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Israel's Occupation, by Neve Gordon
A Book Review By Jim Miles
University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 2008.
ccun.org, February 19, 2009
There are many sources of information from websites through
newspapers to books that carry significant referenced information about the
history and context of the Israel/Palestine problem that, with the support
of the U.S. government and the ambitions of the Israelis, has become a
global problem. There is much material that accounts for the misery
and suffering and imposition of a military regime on an occupied territory,
and it all supports the general idea of an occupied people suffering under
the power of an invading military. Now added to this relatively
strong list of materials is Israel’s Occupation, a book that is so well
written and presented that it provides a captivating and amazingly powerful
read. It is one that I would describe as a ‘must read’ for anyone –
from those already knowledgeable about the situation, to those who are
relative newcomers. Neve Gordon’s description, analysis, and examples
are clear, concise, and authoritative (most from Israeli sources). His
arguments and perspectives are fully supported and well sequenced.
While I hesitate to describe any purely academic work as captivating, this
work fits. It develops several themes about the occupation that keep
recurring, with alterations, as it develops the history of the occupation
from 1967 to the present. First is the theme that the occupation is
both temporary and arbitrary. Not that the occupation is temporary,
but the means employed to control the population are fully temporary and
arbitrary. Control of the population is another ongoing theme, as the
Israelis desired a “land without people for a people without land” and
therefore perpetuated this idea through these arbitrary controls on the
population, while at the same time using that control to confiscate and
annex Palestinian land, piece by piece, through quasi legal means. The
third theme is of excesses and contradictions that ties into the arbitrary
and temporary theme. For all that Israel tried to do to control the
population, to “normalize” the situation, the built in contradictions of
their actions and the excesses they went to in order to create this
similitude of normalcy, all created more and more problems that in turn
created further actions with contradictions and excesses.
Homo sacer Ultimately, Israel simply does not care about the
Palestinian people. At first normalizing meant trying to keep the population
relatively pacified, divided, and comfortable while extracting the most
utility from them as a labour resource and market for Israeli goods, while
investing as little as possible into Palestinian infrastructure. As
explored by Gordon, this changes to the point where at the end – the ‘now’
of Gaza – the people have become fully disposable to the violence that the
Israeli military is ready, willing, and able to use against the Palestinians
– and the Lebanese, and others in the perhaps not so distant future - in
order to secure the land and resources of Eretz Israel and its near frontier
hinterland consisting of compliant and complacent Arab states.
What has recently happened in Gaza is the culmination of Israel’s forty year
history of occupation, the end result of many “excesses and contradictions”,
the end result of all its failed attempts to control the population at the
same time that it acquires more and more land. The violent attacks
“are…an effect of other significant changes that have taken place of the
years,” and signal “Israel’s efforts to normalize the occupation have
failed.” The Palestinians have become homo sacer, people outside the
law, without recourse to law, who may be killed at any time. At
first, the population was controlled by “sustaining some form of security,
while currently it controls the occupied inhabitants by producing endemic
security.” That in itself places a frightening prospect on what the
future will look like for the Palestinians of both the West Bank and Gaza.
Control In the “Introduction” Gordon claims that the above
changes “were and continue to be an outcome of the daily practices
characterizing life under occupation.” He defines control as
not only the coercive mechanisms used to prohibit, exclude, and repress
people, but rather the entire array of institutions, legal devices,
bureaucratic apparatuses, social practices, and physical edifices that
operate both on the individual and the population in order to produce new
modes of behavior, habits, interests, tastes, and aspirations. As
the reader works further and further into the work it becomes obvious that
there is not a single element of physical space or
intellectual/emotional/social space that is not under some form of control
mechanism. Gordon develops the idea that “most of the coercive
measures used in the West Bank and Gaza Strip during the first years of the
occupation were still in use four decades later.” This control is
maintained by various “modes of power”. Originally Israel emphasized
disciplinary power and biopower, controls on the individual and on the
population as a whole, while also using sovereign power. The latter is
the "imposition of a legal system and the employment of the state’s police
and military to either enforce the rule of law or to suspend it.”
Rule of law The idea of rule of law and the legal
expropriation of land is used throughout the work. However that is not the
‘rule of law’ that protects the citizen but serves to control the citizen.
