is
difficult to know what is more staggering: whether Khouri actually believes
Romney’s praise for Israel’s achievement is predicated on his misconception of
the true origins of unscrupulously plundered recipes for the preparation of
chickpeas (falafel and humous); or whether he believes that said recipes somehow
prove that Palestinian accomplishment is comparable to that of Israel in, among
other things, computer sciences, electronics, genetics, medical equipment and
drugs, optics, solar energy, bio-technology, aeronautics, agriculture and
agricultural engineering.
With all due respect to humous, is this what
Khouri is really raising as the flagship of Palestinian enterprise?
Attributing agriculture acumen
INDEED, THE
choice of agriculture seems an injudicious choice of activity by which to try
and illustrate Israeli-Palestinian parity.
Sir John Hope-Simpson again,
on agricultural development in Mandatory Palestine: “The condition of the Arab
fellah [farmer] is little if at all superior to what it was under the Turkish
regime.
No definite policy of agricultural development of the country
held by the Arabs has been adopted.”
By contrast, he reported that: “The
sole agencies which have pursued such a consistent policy have been the Jewish
[ones], public and private. With this exception agricultural progress of any
kind has been haphazard and of small extent or value. The Jewish settlers have
had every advantage that capital, science and organization could give
them.
To these and to the energy of the settlers themselves their
remarkable progress is due.”
Over half a century later, and after three
decades of allegedly oppressive Jewish “imposed hindrances,” the agricultural
activities of the Palestinians had been transformed dramatically. In his largely
Arabophilic treatise on the hydrology of the Middle East, Rivers of Eden (Oxford
University Press), acclaimed agricultural expert and 2012 World Food Prize
laureate Dan Hillel describes this metamorphosis: “The Israeli occupation
changed local agriculture profoundly. It introduced modern technology, including
mechanization, precision tillage, pest control, plastic covering of crops for
temperature control, high yielding varieties, postharvest processing of produce,
marketing, and export outlets. It also introduced efficient methods of
irrigation, including sprinkler and especially drip irrigation. Consequently,
output increased greatly, and farming was transformed from a subsistence
enterprise to a commercial industry.”
Indeed, up to the signing of the
Oslo agreements, the area of land under cultivation by the Palestinian Arabs
more than doubled under “Israel oppression,” and the agricultural output
increased 12-fold!
'Occupation' and education
KHOURI GOES on to make the following breathtaking contention:
“Ask our fellow Arabs in Lebanon, Jordan or elsewhere in the Persian Gulf region
and they will tell you: Palestinian culture, with its premium on education and
hard work, has been a force for hope, development and
prosperity.”
Premium on education? Really? Virtually the entire system of
higher education in the “West Bank” and Gaza was created post-“occupation.”
Indeed, prior to “occupation,” there were no institutions of higher learning of
any significance in the “West Bank” or Gaza (including Bir Zeit, which was
originally established in 1924 as a girls’ school but only attained full
university status in the 1970s), leaving us to ponder how this professed
Palestinian “premium on education” expressed itself.
“Palestinian
culture... a force for hope, development and prosperity”? I guess Khouri must
have missed the 2011 piece entitled “The Palestinians’ Long Wait in Lebanon” in
The New York Times – hardly a Zionist mouthpiece – on the plight of the
Palestinians in that country.
It describes the fierce discrimination,
dubbed by one Arab journalist as “apartheid,” that has left the Palestinians in
dire poverty and resulted in crushing unemployment – over 60% of the
workforce.
He probably didn’t spot the determination of the immigration
judge cited in Ahmed v. Ashcroft (Third Circuit, US Appeals Court) which
specified “Palestinians in Saudi Arabia are relegated to officially sanctioned
second-class status incorporated into the legal and social structure of Saudi
Arabia.”
Likewise, the polls that show that the majority of the
Palestinians resident in the Arab world would like to acquire the citizenship of
their county of residence must have escaped his attention, as apparently did the
Los Angeles Times interview (January 4, 2004) with Arab League spokesman Hisham
Youssef.
In it, Youssef unabashedly declared that the Palestinians’
“fellow Arabs” were deliberately prohibiting them from attaining the citizenship
they desired and keeping them “in very bad conditions” – read “penury and
privation” – so as to “to preserve their Palestinian identity.”
So it
would seem that the Palestinians’ “fellow Arabs” express their view of the
Palestinians as “a force for hope… and prosperity” by holding them in a state of
despair and destitution. Go figure.
Christians under Palestinian culture
AS A “faithful Christian” he seems
curiously unaware of – or unconcerned by – the ravages his co-religionists have
been forced to endure under “Palestinian culture.”
