Sunday, June 13, 2010

Daniel Levy: A glimpse of the future

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/a-glimpse-of-the-future-1.295524

*A glimpse of the future *

"The game is up. It cannot be reversed by doubling PR budgets or endlessly
cloning Shimon Peres or even Mark Regev. It cannot be reversed by allowing
coriander into Gaza, by another photo-op with our friend President Mubarak,
or even by enthusiastically supporting the creation of a new Palestinian
town (ship ) in Rawabi. An occupation that just entered its 44th year and
entails denying basic rights to millions of Palestinians can no longer be
sanitized. As long as Israel maintains that occupation, the costs will
become increasingly burdensome."

By Daniel Levy
Haaretz: 11.06.10


Israelis might consider sending thank-you bouquets today to the national
soccer teams of Switzerland and Greece. It is thanks to them that Israelis
will have to choose between getting behind Brazil, England, Ghana or
whomever, as the World Cup kicks off.

Of course, it would be nice to wrap ourselves in blue and white, and cheer
on the likes of Yossi, Guy and Ben. But on this occasion, one should
probably be thankful that we didn't make it. Hence, those flowers.

There were large demonstrations in Cape Town last week following the Mavi
Marmara incident. For now, South Africa has recalled its ambassador, Ismail
Coovadia, from Israel. An Israeli presence at this greatest of global
sporting spectacles would have been guaranteed to attract an unrelenting
wave of protests, PR stunts and bad publicity.

Unfortunately, South Africa is not the outlier - Israel is. In the days
since Operation Sky Winds, Israel has been able to get a glimpse of the
future and into the abyss that awaits if we continue on our current course.
It is a future replete with both insecurity and the indignity of global
opprobrium and sanctions.

Even or perhaps especially in our hyper-connected world, it seems only a
finite number of truly global causes can be sustained at any one time.

Palestine is now irrefutably on that list. That is certainly inconvenient
for Israel and maybe unfair. We do, though, appear to be locked into a
dramatic acceleration of this phenomenon and - in the absence of something
resembling a credible peace or de-occupation effort - the global Palestinian
solidarity movement is now competing to set the agenda.

In the last two weeks alone, two of Italy's largest supermarket chains have
stopped carrying Israeli products; Swedish dockworkers have refused to
unload goods from Israeli ships; Britain's largest trade union, Unite,
unanimously voted to boycott Israeli items; and Elvis Costello and the
Pixies have both canceled shows in Israel. Meanwhile, the latest debate
raging in the United States is over how much of a strategic burden Israel
has become.

The logic of the kind of unarmed resistance represented by flotillas to Gaza
is to shine a light on the wrongdoings of an offending party. Ideally, one
will succeed in appealing to the better nature, to the humanity, of the
offending party, and its behavior (in this case, the blockade on Gaza ) will
be corrected. If not, then one may seek to shame that party in the court of
global public opinion. Any over-reaction or additional offensive behavior
will only serve to strengthen the case of the light-shiner and "prove" the
original premise of wrongdoing.

In this instance, Israel's leadership played its role with Lionel Messi-like
perfection. It's true that Israel's official PR response was ill-conceived,
while its "army" of citizen advocates indulged in the use of racist
stereotypes on YouTube videos, doing more harm than good. But Israel's
predicament goes far deeper than the embarrassment of having Avigdor
Lieberman head this country's diplomatic corps: It has become structural and
therefore far more worrying. The gap between Israel's self-perception and
global perceptions of the country has taken on Grand Canyon-like
proportions.

In short, the game is up. This is not defeatism - it's an acknowledgment of
a reality that, by ignoring, causes Israel to imperil itself. It cannot be
reversed by doubling PR budgets or endlessly cloning Shimon Peres or even
Mark Regev. It cannot be reversed by allowing coriander into Gaza, by
another photo-op with our friend President Mubarak, or even by
enthusiastically supporting the creation of a new Palestinian town (ship )
in Rawabi. An occupation that just entered its 44th year and entails denying
basic rights to millions of Palestinians can no longer be sanitized. As long
as Israel maintains that occupation, the costs will become increasingly
burdensome.

Having lost the world, Israel's focus turns in on itself. The country's
leadership has to work harder to keep its own public on board for the
occupation project. This requires a growing suppression of dissent, further
ostracizing Israel's Palestinian minority, and ever-more aggressive appeals
to Jewish national pride. Democratic norms are thereby eroded, further
feeding the tarnishing of Israel's image. This is the vicious cycle in which
Israel is embroiled.

It is true that there will almost certainly always be unjustified prejudice
toward Israel. Whatever it does, some people will always be out to get us.
But prejudice is not what motivates the vast majority of those mobilizing in
solidarity with the Palestinians. The occupation is the oxygen of their
campaign, and the vast majority seek an end to it - not to Israel itself. An
Israel that fails to appreciate this and which sustains the occupation is
the single most proximate cause of its own delegitimization.

It is still in our power, however, to change all of this. We can end the
1967 occupation in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights and its
remnants in Gaza, and achieve recognition for minor border modifications to
the '67 line with one-for-one land swaps and support for reasonable
arrangements on security. Israel could implement such a de-occupation with
the Palestinians and Arab states directly, or with the U.S. and the Quartet
- and have them deliver the Palestinian and Arab side of the bargain.

But if Israel does not take the lead, then let us at least hope that our
remaining friends in the world will step forward with their own proposals
and that we in turn will have the wisdom to say yes to them.

Enjoy the World Cup, and let's look forward to Israel's qualification in
2014 being all about soccer and blissfully devoid of politics.

Daniel Levy is a senior fellow at the New America Foundation and editor of
the Middle East Channel at foreignpolicy.com
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