David Brooks (Mis)Uses Israeli History to Involve the U.S. in a Cycle of Violence

I left Israel last summer with the awareness that the people there live in misery. I was moved by a friend’s grim summary of the situation: “The Arabs don’t want us here, they just don’t. So we have to accept that there will be one war after another.” One war after another? That’s misery.

David Brooks got the same quote I did, in a column a week ago (September 28) from a “veteran of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.” How long will our war with the Arab world last? “This is forever.”

Surely this is how many (maybe most) Israelis think. But there are two huge problems in parroting these thoughts, as Brooks did, to guide American relations with the Arab world. 1, is the widespread Israeli belief that Israel deserves no share of blame for the 60-year history of violence with “an existential foe,” as Brooks says. It’s simply wrong: “nationalist propaganda,” in the words of Simha Flapan, one of the Israeli “new historians” who have in the last generation transformed historical understanding of the Middle East. 2, and more dangerous, is the conflation issue: Brook’s neoconservative claim that Americans should think about the Arab world as Israelis do “who have more experience with Islamic extremism.” Why? Why must we recapitulate the experience of an ally in the Arab world?

First let’s consider the history of Arab-Israeli violence, and specifically the two wars that Brooks cites as historical examples of dealing with Islamic “extremism”: 1948 and 1967.

If you read the new historians, it is clear that in both wars, the two sides, Israel and the Arab states, had prepared for war. In both cases, Israel was the far stronger side, and won resoundingly—and in winning greatly expanded its territory.

In the first instance, the U.N. had partitioned Palestine in 1947 and called for a Jewish and an Arab state. The Palestinians, and later the Arab neighbors, were determined to stop the creation of a Jewish state. The founders of Israel also were determined to prevent the creation of a Palestinian state. “The essential condition of life in Palestine was one of mutual exclusion,” Shlomo Ben-Ami, the historian and former Foreign Minister, writes in Scars of War, Wounds of Peace. Indeed, the idea of “transfer” or ethnic cleansing of Palestine, was central to the leaders of the new Israeli state. “‘Drive them out!” was Ben-Gurion’s instruction to a leading general at a Palestinian village.

After ’48 Israel wound up with a lot more territory than it had been assigned under partition, and did so by expelling 700,000 Palestinian refugees, many of them fleeing atrocities and massacres—refugees who were not allowed to return to their homes after the war. As Hannah Arendt wrote at the time, “Liberals in all countries were horrified at the callousness, the haughty dismissal of humanitarian considerations by a government whose representatives, only one year ago, had pleaded their own cause on purely humanitarian grounds…”

Note: I’m not saying that the Arabs would not have driven the Jews into the sea if they were able. But they weren’t able, and duly the Arabs were forced off the land, and perceived Israel as an “existential foe.”

In ’67 the evidence from the new historians is that while Israel started the war, preemptively, neither side really wanted a war but both sides practiced brinksmanship, and indeed, the Israeli generals strongarmed their own political leaders to action. Before his death, the hero of that war, General Moshe Dayan admitted that the Israeli army had pressed tractors to plow fields further and further into the demilitarized zone between Israel and Syria so as to bring on hostilities, and allow Israel to capture the Golan Heights (according to Avi Shlaim in his book, The Iron Wall).

Yes the Arab states were hostile to Israel, perhaps even her existence; but consider that of the three states that took Israel on, Egypt and Jordan have since signed peace treaties with Israel, and Syria has repeatedly offered to make a deal with Israel, and Israel has repeatedly rejected these overtures. I count that as one of the big revelations of my trip to Israel last summer: the statement (by David Kimche in the Jerusalem Post) that we don’t make deals with Syria and give up land, because Syria’s too weak. Some way to treat a neighbor with a legitimate beef. Gideon Levy attacked the obdurate Syria policy in Ha’aretz just the other day, saying that Israel has adopted a militarized approach to its neighbors, and would prefer to dominate them rather than have peace. Altogether 22 Arab states have said they would accept Israel’s existence along the borders established, to Israel’s advantage then, after the 1948 war. It is simply not accurate to describe these neighbors as posing an “existential threat” that goes on “forever.” It is self-serving propaganda. Or as Hannah Arendt wrote prophetically in 1950 (the quotes are from Prophets Outcast, from Nation books): “Today the Israeli government speaks of accomplished facts, of Might is Right, of military necessities, of the law of conquest, whereas two years ago, the same people in the Jewish Agency spoke of justice and the desperate needs of the Jewish people.”

