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Palestinian Nakba Protests:
A Taste of the Future: Israel in Strategic
Dead-End
By Jonathan Cook
Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 23, 2011
Jonathan Cook argues that the scenes of Palestinian defiance
on Nakba Day in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and on Israel's borders with
Syria “will fuel the imaginations of Palestinians everywhere to start
thinking the impossible”, placing Israel “in a diplomatic and strategic
dead-end”.
They are extraordinary scenes. Film
shot on mobile phones captured the
moment on 15 May when at least 1,000 Palestinian refugees marched across
no-man's land to one of the most heavily protected borders in the world, the
one separating Syria from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Waving
Palestinian flags, the marchers braved a minefield, then tore down a series
of fences, allowing more than 100 to run into Israeli-controlled territory.
As they embraced Druze villagers on the other side, voices could be heard
saying: "This is what liberation looks like."
“The
Palestinian 'Arab Spring' is arriving and Israel has no
diplomatic or political strategy to deal with it. Instead on
15 May, Israel used the only weapon in its current arsenal –
brute force – against unarmed demonstrators.”
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Unlike previous years, this Nakba Day was
not simply a commemoration of the catastrophe that befell the Palestinians
in 1948, when their homeland was forcibly reinvented as the Jewish state. It
briefly reminded Palestinians that, despite their long-enforced dispersion,
they still have the potential to forge a common struggle against Israel.
As Israel violently cracked down on the 15 May protests on many fronts
– in the West Bank, Gaza, Jerusalem and on the borders with Syria and
Lebanon – it looked less like a military superpower and more like the
proverbial boy with his finger in the dam.
The Palestinian "Arab
Spring" is arriving and Israel has no diplomatic or political strategy to
deal with it. Instead on 15 May, Israel used the only weapon in its current
arsenal – brute force – against unarmed demonstrators.
Along the northern borders,
at least 14 protesters were killed and dozens wounded, both at Majdal Shams
in the Golan and near Maroun al-Ras in Lebanon. In Gaza, a teenager
was shot dead and more than 100 other demonstrators wounded as they massed
at crossing points. At Qalandiya, the main checkpoint Israel created to bar
West Bank Palestinians from reaching Jerusalem, at least 40 protesters were
badly injured. There were clashes in major West Bank towns too. And
inside Israel, the country's Palestinian minority took their own Nakba march
for the first time into the heart of Israel, waving Palestinian flags in
Jaffa, the once-famous Palestinian city that has been transformed since 1948
into a minor suburb of Tel Aviv. With characteristic obtuseness,
Israel's leaders identified Iranian "fingerprints" on the day's events – as
though Palestinians lacked enough grievances of their own to initiate
protests. But, in truth, Israeli intelligence has warned for months
that mass demonstrations of this kind were inevitable, stoked by the
intransigence of Israel's right-wing government in the face of both
Washington's renewed interest in creating a Palestinian state and of the
Arab Spring's mood of "change is possible".
“…ordinary
Palestinians used the new social media to organize and
coordinate their defiance - in their case challenging the
walls, fences and checkpoints Israel has erected everywhere
to separate them.”
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Following in the footsteps
of Egyptian and Tunisian demonstrators, ordinary Palestinians used the new
social media to organize and coordinate their defiance - in their case
challenging the walls, fences and checkpoints Israel has erected everywhere
to separate them. Twitter, not Tehran, was the guiding hand behind these
demonstrations.
Although the protests are
not yet a third intifada,
they hint at what may be coming. Or, as one senior Israeli commander warned,
they looked ominously like a "warm-up" for September, when the newly unified
Palestinian leadership is threatening to defy Israel and the United States
and seek recognition at the United Nations of Palestinian statehood inside
the 1967 borders. Ehud Barak, the Israeli defence minister, alluded
to similar concerns when he cautioned: "We are just at the start of this
matter and it could be that we'll face far more complex challenges."
There are several lessons, none of them comfortable, for Israel to draw from
the weekend's clashes.
The first is that the Arab Spring cannot be
dealt with simply by battening down the hatches. The upheavals facing
Israel's Arab neighbours mean these regimes no longer have the legitimacy to
decide their own Palestinian populations' fates according to narrow
self-interest. Just as the post-Mubarak government in Egypt is now
easing rather than enforcing the blockade on Gaza, the Syrian regime's
precarious position makes it far less able or willing to restrain, let alone
shoot at, Palestinian demonstrators massing on Israel's borders. The
second is that Palestinians have absorbed the meaning of the recent
reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah. In establishing a unity government,
the two rival factions have belatedly realized that they cannot make headway
against Israel as long as they are politically and geographically divided.
Ordinary Palestinians are drawing the same conclusion: in the face of
tanks and fighter jets, Palestinian strength lies in a unified national
liberation movement that refuses to be defined by Israel's policies of
fragmentation. The third lesson is that Israel has relied on
relative quiet on its borders to enforce the occupations of the West Bank,
Jerusalem and Gaza. The peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, in particular,
have allowed the Israeli army to divert its energies into controlling the
Palestinians under its rule.
“…the
question is whether Israel has the manpower to deal with
coordinated and sustained Palestinian revolts on multiple
fronts. Can it withstand such pressure without the resort to
mass slaughter of unarmed Palestinian protesters?”
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But the question is whether
Israel has the manpower to deal with coordinated and sustained Palestinian
revolts on multiple fronts. Can it withstand such pressure without the
resort to mass slaughter of unarmed Palestinian protesters?
The fourth is that the
Palestinian refugees are not likely to remain quiet if their interests are
sidelined by Israel or by a Palestinian bid for statehood at the United
Nations in September that fails to address their concerns. The
protesters in Syria and Lebanon showed that they will not be pushed to the
margins of the Palestinian Arab Spring. That message will not be lost on
either Hamas or Fatah as they begin negotiations to develop a shared
strategy over the next few months. And the fifth lesson is that the
scenes of Palestinian defiance on Israel's borders will fuel the
imaginations of Palestinians everywhere to start thinking the impossible –
just as the Tahrir Square protests galvanised Egyptians into believing they
could remove their dictator. Israel is in a diplomatic and strategic
dead-end. Last weekend it may have got its first taste of the likely future.
A version of this article originally appeared in The
National,
published in Abu Dhabi. The version here is published by permission of
Jonathan Cook.
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