Evacuating Migron: An exercise in futility
09/03/2012 22:21
Borderline Views: The settler movement has succeeded in thwarting the implementation of a clean-cut two-state solution.
Police give eviction notice at Migron caravan Photo: TOVAH LAZAROFF
There are over 300,000 Jewish residents in West Bank settlements. It is, as
Meron Benvenisteso famously wrote ( and was so strongly criticized for writing
by his colleagues on the Left back in the 1980s) an irreversible situation. No
Israeli government, of the Right or the Left, will ever be able to bring about
an evacuation – forceful or otherwise – of so many settlers and their
families.
While the settler movement, spurred on by the Gush Emunim
activists and their national-religious fervor and ideology as far back as the
aftermath of the 1973 Yom Kippur War, may not have succeeded in implementing its
dream of Jewish sovereignty over the entire West Bank, and while it was unable
to prevent the signing of the Oslo Accords in the 1990s, or the evacuation of
Gaza six years ago, has nevertheless succeeded in thwarting the implementation
of a clean-cut two-state solution.
It has achieved this through its
endless political and settlement activity over a period of almost 40 years – and
into the third generation of settler activists, many of whom were born, grew to
adulthood and had their own children as residents of the West Bank (Judea and
Samaria).
It has succeeded in thwarting the idea of a two-state solution
based on a simple demarcation of a border and a clean line of separation between
the territories of independent Israeli and Palestinian states. Even those who
for decades have believed that this is the only just solution for the two
peoples living between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean must surely
realize that what was a realistic territorial solution until about a decade ago,
and what could have ostensibly been implemented in the past, is no longer a
reality, given the dynamic growth of the settler population and the intensity
with which it will resist, en masse, any attempts to implement a mass
evacuation.
So why does it matter anymore if a single outpost in Migron
is evacuated, and fewer than 100 residents of this hilltop sub-community are
forced to leave their homes? Whether Migron is defined as legal or illegal is of
no significance, as is also the case with regard to the many other smaller
communities and outposts which have been set up in close proximity to the larger
Jewish communities and townships during the past decade.
Depending on
one’s own politics, all 300,000-plus residents of the region are illegal
settlers, or they are all entitled to settle throughout the ancient Jewish
heartland of the Land of Israel. But both sides will agree that there is no
fictitious distinction between “legal” or “illegal.”
No amount of
discussion, polemics or speeches in the Knesset is going to bridge the essential
political divide between these opposing positions. And no amount of formal
Knesset decisions to evacuate a small community here or there is going to change
the essential fact that no government of Israel, even backed by the entire army
and police force, will never be able to forcefully remove an entire network of
settlements, towns, schools, factories and public institutions which have even
established over such a long period of time.
The relatively peaceful
evacuation of 5,000 residents of Gush Katif back in 2005 is no precedent for the
evacuation of 300,000 people. The potential for violent opposition, spreading
well beyond the refusal to leave houses, is immense. Spurred on by the younger
radical generations who have gradually taken over the political activism from
their parents during the past five years, and supported – unlike the case of
Gaza – by many tens of thousands of Israelis who do not live in the territories,
serious violence and even fatalities in such a situation is not out of the
question.
A government, any government, faced with the option of a
complete breakdown of the democratic norms of the state, akin to a civil war, as
contrasted with the uncertain benefits of implementing a peace agreement, and
following what is generally perceived as the negative accomplishments of the
Gaza withdrawal and the takeover of the Gaza Strip by Hamas and the continuous
firing of Katyusha rockets into the south of Israel, is no longer going to opt
for the mass evacuation scenario.
While in the past, an Israeli leader
returning from a round of secret negotiations with a peace agreement signed and
sealed could have expected automatic ratification by the Knesset, in the
knowledge that no Israeli parliament would reject the opportunity to implement
such an agreement, this is no longer the case.
That does not mean that
any more or less Israelis are opposed to peace or to settlement evacuation in
principle.
It does mean, however, that a growing number of Israelis are
deeply concerned about the potential implications of witnessing endless
incidents of soldiers confronting settlers and their families, including
thousands of small children, to see the right-wing declaim the state’s
activities as anti-democratic, to see hundreds of religious soldiers refuse to
obey evacuation orders, or to see bulldozers destroy houses, schools and even
synagogues (as happened in Gush Katif) and they have already come to the
conclusion that it is not worth it – besides being impossible.
This view
of affairs is not concerned with the rights of the Palestinians. It is concerned
only with the implications for Israeli society.
So why indeed is it so
important to evacuate Migron? Does the Netanyahu administration honestly believe
that the international community in general, or the US in particular, buy into
the government-led media message that Israel is coming down hard on the
“illegals”? As far as the international community, friends and foes alike, are
concerned, settlement beyond the Green Line remains illegal and constitutes an
obstacle to the implementation of any future peace agreement between Israel and
the Palestinians. The undue investment of time, resources, manpower, media
headlines and discussions in the evacuation of no more than some tens of people
is not seen by the international community as a serious attempt by any Israeli
government to deal with the settlement issue as they believe it should be dealt
with.
It is a futile exercise, both in terms of Israeli domestic politics
as well as its standing within the international community.
Any form of
future peace agreement has to finally move away from the idea of a clean
territorial separation. The notion of two states can still be accomplished, even
if it is no more than the lesser evil, but it requires original and innovative
solutions regarding sovereignty, citizenship and the status of land
ownership.
Ironically, this endangers the status of the Arab-Palestinian
citizens of Israel who could be subject to demands for cross-citizenship within
the Palestinian State, much in the same way as Israelis residing in the West
Bank would demand cross-citizenship of the State of Israel.
Thus, the
notion of sovereignty inside Israel itself would have to undergo change and this
is certainly not an outcome which most residents of Israel would desire. This
form of solution is never one-directional.
Shifting the borders into the
West Bank in one place may have to be compensated with shifting the borders into
Israel at another place, while cross-citizenship of West Bank Jewish residents
within Israel may bring about similar cross-citizenship of Arab- Palestinian
residents of Israel within a Palestinian state.
This will serve to
completely change the traditional ideas of territorial sovereignty within
compact and well-defined areas and territories. If this happens, then the
settler movement will have served to change traditional notions of statehood in
much more significant ways than it ever dreamed, or desired. They will have
strengthened their own desire to remain permanent residents of the West Bank,
while, at the same time, weakening Israeli sovereignty within the accepted
borders of the State of Israel.
The writer is dean of the faculty of
Humanities and Social Sciences at Ben-Gurion University and editor of the
International Journal of Geopolitics, the views expressed are his alone.