Brooks applauds Israel for crushing Arab nationalism in ’67. He does not consider the calamity that followed from that war: the rise of Israeli nationalism. Nationalists, who have never accepted partition of Palestine, but dream of a Jewish state that extends to the river Jordan, have built hundreds of thousands of homes, illegally, in the occupied territories, thereby violating the Geneva Conventions, and have helped to construct an apartheid system, in which a couple of million Arabs are deprived of basic rights, causing enormous resentment across the Arab world, inflaming the murderous Khalid Sheik Muhammed among others. Yes, Israel has real problems from extremist neighbors, now including non-Arabs, like Iran. But many of them it has brought on itself, through a militarized cycle of violence. “The 1967 victory was so overwhelming that Israelis increasingly came to believe that they could live forever without peace,” Simha Flapan writes.

On to point 2. The danger of Brooks’s argument—the neoconservative fallacy, duly imbibed by the neoliberals—is that Americans should look on Israel’s approach to its neighbors as a model for our own relations with the Arab world. “Israel: a country which for fifty years has rested its entire national strategy on preventive wars, disproportionate retaliation, and efforts to redesign the map of the whole Middle East… for the US to imitate Israel wholesale, to import that tiny country’s self-destructive, intemperate response to any hostility or opposition and to make it the leitmotif of American foreign policy: that is simply bizarre.” (Tony Judt)

We’re a pluralistic superpower, not a small ethnically-homogeneous state battling for borders. One of the most creative thinkers about the Middle East, Joshua Landis of the University of Oklahoma, makes the point that many states in the Middle East, including Israel, share attributes: They are new, created by colonialists from another continent drawing lines with rulers on maps; and from Iraq to Syria to Israel, they all have problems with ethnic minorities and militias and borders. Israel’s democratic institutions and freedoms could be a beacon to the entire region, if its militaristic attitudes towards its neighbors, hardened by victories and U.S. military funding, and the lobby here, were not so galling, and had helped perpetuate a cycle of violence. This is the heart of the fallacy of the Israel lobby in the U.S.: the blurring of our interests with a relatively new state in a powderkeg region and the widespread acceptance in our press that because Israel has gone down a blind alley of violence as an answer to its neighborhood, of wars “forever,” as Brooks promotes the policy with such appeal, we must adopt that as our answer, rather than imagining a different way.

About Philip Weiss

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.
Posted in US Policy in the Middle East

{ 17 comments... read them below or add one }

  1. Ramat gan says:

    Fuck you.

    This article is bullshit.

    Make crap up about your own country not other people's county.

    Fuck The Observer, too, for running this garbage.

  2. MAN says:

    THE MAN IS TRYING TO SELL A FICTION TO THE WORLD THAT AREN'T INTERESTED IN ISRAEL AND THE U.S.A.
    AND THAT IS THE WAY I'M LOOKING IT THE ARTICLE.

  3. christine says:

    thank you for your informed, well written observations. Any thought on running for Congress?!

  4. Adam Ramsey says:

    Phil,

    Thank you so much for these great pieces. As an American Jew, I am learning more and more from each article you write. They are incredibly informative and eye-opening.

    This particular one should be developed into a longer and more thorough referenced article and published in a major media outlet. Please work on it.

    Thanks again.

  5. Klaus Bloemker says:

    One question remains, a question I have always wondered about: why would a Jew settle in Israel long after WW II ended. If prospective neighbors hate me so much, I just wouldn't go there.

    Klaus Bloemker
    Frankfurt, Germany

  6. Ramat gan says:

    Observer:

    Is it really worth a few clicks to be publishing this? Is this what your newspaper is about?

  7. mr_dude says:

    Mr Brooks is what is meant as part of the Israeli lobby. Not necessarily telling the US government what to do, but aligning any event that is happening to us with Israel's and persuading us how similar the problems the two countries are facing. With the constant barrage of this kind of persuasion to the American people, they sooner or later come to believe such propaganda. Has the "root cause" issue ever get pushed onto the citizens? by anyone? It is what practically the rest of the world is saying, except in this country.

  8. Susan says:

    Klaus, where do you think Jews should live instead? Maybe they should all go live in Germany. Would they all be welcome? I doubt it. Maybe they could all live in the UK. I was harassed and threatened on the Underground for wearing a Jewish star in London so that would not be a viable option that leaves the US and Israel.

    The Holocaust might have ended, but antisemitism has not. Read Jan Gross's book,
    Fear which is about what happened to Jews in Poland after the Holocaust ended. May be Jews should go back to Russia or Eastern Europe. That seem even less appealing than the UK.

