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Was
Einstein Right?
by
John Chuckman
April
5, 2003
"My
awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the idea of a Jewish state
with borders, an army, and a measure of temporal power, no matter how modest. I
am afraid of the inner damage Judaism will sustain - especially from the
development of a narrow nationalism within our own ranks, against which we have
already had to fight strongly, even without a Jewish state." Albert Einstein
Einstein
is one of my favorite twentieth-century characters. He was remarkable, and I
don't mean only for his profound contributions to our understanding of the
physical world. He was someone who drove authoritarians like J. Edgar Hoover
mad. He was one of those rare souls, like George Orwell, who despite mistakes
and flaws, consciously worked to direct his actions, and redirect them after
missteps, by principles of decency, humanity, and rational thought. He never
subscribed to menacing slogans like "My country, right or wrong" or
"You're either with us or against us." Quite the opposite, he knew
any country was capable of being wrong at times and did not deserve blind
allegiance when it was.
Einstein's
was one of the most important names lent to the cause of Zionism. His name and
visits and letters raised a great deal of money towards establishing
universities and resettling European Jews suffering under violent anti-Semitism
long before the founding of Israel.
But
even in a cause so dear to his heart, Einstein never stopped thinking for
himself. He not only opposed the establishment of a formal Israeli state - he
was after all a great internationalist - but he always advocated treating the Arabic
people of Palestine with generosity and understanding.
Clearly
Einstein's Zionist path was not the one followed. The actual path chosen by
Israel has been pretty much that of "the iron wall," a phrase put
forward by Ze'ev Jabotinsky in the 1920s as the appropriate posture for
Zionists to adopt towards Arabs in Palestine.
Charles
de Gaulle, up until the Six Day War, demonstrated great understanding and
support for Israel. This thoughtful and highly individualistic statesman felt
an instinctive sympathy for the struggle of the Jews, but the Six Day War
caused him to alter France's policies towards the Jewish state.
The
Six Day War was a much darker and more complex affair than it is portrayed in
official Israeli myths. The war was not simply an attack by a gang of Arab
states against Israel - a description which suggests not just Goliath, but the
entire tribe of Philistines, attacking little David with his slingshot. While
this is an appealing image, naturally arousing great sympathy in American Puritans
raised on the Old Testament, it is not an accurate one. A fine Jewish scholar
like Avi Shlaim, a specialist in the first half century of Israeli policy,
recognizing that not all important documents bearing on the matter have been
released, agrees there are doubts and ambiguities here rather than light and
darkness.
Before
the Six Day War, David Ben Gurion made it clear to de Gaulle and other western
leaders that Israel wanted more land to absorb migrants. Before the war, Israel
also high-handedly diverted water from the Jordan river, a hostile act in a
water-short region and the kind of thing that caused more than one "range
war" in America's Southwest.
A
very tense situation arose with a surge in Soviet armaments to Arab states,
although any knowledgeable observer understood that Israel continued to hold
the upper hand in any potential conflict. A major diplomatic mission was
undertaken by Abba Eban to gather support for Israel's intended violent
response to Egypt's blockade of the Straits of Tiran. Just as we now have
Bush's obdurate, hasty demand for war with Iraq, Eban made it clear that Israel
had no stomach for diplomacy to end the blockade. The blockade meant war.
De
Gaulle made a remarkably prescient observation to the Israeli government:
"If Israel is attacked, we shall not let her be destroyed, but if you
attack, we shall condemn your initiative. Of course, I have no doubt that you
will have military successes in the event of war, but afterwards, you would
find yourself committed on the terrain, and from the international point of
view, in increasing difficulties, especially as war in the East cannot fail to
increase a deplorable tension in the world, so that it will be you, having
become the conquerors, who will gradually be blamed for the
inconveniences."
