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Unsettling: how self-delusion led Israel and America to disastrous occupations of Arab lands.


The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977 By Gershom Gorenberg Gershom Gorenberg is an American-born Israeli political writer[1] specializing in the political history of Israel and Israeli-American relations. He is currently a senior correspondent for The American Prospect, a monthly American political magazine.  Times Books, $30.00

In 1969, an official from the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv Tel Aviv (tĕl əvēv`), city (1994 pop. 355,200), W central Israel, on the Mediterranean Sea. Oficially named Tel Aviv–Jaffa, it is Israel's commercial, financial, communications, and cultural center and the core of its largest  took an exhausting afternoon trek out to the fledgling desert community of Kalyah, in the West Bank territory Israel had taken from Jordan in the Six Day War just two years earlier. A Time magazine report had painted a worrying portrait of a rising Jewish settlement presence that hinted at permanence, and the Americans had decided to investigate. At the time, there were just a handful of Israelis living there, in one of only two official settlements out on the far eastern edge of the West Bank.

The consular rep didn't want to announce his mission by actually entering the community, so he decided on a quiet drive-by instead. He reported back to his superiors that those alarming tales of settlement growth were standard-issue media exaggeration, a "somewhat distorted picture of reality" In any case, he argued, Kalyah was too far from the highway and the Jordan River Jordan River

River, Middle East. It rises on the Syria-Lebanon border, flows through Lake Tiberias (Sea of Galilee), and then receives its main tributary, the Yarmuk River.
 to offer the new residents much of a military advantage. To the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , it was simply incomprehensible that these makeshift communities were anything more than some sort of temporary security measure, albeit a diplomatically inconvenient one.

If that embassy rep made the same desert drive today, he'd encounter some 4,000 residents living in at least two dozen communities on the Israeli-controlled side of the Jordan River. In all, there are at least 261,000 Jews still living in lands conquered by Israel during the Six Day War. They live in orderly government-planned suburbs north and east of Jerusalem; in more isolated, far-flung towns surrounded by barbed wire barbed wire, wire composed of two zinc-coated steel strands twisted together and having barbs spaced regularly along them. The need for barbed wire arose in the 19th cent.  and heavily-guarded highways; in small, fortified fortified (fôrt´fīd),
adj containing additives more potent than the principal ingredient.
 enclaves in and near the ancient biblical cities of the West Bank. These settlements are filled with the second and even third generations of those early post-war pioneers, who would have told that U.S. official, if he had only asked, that in their view there was nothing temporary about their new home.

If U.S. officials, blinded by regional Cold War considerations, were deceiving themselves about Israel's intentions in 1969, they weren't alone. As journalist Gershom Gorenberg demonstrates in his new book, The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977, their Israeli counterparts were doing the same. A few may have entered the post-war period with a determination to create "facts on the ground," but two years after Israel first entered the area, even many government officials were still under the impression that their exit from most or all of the West Bank would arrive sooner or later. Through arguments equal parts intellectual and emotional, Israeli leaders wound up locking a state unprepared for the scale of their military success into a disastrous policy after the fact. The Middle East is full of desert mirages; Israel has already spent a generation chasing theirs. The United States has just gotten started.

By any standard, it was never much of an empire--at its height, just 26,000 square miles--but by the time the dust cleared on June 4,1967, Israel controlled roughly four times as much land as it had just a week earlier. The new land had an intoxicating in·tox·i·cate  
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates

v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.

2.
 effect on the Israeli public. For young people who had come of age after the legendary battles of 1948, it offered an unexpected chance to play a part in the drama of nation-building. For what remained of the socialist pioneers of the secular left The secular left is a term used to describe members of the left-wing who are also secularists (they support separation of church and state, a secular state, and a secular education).

The secular left is not necessarily opposed to the religious left.
, it meant a return to an earlier era of national adventure paired with the possibility of a security the state of Israel had never known. For the right, particularly the previously marginalized religious Zionist movement Noun 1. Zionist movement - a movement of world Jewry that arose late in the 19th century with the aim of creating a Jewish state in Palestine
Zionism
, it represented nothing less than the fulfillment of biblical prophecy. Even many who felt uneasy with their nation's new occupying role still felt an emotional tug that bound them to the soil, almost against their will, through some special alchemy, the Six Day War transformed even die-hard agnostics into believers. Nathan Alterman Natan Alterman (born 1910, Warsaw - died 1970, in Israel) was an Israeli poet, journalist, and translator.

