
The Likud has never once deviated from its own official position that Palestinians have no right to statehood on even one square meter anywhere in Palestine.

By Dr. Henry Siegman
There could not have been a more dishonest and carefully weasel-worded a statement than the one issued by the American Jewish Committee and endorsed by AIPAC, the pro-Israel lobby, expressing outrage over the merger of the Israeli Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) organization with the far-right Habayit Hayehudi political party. The merger was in fact outrageous. But was not the outrage directed deliberately at a false target?
Otzma Yehuditโa successor organization to the racist Kahanist political party that was outlawed in Israel and in the United States as a terrorist organization some time agoโhas long been considered utterly reprehensible. The organization advocates the ethnic cleansing of the Arab population in Palestine and the adoption in Israel of certain provisions that mirror the Nazi Nuremberg laws, such as the outlawing of sexual relations between Jews and Arabs.
But the violence, racism, and aping of the Nazis by Kahane and his successors is hardly news. To a limited extent, the followers of Kahane have practiced the violence they have preached. In Hebron in 1994, one of those followers, Baruch Goldstein, murdered 29 Palestinian worshippers at prayer. Kahanist followers and other right-wing Israelis have elevated Goldstein to sainthood, much like Hamas treats its terrorist โmartyrs.โ
To this day, the Likud, Israelโs governing party headed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has never once deviated from its own official position that Palestinians have no right to statehood on even one square meter anywhere in Palestine, a position that does not vary from Kahaneโs party all that much. Indeed, Kahaneโs territorial claims do not vary at all from Netanyahuโs claims to the West Bank that he voices (only in Hebrew) whenever election time comes around, such as right now.
But none of this is news. The overwhelming majority of Israelis have always rejected Kahaneโs views as reprehensible. What is newsโand truly outrageous beyond words or comprehensionโis that long after Kahane and his party were thrown out of Israelโs Knesset, from which its members have been banned to this day, the prime minister of Israel personally midwifed an arrangement to bring these fascists back into Israelโs political mainstream and, he hopes, to Israelโs Knesset. Thereโhaving been koshered by Netanyahu himselfโthey will be able to inject their poison into Israelโs bloodstream. Indeed, the prime minister postponed a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow so as not to risk jeopardizing a goal he considered more important than Israelโs security agenda with the Russians.
Yet the AJCโs and AIPACโs statements contain not the slightest hint of this outrage, for the name Netanyahu and the role that heโand only heโplayed in bringing this demonic merger about never appears. Did they really think that if they focus their criticism on the merger of two like-minded organizations that have long existed in Israel without American Jews knowing much about them, and by carefully avoiding any mention of Netanyahuโs role in organizing this scandal, they would distract attention from the real culprit?
Does not AIPACโs announcement two days later that it will have the โhonorโ of welcoming Netanyahu to its forthcoming annual gathering in Washington D.C. suggest this was indeed the purpose of their misdirected anger?
Netanyahu is hardly a crusader for democracy. He will likely be indicted by Israelโs attorney general following a hearing and he is desperate to avoid a jail sentence that only reelection can spare him. Every additional right-wing vote in the coming election and in the Knesset could make a major difference for him.
And yet, how can any of that explain so egregious a betrayal of principles that ridicules the claim that Israel is a Jewish and democratic creation? Netanyahu has also embraced anti-Semitic leaders of Central European countries, and the leaders of organizations with fascist and anti-Semitic parentage in Austria and Italy. He reportedly sent two Israeli experts to help Hungaryโs Viktor Orbรกn organize a three-year anti-Semitic campaign targeting George Soros.
Such behavior can only be the result of an uncontrollable and fatal personality flaw, one that commentators in Israel often write aboutโhis manic pursuit of political power. Netanyahu has come to believe that when he is referred to mockingly by his critics as King Bibi, it is actually intended as a compliment. That conceit is in turn reinforced by a deep personal weakness that drives him to be seen as a โstrongโ leader by the โstrong leadersโ he admires, virtually every one of whom is authoritarian or anti-Semitic or both. Not one of them in that bunch, including Americaโs president, values democracy or universal human rights.
Itโs difficult to understand what has moved so many in American Jewish establishment organizations to accept behavior in Israel that they condemned and actively opposed in their earlier incarnations when they battled for Jewish rights in America. Every one of the major defense agenciesโthe American Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress (which I headed for 16 years), and the Anti-Defamation Leagueโdevoted a major part of its energies and resources to preserving the separation of church and state that defined democratic governance. The best and brightest of the Zionist founding fathers also advocated that kind of separation of religion and state for the Jewish state, but they lost that battle. When the state is not a limited instrumental entity, but is instead deified, as the State of Israel has now become, it is only a matter of time before democracy is forfeited.
Bret Stephens of The New York Times wrote that when the final chapter of Netanyahuโs life is written, he is likely to go down as the Richard Nixon of Israel. But that would hardly do justice to the man. He is far more likely to go down, and I mean down, as the Trump of Israel. The true measure of Netanyahu, and of the unspeakable damage he and his American supporters have done to his country, is that he and most Israelis will see the comparison as a compliment.
Originally published by LobeLog, 03.07.2019, based at the Institute for Policy Studies, a program of Open Society Foundations, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.
