| A Review of: The Case for Israel by Nicholas MaesIt is a peculiar feature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that
its history allows for no consensus whatsoever. Perhaps Ben Gurion
believed in the transfer' or forced deportation of Palestinians,
but there is evidence to suggest he embraced the notion of a
bi-cultural state. Perhaps Jews of the Yishuv acquired land from
the natives in a legitimate fashion, although it is possible they
occasionally hustled' them out of their ancestral possessions.
Perhaps the massacre of Palestinians at Deir Yassin in 1948 was due
to a breakdown in communications, except that it may have been an
unspeakable act of state terrorism. Perhaps the Six Day War was a
just pre-emptive strike against the combined armies of Israel's
enemies, unless it was an exercise in militarism and conquest.
Clearly the historical record is still up for grabs.
Because these huge themes in Israeli history are subject to such
doubt and controversy, the definition of state policy is equally
elastic. Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East, except
that it possibly runs roughshod over the civil liberties of its
non-Jewish inhabitants. Its military is strictly governed by the
precept purity of arms' and deploys lethal force only in the most
pressing circumstances, although it appears to shoot Palestinian
children on sight and assassinate terrorist suspects (without due
process) heedless of the collateral damage involved. The Barak-Clinton
peace initiative would have granted the Palestinian Authority control
over 95% of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, the only problem being
(according to detractors) the allotted area was so discontinuous
that it could never have been the framework for a viable state.
Suicide bombers, the security fence, settlement policy, house
demolitions, all of these are subject to an interpretive process
that more often than not ends in outright contradiction.
With such intractability lurking in the background, the many books
that appear on the Israeli question' often assume one side of the
quarrel or the other, and attempt to reconfigure the evidence in
such a way that the opposition will be drummed into submission.
Certainly this is the purpose of The Case for Israel by Harvard law
professor Alan Dershowitz.
Dershowitz's The Case for Israel is composed as a semi-legal defence
of the Jewish state. Dershowitz envisages Israel in the dock of
international justice. In his book he sets out to establish that
Israel is innocent of the more egregious charges brought against
it-racism, war crimes, genocide, etc. According to him, Israel has
succeeded in a number of ways: in safeguarding human rights to a
greater degree than any other country faced with similar threats
to its security and well-being; in minimizing the damage inflicted
on its enemies; in abiding by the rulings of its Supreme Court,
even in times of national crisis. Overall, it is much more sinned
against than sinning. To prove these contentions, Dershowitz poses
thirty-two pointed questions, each of which he answers with some
attention paid to both pro- and anti-Israel sources. Since many of
the questions are historical in tone, A Case for Israel is not only
a defence of Israel's right to exist and to implement measures
necessary to its security, but a history of the state as well,
albeit a choppy one.
Proceeding in chronological order, Dershowitz debates whether Israel
is a colonial, imperialist state; whether the Jews were unwilling
to share Palestine; whether they have exploited the Holocaust;
whether the UN Partition Plan was unfair to Palestinians; whether
the Israeli occupation transpired without justification, and other
controversial issues. In each case, Dershowitz decides in Israel's
favour, while occasionally conceding mistakes have been made and
condemning certain occurrences in the harshest terms (Deir Yassin,
Sabra and Shatila, and Baruch Goldstein's homicidal fury). He views
the establishment of a Palestinian state as desirable and inevitable,
and believes his arguments are consistent with a liberal, civil
libertarian set of values.
As far as the book's historical component is concerned, Dershowitz
faces the same problem as any historian of the region: the basic
facts are so heatedly contested that Dershowitz will succeed in
winning over only readers who are already predisposed to the
pro-Israel interpretation of events. This is not to say that both
camps offer equally viable historical narratives on all occasions.
Dershowitz's argument, for example, that the early waves of Jewish
immigrants to Palestine were by no means part of a colonialist
program is much better grounded than the Muslim contention that
they were. On the other hand, his description of the expanding
Yishuv as an enterprise that was essentially friendly to the
Palestinian fellahin alters the more complicated impression that
the historian Benny Morris creates in his Righteous Victims (a work
Dershowitz draws heavily on). He avoids, too, almost all mention
of Jewish terrorism in the 1930s and (again according to Morris)
Israeli provocations before the Sinai campaign. His treatment of
the War of Independence, the Six Day War, the occupation of the
West Bank and Gaza Strip, while measured and well-documented, will
never convince the hardened Chomskyite that Israel's conduct was
for the most part necessary and restrained.
Dershowitz comes into his element when he discusses more recent
events. He argues forcefully and methodically that Israel has
initiated serious peace talks on numerous occasions (and that
Arafat's rejection of the Clinton-Barak offer was the height of
folly); that Israel is in no way guilty of genocide; that it is by
no means the chief violator of human rights on the globe; that there
is no moral equivalence between Palestinian terrorists and Israeli
reprisals; and that US universities have no solid reason to divest
from Israel. His is not the last word on these disputations-he
underplays the effects of the occupation and the West Bank settlements
on the Palestinians-but his critics can't afford to ignore his
pointed observations and general line of reasoning. At the same
time, instead of reducing complex issues to a simple calculus of
right and wrong, commentators who take the opposite view must grapple
with the difficult questions Dershowitz raises (and which they
pointedly overlook): why do Palestinians send their children into
battle and allow them to be exploited by terrorist organizations
like Hamas; is targeted assassination utterly unacceptable when it
is conducted against guilty individuals who deliberately seek refuge
among a civilian population; isn't the administration of (the former)
Chairman Arafat greatly responsible for Palestinian misery, when
one considers its corruption and involvement in numerous terrorist
attacks; is the wall merely an apartheid structure (assuming it
will not encroach excessively on Palestinian territory) or does it
serve the truly useful purpose of protecting Israelis against
terrorist attacks and therefore dampening the cycle of attack-and-reprisal;
is the UN not unfairly tilted against Israel, given the undue
leverage of its Muslim bloc; and by focussing unduly on the
Palestinian/Israeli conflict, are critics not casting a blind eye
to crises that are far more devastating in effect (the true genocide
in Sudan is one such example)?
Towards the end of his book, Dershowitz attempts to ascertain (a
central preoccupation of The Politics of Anti-Semitism) whether or
not critics of Israel are anti-Semitic. He concludes that criticism
of Israel is both necessary and welcome, but that there is a line
to be drawn between legitimate and illegitimate criticism (he
distinguishes between the two at some length) and proponents of the
latter are indeed anti-Semites, whether they think of themselves
as such or not.
While there is good reason to suspect the intentions of critics-who
hold Israel to a higher standard than other nations, who launch
accusations that cannot be supported with facts, or who view the
Jewish reaction to the Holocaust as an exercise in rapacity and
self-exoneration-whether their motivation is anti-Semitic or not
is possibly irrelevant. In the end it is the soundness of their
arguments that matters. Despite the odd manifestation of bias here
and there, Dershowitz has taken pains to reason with his readership;
he does not try to shout his opponents down (he never engages in
ad hominem attacks) but constructs a rational argument and invites
his critics to prove him wrong.
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