    You also don't know or don't care that about half of all Israeli Jews were refugees or descendents of refugees from Arab or Muslim countries. Amir Peretz was born in Morocco. Moshe Katsav was born in Iran. I have met Israeli Jews from Yemen, Syria, Iran, Iraq Lebanon, Turkey, Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya.

  9. Klaus Bloemker says:

    Susan – some Jews in Frankfurt are actually Israelis who were fed up with Israel and came to Germany because – believe it or not – today they are saver in Germany than in Israel.

    Best regards – Klaus

  10. Susan says:

    Klaus, they are a very tiny minority. They are safe, because they are not visibly marked as Jewish. Would they be as safe, if they wore a kippah, skullcap? Jews who are visibly marked as Jews have been attacked in Germany as well as the UK.

    I realize that I am an American Jew living in the US, but I would choose to live in Israel before I would live in any European country.

  11. Hey says:

    Then there is the mass violence against Jews in France. France has enough problems in stopping Islamist violence against its POLICE, it has no hope of protecting Jews. Jewish schools ban kids from hearing any identifying items off of school grounds, or in a stereotypically jewish (local equivalent to JAP) way.

    Jews are so much safer in Germany. I mean, there are no honour killings, no salafist terrorists, no nazis winning elections, nothing at all to worry about!

    Kushner, fire this sonderkommando!

  12. PeaceThroughJustice says:

    Ahh, the "new anti-Semitism". Why do we always get all these cries of the the "new anti-Semitism" every time Israel commits another round of its atrocities? How many Palestinians must die so that Susan can feel comfortable in her home in Crown Heights? Will Susan EVER feel as comfortable as she feels she truly deserves?

  13. klaus Bloemker says:

    Susan – I of course understand your qualms about Europe (and Germany in particular). But let me tell you this: since 1990 Germany admitted a large number of Russian Jews. To the point that Sharon complained with the German government to stop its liberal immigration criteria – in order to make the Russian Jews come to Israel instead.

    My point is: Israel has become unattractive for Jewish immigration – they rather come to Germany. Isn't that an irony of history – and Zionism?

    Anyway, thank you for resoponding to my comment.

    All the best – Klaus
    Frankfurt, Germany

  14. Susan says:

    Klaus, I more worried about France and the UK than Germany. Jews no longer feel safe being visibly marked as Jews. Kosher restaurants have been attacked. French Jewish schoolchidren's buses have been attacked.

    Klaus, large numbers of French Jews have emigrated to Israel. Apparently, Israel is a attractive place to many Jews.

    PJP, it might surprise you to know, but I don't live in Crown Heights. In live in Center City, Philadelphia.

    I have always supported and continue to support a two-state solution. I think that all the settlements should be knocked down. You cannot dismiss me as a religious fanatic or as a right-winger.

    "How many Palestinians must die so I can feel comfortable in Crown Heights?" That is not a decent response. Yet, you accuse AIPAC and Foxman of stifling debate, but you are much worse. I don't agree with you so I must want Palestinians to die? I have already spent too much time explaining myself.

  15. Tom says:

    Jews on both sides of this issue are primarily concerned with the safety of world Jewry, and give not a whit about the safety of Arabs. This Jewish supremacist mindset is deeply offensive, and has roots that go back thousands of years. It was a Jew (Herzl) who decided that they should "spirit the penniless Arabs out of Palestine" long before any hostilities arose.

  16. Klaus Bloemker says:

    Susan – you are right as far as France is concerned (my sister lives here. I don't konw about Britain). But you probably know that it's the French of Algerian, Maroccan origin who are particularly inflamed by Israel's policies towards their Arab fellows.

    The difference here to Germany is that our main immigration group are Turks who don't care that much about the Palestinians. They are preoccupied with their Kurds.

    On "being visibly marked as a Jew".
    In today's world climate I just wouldn't mark myself as a Jewesses or a Muslim/Arab woman (if I were either). These head scarf women, more often than not, make a political statement rather than a religious one. I would interpret the kippa the same way – it's confrontational political, not religious. Eating in a kosher restaurant – I wouldn't interpret that as political but religious. Attending a school marked "Jewish" – that's, in my view, neither political nor really religious, but cultural-intellectual.

    Anyway – I hope you can wear your Star of David necklace in peace if you happen to come to Germany.

    Best regards – Klaus
    Frankfurt, Germany

  17. Susan says:

    Klaus, the irony is that there are a large number of Jews of Moroccan descent in France.

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