He was born in Warsaw, and moved to Tel Aviv in 1925, where he continued his studies at the Gymnasium.
, a legendary writer and Labor partisan who had publicly dismissed the importance of Jews returning to the precise outlines of their ancient homeland, underwent a sudden metamorphosis of the spirit, emerging a passionate settlement supporter. "I'm a Tel Aviv man," he said of the newly-acquired territory, "but anyone who returns these pieces of land will first have to write a different Bible"

There was a surreal exchange of dazed daze  
tr.v. dazed, daz·ing, daz·es
1. To stun, as with a heavy blow or shock; stupefy.

2. To dazzle, as with strong light.

n.
A stunned or bewildered condition.
 pilgrims from both sides during the summer weeks after hostilities ended. Palestinians--including Sabri al-Banna, later known by the terrorist nom de guerre nom de guerre  
n. pl. noms de guerre
A fictitious name; a pseudonym.



[French : nom, name + de, of + guerre, war.]

Noun 1.
 Abu Nidal--made day trips back to visit family homes in Jaffa and West Jerusalem West Jerusalem may refer to:
  • Those parts of the city of Jerusalem captured by Israel in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. See East Jerusalem for details.
  • The western neighborhoods of Jerusalem, Israel today.
 they'd left behind two decades earlier, and sought steady work in Israel proper. And Jews driven variously by nostalgia, piety, and curiosity filtered in the opposite direction over the suddenly porous Green Line. In the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of the chaos, newly-empowered religious Zionists adopted a strategy of their secular pre-Independence counterparts, defiantly creating more "facts on the ground" than even their government sympathizers had bargained for. Prospective settlers often made their move across the former borders quietly in twos and threes, occasionally in conflict with flustered flus·ter  
tr. & intr.v. flus·tered, flus·ter·ing, flus·ters
To make or become nervous or upset.

n.
A state of agitation, confusion, or excitement.
 military authorities, other times with their tacit approval, encouragement, or even their direct support. A burgeoning government bureaucracy soon developed to regulate outposts that, for the most part, did not officially exist.

The American-born Gorenberg--who moved to Israel around the time settler patron Menachem Begin Noun 1. Menachem Begin - Israeli statesman (born in Russia) who (as prime minister of Israel) negotiated a peace treaty with Anwar Sadat (then the president of Egypt) (1913-1992)
Begin
 was elected--meticulously recounts the genesis of the settlement movement, tracking a sort of creeping chaos. From the start, there were deeply-held and often contradictory opinions at play in Israel over the set dement de·ment  
tr.v. de·ment·ed, de·ment·ing, de·ments
1. To make (a person) insane.

2. To cause (a person) to lose intellectual capacity.
 idea--not only in the population at large but often within individuals themselves--though it took years for the controversy to begin to dominate the national debate. This tortured duality tragically found its truest expression in the person of Israel's leader, Levi Eshkol. The ailing prime minister told some officials that negotiations with the Jordanians would soon bring Israeli control of the West Bank to a close and assured others he was determined to maintain a presence in the area that would forever end the nation's geographic vulnerability. He spoke wistfully of a scriptural heritage tying the Jewish people to Judea and Samaria, and Fagmatically of the unsustainable reality on the West Bank--sometimes in the same conversation.

His colleagues and successors found their own personal weaknesses magnified by the territorial dilemma. An overconfident o·ver·con·fi·dent  
adj.
Excessively confident; presumptuous.



over·con
 defense minister Moshe Dayan Noun 1. Moshe Dayan - Israeli general and statesman (1915-1981)
Dayan
 misjudged his adversaries, assuming Palestinians would adapt easily to occupation and that a new Arab offensive was unlikely. Eshkol's successor, Golda Meir, bristled bris·tle  
n.
1. A stiff hair.

2. A stiff hairlike structure: the bristles of a wire brush.

v. bris·tled, bris·tling, bris·tles

v.intr.
 at the slightest criticism from troubled advisers, and refused to confront the implications of long-term Israeli control of the conquered land. They were all under the impression that they could harness the passions created by the Six Day War for their own purposes, not realizing they'd unleashed forces they couldn't hope to control. By the time these miscalculations proved too glaring to ignore, none of the nation's leaders had the political will--or perhaps, the heart--to confront the growing settier movement. It's a tragic portrait of ambivalence writ large.

