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August 13, 2001,
U.S. Edition

Israel's Best
Plan: Build More Walls
If
the nation continues along its current path, it will eventually face a
demographic disaster.
By
Fareed Zakaria
In
rejecting Ehud Barak's proposals at Camp David, Yasir Arafat did more
than shatter the hopes for peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
He also shattered the Israeli left. For a decade the Labor Party had a
solution to Israel's biggest problem: land for peace. It would give back
much of the land conquered in the 1967 war and get a peace agreement in
return. But the assumption that underlays it--that you could make a deal
with Arafat--is now pretty wobbly. As a result, Israel has few doves left.
About 70 percent of the population supports Ariel Sharon's tough strategy
of reprisals and pre-emptive attacks.
But once you get
past the rhetoric, it becomes clear that the Israeli right has no solutions,
either. The right in Israel held three core positions: first, that there
could never be a Palestinian state (Jordan was the true Palestinian state).
Second, that Arafat and the PLO were not legitimate representatives of
the Palestinian people and could never be negotiating partners. And finally,
that the Jewish settlements in Gaza and on the West Bank would expand
indefinitely. Palestinians in these areas might gain autonomy but never
independence. Remember these mantras? Virtually no Likud politician--not
Bibi Netanyahu, not Ariel Sharon--espouses them today.
Sharon has a solution--counterterrorism--to
address the crisis of the moment. But what then? Some speak of a "big
bang": reoccupying Gaza and the West Bank. But do Israelis really want
to rule, day to day, more than 3 million seething Palestinians? It would
make their current tensions seem trivial. Sharon offers, in effect, the
status quo, with the hope of reduced violence. But to be a strategy and
not a tactic, the current approach must assume that eventually the Palestinians
will crack, that time is on Israel's side. But it isn't.
Two weeks ago one
of Israel's leading demographers, Arnon Sofer of Haifa University, published
a monograph that has received much attention in Israel. Sofer predicts
that by 2020 the area comprising Israel and the occupied territories will
be 58 percent Arab. For Israel, the Palestinian problem is going to get
more difficult with each passing year. Arafat well understands this, which
is why he has often said that his strongest weapon is "the womb of the
Arab woman."
Sofer embraces a
solution that is increasingly being discussed in Israel: unilateral separation.
It has the support, most prominently, of Ehud Barak but also of several
other senior Israeli politicians, on both the right and the left. Sofer
told me that he has briefed Sharon on the topic several times, most recently
two weeks ago. The prime minister asked if he could keep Sofer's maps.
Unilateral separation
would mean walls. Israel would finally define its borders. The Palestinian
Authority would get most of the West Bank and Gaza and could declare an
independent state. Israel would have relations with it but in the guarded
way it does with its other Arab neighbors.
Obviously such a
solution has technical problems--what to do about Jerusalem?--but the
real obstacle is that it has political costs. For Sharon, it means that
the dream of "Greater Israel" is dead. Drawing defensible borders for
Israel would require that about 30,000 Jewish settlers in the West Bank
move.
For Shimon Peres
and many Laborites, separation accepts that peace will remain a tense,
armed truce, not a genuine reconciliation built on economic interdependence.
No new Middle Eastern order.
"It's a counsel
of despair," admits Shlomo Avineri, a distinguished Israeli academic who
was one of the first to float the idea. "But the current situation is
awful. We remain in a neocolonial relationship with the Palestinians,
which forces us to do things that are incompatible with being a democracy.
It coarsens Israeli life, making us all racists. Every time we see an
Arab, we assume he's a terrorist. And it is utterly demeaning for the
Palestinians, who are lined up and searched like cattle every day. We
need to get out of each other's hair."
Separation would
also address the real danger to Israel's democracy: its relationship with
its Arab citizens. Israel's biggest problem is actually not the Arabs
in the occupied territories. It is the 1.2 million Arabs within Israel.
Having been treated as third-class citizens for decades--they face discrimination
in housing, employment, health care and education--they bear a deep grudge
against the Israeli state. But until recently they were reasonably loyal
Israeli citizens. Over the past few years the intifada and Israel's response
to it has radicalized them on behalf of the Palestinian cause. And by
Sofer's calculations, they will constitute 32 percent of Israel in 2020,
most of them of voting age.
Separation would
help cut the cord between Israeli Arabs and the Palestinian cause. One
of their chief reasons for radicalization would end: Israel would no longer
be occupying Arabs against their will. The other--their miserable treatment--is
also something that the Israeli government should end. It may not be enough,
but Israel cannot afford to do less, morally or politically.
If Israel cannot
produce normalcy in its own Arab population, whatever it does with the
Palestinians will be irrelevant. It will find itself having to choose
between being Jewish and being a democracy. This is the real time bomb
ticking within the borders of Israel.
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