De
Gaulle also understood that Israel's behavior was nourishing nationalistic
aspirations on the part of the Palestinians, a development Israel either
greatly underestimated or chose to ignore, perhaps reflecting the arrogance of those
supported by great power towards those without power. De Gaulle's advice was,
of course, ignored. Israel managed easily to overwhelm the Arab states, as its
leaders had known it would, and it has occupied a good portion of the
territories seized ever since. It has ignored many quiet diplomatic voices on
this matter. It has stood in contempt of UN resolutions for years. It has
suffered innumerable guerilla attacks and launched innumerable reprisals, even
starting a bloody war in Lebanon complete with atrocities. Israel finally came
to toy with the notion of a Palestinian state but never made the genuine effort
or concessions necessary to see this become a reality. It has, in short,
fulfilled de Gaulle's warning of trouble more than thirty years ago.
The
9/11 attack on America, coming under the administration of perhaps the most
aimless, blundering, and least informed president in American history, was a
godsend for Israel's belligerent policy. The people Israel has occupied and
mistreated for a third of a century are regarded by this American president as
something akin to al Qaeda. We have even had trial balloons released by
Republican figures like Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Armey concerning Israel's
right to hold the land and drive out its people, although it is possible these
represent pre-assault softening-up by Washington to make Palestinians grateful
for a second pathetic offer of statehood now in the works, pathetic because it
is impossible to imagine anything else being blessed by both Bush and Sharon.
Perhaps
most revealing of the moral state to which Israel has been reduced since the
Six Day War were preparations for Mr. Bush's war on Iraq. All Israeli citizens
were issued gas masks. A debate and legal moves centered around whether foreign
workers, of which there are large numbers, should also receive gas masks. If
they wanted gas masks, they must rent or buy them, and the masks available for
rental were those considered as expired and unsuitable for Israelis. In
families of mixed marriages, apparently spouses who remain unregistered under
Israel's now more restrictive registration requirements, do not receive gas
masks. Most Palestinians under Israeli occupation are not issued gas masks, it
being considered the responsibility of the broken Palestinian Authority, almost
without resources, to look after this.
There
is something especially repugnant in establishing a hierarchy of people whose
safety should be the responsibility of the state, and the various adjustments
made to this hierarchy in the face of criticism hardly reflect humane policies.
In
recent months, not a week passes in which Israel's army does not kill fifteen
or twenty Palestinians. Often, this many are killed in a day or two. These
killings are generally reported as the deaths of "militants,"
although we have no way of determining the legitimacy of that term. We do know
that quite a number of people who cannot possibly be characterized as
militants, including women and children and peaceful foreign observers, have been
killed by Israeli soldiers. Of course, even those who might justifiably be
called militants are in their view only putting up a pathetic defense of their
homes against Merkava tanks and Apache helicopters.
The
assassination of suspected terrorists is now an accepted, ordinary event in
Palestine, and Mr. Bush has granted Israel the right to extend this violence to
America territory. Mr. Sharon's secret services have conducted scores of
assassinations. Perhaps assassination is the wrong word since it is generally used
to describe the killing of a high-level political opponent. Mr. Sharon's bloody
work is precisely that of a police force murdering, instead of arresting,
criminal suspects by the score.
At
this writing, as America bombs and burns its way through Iraq, Israel has again
rolled out its bulldozers and tanks into Gaza - killing, wrecking, and making
many improper arrests. Most horrifying is what Israel is doing to Bedouin
farmers in the Negev desert. Israel has used crop dusters spraying poisonous
chemicals to destroy the Bedouin crops. The charge is that they are illegal
squatters - a remarkable accusation coming from those who still hold lands
seized in 1967 and regularly build new settlements on them for brand-new,
heavily-armed immigrants.
Defenders
of Israel's excesses in the United States have been driven to advocate policies
as chilling as creating a legal framework for torturing terrorist suspects in
the United States and Israel's undertaking the cold-blooded reprisal killing of
the families of desperate suicide bombers. These are powerful measures of the
corrupting long-term effects of the Six Day War and Israel's determination to
retain control over much or all of the seized land.
Regrettably,
Einstein appears to have been right about what Israel had the potential for
becoming. No person of principle can support Israel's present policies, and I
believe there is little doubt that would include Einstein had he lived. Perhaps
it is just as well he did not.
John Chuckman lives in Canada and is
former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He writes frequently
for Yellow Times.org and other publications.