While Israel is the
only Middle Eastern country where the Christian population has increased (over
four-fold since independence) it has been drastically eroded in the
Palestinian-administrated areas. A recent report in The Guardian (December 23,
2011) reported that in Gaza celebrating Christmas and displaying crucifixes are
taboo, and described how the remnants of the minuscule Christian population live
in constant fear.
But such harassment has not been confined to the
Hamas-dominated Gaza. Indeed, shortly after the commencement of the Palestinian
Authority’s rule, The Times of London (“Tensions darken festive mood in
Bethlehem” – December 22, 1997) wrote of the dire predicament of the Christians
under that regime: “Life in Bethlehem has become insufferable for many members
of the dwindling Christian minorities. Increasing Muslim-Christian tensions have
left some Christians reluctant to celebrate Christmas in the town at the heart
of the story of Christ’s birth.”
The paper cited reports that
“[Christian] cemeteries have been destroyed, monasteries broken into, and their
telephone lines disconnected.” It conveyed the grave concern expressed by Dr.
George Carey, then archbishop of Canterbury, who “said after a visit to the Holy
Land in 1993: ‘My fear is that in 15 years Jerusalem [and] Bethlehem – once
centres of a strong Christian presence – might become a kind of Walt Disney
Christian theme park.’”
If not culture – then what?
KHOURI’S PENCHANT for self-aggrandizement exposes his
lack of perception and proportion. He boasts: “I returned to Palestine in 1993
to launch the first Coca- Cola bottling plant in the West Bank. It was granted a
Best Country Bottling Operation award in May by Coca-Cola, a testament to my
colleagues’ ingenuity and determination.”
While Khouri should be
commended on his success, a plant for topping up bottles of foreign-sourced soft
drink, however well-run, is – with all due respect – hardly a staggering
industrial achievement in the second decade of the 21st century. Not really on
the cusp of creative advancement.
Is Khouri really suggesting it is
somehow indicative of the comparable energy and enterprise that launched leading
industrial giants such as Teva, Elbit, Checkpoint, Israel Aerospace Industries –
to name but a few examples of Israeli entrepreneurship? There are, of course,
refined, erudite and capable Palestinians and Khouri is – in all likelihood –
one of them. But sadly, these manifestations of individual competence and acumen
do not seem to translate into societal success – either within the Palestinian
world, or in the wider Arab world of which they claim they are
part.
Indeed, as Tom Friedman pointed out in a rare moment of
intellectual integrity, “One reason the Arab world has stagnated while Asia has
thrived is that the Arabs had no good local models to follow.” (New York Times,
April 3, 2012).
This is a point driven home by The Economist, which notes
that: “From 1980 to 2000 Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates,
Syria and Jordan between them registered 367 patents in the United
States.
Over the same period South Korea alone registered 16,328 and
Israel 7,652. The number of books translated into Arabic every year in the
entire Arab world is one-fifth the number translated by Greece into
Greek.”
It is of course, not immediately obvious how one could compile a
compelling case to attribute such dismal culture-wide under-achievement to
“Israel’s imposed hindrances.”
A culture of denial?
KHOURI’S VENOM verges on the ludicrous
when he snipes spitefully: “Israel did not make the desert bloom.” After all,
even the briefest visit to the inhospitably arid regions of the Arava and Negev
would suffice to repudiate Khouri’s mendacious malice.
It would reveal
not only tens of thousands of hectares of extensive dry farming, producing tens
of thousands of metric tons of grain, but also modern, cutting-edge greenhouses
and the flourishing, innovatively irrigated orchards that yield impressive
quantities of some of world’s finest horticulture produce – most for export
markets in the West.
Deserts, Mr. Khouri, don’t come much more blooming
than that.
But resolutely impervious to readily visible fact, Khouri
brings the non sequitur to rarely attained levels when he appears – inexplicably
– to attribute the astounding – and globally acknowledged – success of Israeli
agriculture “to a deal struck with the British viceroys of Mandate Palestine”
almost seven decades ago.
Grudgingly, Khouri admits that “Israelis far
outdo Palestinians in net wealth. In fact, [Romney’s] estimates of the disparity
were too conservative: Israel’s per capita gross domestic product is roughly
$32,000 to the Palestinians’ $1,500.”
He goes on to observe, correctly,
that “Remarkably, that $1,500 figure is roughly half of what Palestinians
claimed in 1993, when the Oslo accords were signed” but then, somewhat
discordantly as “a proud American,” gripes that “the US-sponsored peace process
has made us poorer.”
This of course is a baseless grievance that flies in
the face of facts. For in fact the US had no hand in brokering the Oslo deal,
which was the unfortunate product of direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations –
although later it did contribute generously to Palestinian coffers in a vain
effort to help it succeed – somehow making Palestinians poorer.