Israel has consistently violated all international agreements on occupation,
prisoner’s rights, and human rights, although they do on occasion pick out a
single item that they can argue demonstrates their ability to abide by the
law. A significant aspect of the occupation law that they do use is
that an occupier should follow previous regimes of law in an occupied area
and not introduce new laws. For Israel that proved fruitful
as the laws they used and continue to use were developed by other occupiers
also seeking some form of population control to some degree - the Ottoman
Empire and the British Empire, neither of which designed laws for the
benefit of the indigenous population’s benefit if it contradicted their own
needs for control and resources. Later, with Gaza under the
non-democratic Egyptian government, and the West Bank under the
non-democratic Jordanian government, both serving as compliant neighbours
supported with U.S. funds, some of their laws were used for Israeli purposes
as well. In short, when Gordon indicates that Israel acquires land
through application of the law, it is not the law of human rights and
citizen’s entitlement to their private property, it is rule of law created
to control an occupied population. Density Just as the
occupying controls were densely applied, Gordon’s work is densely written.
That density is well structured and makes it accessible to readers, lay and
academics alike. To quote extensively from the work would be redundant
(other than what I have presented above to provide the overall themes of the
work). The material covers the original physical infrastructure and
develops through the various ways and means that structure was used to
control the population and separate it from the land. The two
most significant chapters – among a series of chapters in which all is
significant – were the last two chapters on “Outsourcing the Occupation” and
“The Separation Principle”. Briefly, “Outsourcing the
Occupation” discusses the Oslo Agreements and how they arose from the First
Intifada and then created the conditions necessary for the Second Intifada.
In brief, Oslo signified the failure of “normalization” and became the
new means to gain control of the land, outsourcing the control of the
population to the newly created Palestinian Authority. While seemingly
successful at first, the “excesses and contradictions” built into the
structure and modes of occupation created new conditions that developed a
stronger armed resistance to occupation. The PA was eventually
disempowered, while the control of land continued, mainly through the
settlements and the variety of infrastructures supporting them (military
zones, bypass roads, the wall). “The Separation Principle”
discusses the end result of the change from a colonialist occupation seeking
to normalize the population while owning the resources to that of a
separation principle that ignores the population constrained within its
greatly reduced cantons while extracting and possessing maximum benefit from
the greater part of the occupied land.
Primary
Contradiction The primary contradiction to all Israeli actions and
policies is that of denying the unity of the people and the land, “the
attempt to separate the people and their land.” Separation is not a
withdrawal of power from the OT, “but is used to blur the fact that Israel
has been reorganizing its power in the territories to continue its control
over their resources…and should be understood as the continuation of the
occupation by other means.” With that is Israel’s turn to overpowering
violence and destruction on both the people and what little infrastructure
they have left – “Israel has lost all interest in the Palestinian population
as an object of control.” While both “normalcy and full blown
catastrophe would signify the end of the occupation,” holding the OT on the
“verge of catastrophe” would “uphold and preserve the occupation.”
For Gordon, If Israel maintains the distinction between the
people and their land, numerous contradictions will continue to emerge; the
Palestinians will accordingly resist Israeli control….without reuniting the
Palestinian people and their land and offering them full sovereignty over
the land…the cycle of violence will surely resume. That primary
contradiction has implications of course that extend beyond the borders of
Israel into the political/corporate/military headquarters of the U.S. and
into the physical boundaries and other occupied territories of Iraq,
Afghanistan, and the threatened territories of Iran and Pakistan. Thus
the Palestinian problem remains at the centre of Middle East policy in the
U.S., as the U.S. fights for land and resources rationalized within the war
on terror. Gordon does not get into this extension of the
topic and rightly so. He remains within his primary focus, within the
primary contradiction, and leads the reader through an amazing array of
physical, psychological and social controls within every detail of
Palestinian society. Israel’s Occupation becomes a must read on
my list; and my first question of anyone that wants to argue with any
perspectives on Israel would be “Have you read this book yet?”
Jim Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular contributor/columnist of
opinion pieces and book reviews for The Palestine Chronicle. Miles’
work is also presented globally through other alternative websites and news
publications.
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