So while
it is indeed true that Palestinians did fare far better under Israeli
“occupation” than under their own corrupt, cruel and less-than-competent regime,
this is attributable – exclusively – to their own deeds and misdeeds; to what
they did and to what they did not do.
But rather than recognize
Palestinian responsibility for the Palestinians’ plight, Khouri typically adopts
the well-known Palestinian stratagem of blaming everyone and anyone – the
British, the US the Israelis – except themselves for their own unenviable
plight.
Water-the dry facts
ONE OF the most galling allegations that Khouri hurls is that
Palestinians are being deprived of water by Israel.
On the contrary, the
Palestinians’ hydrological situation has improved beyond all recognition under
Israeli administration, not only in absolute terms compared to initial
pre-“occupation” conditions, but in relative terms compared to that of
Israelis.
Whether one focuses on overall consumption of fresh water; per
capita consumption of fresh water; consumption of fresh water relative to
Israelis; accessibility of running water to households; the area under
agricultural cultivation; or the size of the agricultural product, the
conditions for the Palestinians were dramatically enhanced by Israeli
rule.
Moreover, from 1967 to the years just before Oslo, Palestinian
household consumption of water rose precipitously – by almost 600%,
significantly higher than the 230% rise in Israel.
Similarly, water
conveyance to households also increased impressively. Whereas in 1967 only 10%
of the “West Bank” Arab population was connected to a running water system, the
figure today stands at 95%. So much for discriminatory deprivation! As
mentioned, Palestinian agricultural performance improved spectacularly as well –
both in terms of area cultivated and quantities produced, even though water
allocations were not increased. (Significantly, in recent years Israeli farmers
have had their freshwater allocations slashed by 50% and more.)
Demand not discrimination
KHOURI COMPLAINS
that “[i]n the West Bank, for example, Israeli settlers consume on average 4.3
times the amount of water as Palestinians.”
However, he fails to mention
that Israel conveys more water from inside the pre- 1967 borders into the “West
Bank” than the total consumption of the entire Jewish population in the
settlements across the “Green Line.” In other words, there is a net inflow of
water from pre-1967 Israel to the Palestinians, which more than compensates for
the settlers’ sorely maligned lawns and swimming pools.
Indeed, while
claims that per-capita consumption of water by Israelis is much higher than that
of the Palestinian population are true, this is principally a result of
differences in demand – not supply – because of differences in lifestyles.
(Clearly, the fact that a millionaire in an opulent penthouse in Manhattan will
use far less water than an equally affluent owner of a sprawling estate in Bel
Air is not a matter of discriminatory deprivation.) Significantly different
rates of consumption are found between the Jewish and Arab populations within
pre-1967 Israel – and between different socio-economic groups within the Jewish
population – without anyone raising the claim that this is the result of
purposeful deprivation.
Interestingly, per-capita consumption in the
frequently vilified settlement of Kiryat Arba is 25% lower than in the Beduin
city of Rahat – and 90% lower than in up-market Savyon. What perverse
discrimination does that indicate?
“Imagine our potential without Israel’s hindrances…”
ACCORDING TO Khouri: “Palestinian development
of all kinds is severely hindered by the Israeli occupation.” In fact, it soared
under Israeli administration and wilted under Palestinian rule.
He
continues, “Yet Palestinians have not given up. Palestine has one of the highest
literacy rates in the Arab world” – forgetting to note that is was under Israeli
administration that literacy rose precipitously.
He claims that “Our
youth continue to graduate from our universities” but fails to mention that none
of these existed prior to 1967.
He crows that Palestinians are “opening
businesses and gaining skills. Our private sector innovates and grows” – when in
fact, despite massive international aid – among the highest per capita in the
world – the Palestinian economy is still unsustainable, comprised mainly of a
bloated public sector and a minuscule private one, generating a GDP dramatically
lower than disposable income.
He concludes his duplicitous diatribe with
the following words: “If Romney had any historical perspective, he would dispose
of his racist judgments about Palestinian culture and instead imagine our
potential without Israel’s imposed hindrances.”
Apart from the fact that
Romney of course never made any reference to race, but rather to culture, there
is really no need for him to imagine how a Palestinian-dominant society would
fare “without Israel’s imposed hindrances.” All he needs to do is look at
Jordan, where the Palestinians comprise a clear majority, and at the performance
of the Jordanian economy, which is manifestly unencumbered by “Israel’s imposed
hindrances.”
What he would find is a GDP per capita barely one eighth
that of Israel’s – hardly something that helps Khouri make his case.
It
does, however, help Romney make his.
Martin Sherman
(www.martinsherman.net) is the founder and executive director of the Israel
Institute for Strategic Studies.