Governing may be a messy business, but the decision-making process laid out by Gorenberg defies any attempt at a linear explanation. Anyone looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 the masked man behind Israel's settlement policy will be disappointed. In this telling, nobody's really in control of the situation, not even the nation's leaders. During this period, there never seems to be a single moment of clarity when the final goal becomes apparent, no development of a coherent long-term territorial policy. That oversight was partly due to the schizophrenic nature of the debate, and partly because the illegality of settlement-building was never much in question: By the time the heady summer of '67 gave way to autumn To Autumn is a poem written by English Romantic poet John Keats in 1819 (published 1820).

Keats was inspired to write To Autumn after walking through the water meadows of Winchester, England, in an early autumn evening of 1819.
, the Israeli government's top legal minds had concluded that the entire enterprise violated international law.

So the country's leaders, by necessity, decided it was wisest they knew without fully knowing. They drew a veil over activity in the territories so opaque that government ministers themselves were often taken aback by developments. The United States found itself almost unconsciously adopting a similar approach: American officials, convinced that the Middle East was a rising Cold War battlefield, alternated between discounting inconvenient or contradictory information on settlement activity in favor of overly optimistic assumptions and proffering sharp but toothless reprimands to their regional ally.

For those Israelis who assumed the new territory meant long-term security--and for others who believed its acquisition signaled the dawn of a messianic age--the Yom Kippur War Yom Kippur War: see Arab-Israeli Wars.  provoked a crisis of faith. The staggering losses from the surprise attack accelerated the decline of the public appetite for occupation. But the 1973 conflict left an unlikely legacy for settlement supporters as well: Religious Zionists coalesced co·a·lesce  
intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es
1. To grow together; fuse.

2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite:
 into a defiant new group that would blaze a fiery trail through the next three decades of Israeli history. Gush Emunim--the Bloc of the Faithful--soon grabbed headlines via increasingly ambitious clashes with Israeli authorities desperate to maintain control over settlement growth. Meanwhile, international pressure on Israel (like the United Nation's infamous "Zionism is racism" resolution) had a perverse effect on the nation's politics. The popular passions it released helped reveal the extent of the Labor party's long decay just 10 years after their summer of triumph. When the Likud era began with the elections of 1977, the nation's new, conservative leaders were far less tortured in their defense of settlements; their ascent marked the dawn of an explosive period of government-sponsored building in the territories. But, of course, there was no need to start from scratch to start (again) from the very beginning; also, to start without resources.
- Thackeray.

See also: Scratch
. Begins leadership may have allowed settlement policy to reach full bloom full bloom

the stage of a crop when two-thirds of the plants are in flower; the crop is mature.
, but the roots had already been growing for a decade.

It's almost too easy, at this point, to look back and cluck at the epic missteps, shake our heads at misplaced mis·place  
tr.v. mis·placed, mis·plac·ing, mis·plac·es
1.
a. To put into a wrong place: misplace punctuation in a sentence.

b.
 settler optimism, and wince at the brash assessment by then-Gen. Ariel Sharon that settlements would somehow "wean wean (wen) to discontinue breast feeding and substitute other feeding habits.

wean
v.
1. To deprive permanently of breast milk and begin to nourish with other food.

2.
 the Arabs of the Gaza Strip Gaza Strip (gäz`ə), (2003 est. pop. 1,330,000) rectangular coastal area, c.140 sq mi (370 sq km), SW Asia, on the Mediterranean Sea adjoining Egypt and Israel, in what was formerly SW Palestine.  from the illusion that we will eventually get out of there" Some of the Israeli government's stumbles were unavoidable, the inevitable result of an intractable conflict and legitimate security concerns. (Arab leaders, for their part, proved unable or unwilling to use the diplomatic tools that might have short-circuited the settlement process until both the concept and the reality were too established for Israeli politicians List of Israeli politicians:
See also: List of Israelis

A
  • Aaron Abuhatzera, former minister, head of the National Religious Party
  • Yosef Almogi, former minister and mayor of Haifa
 to dislodge, even had they wanted to.) But it's also true that the most serious wounds were self-inflicted. Through its continued presence on the other side of the Green Line, the Israeli government birthed some unlikely political stepchildren.

Abu Nidal wasn't the only one of Israel's enemies to draw inspiration from the events of '67. The Six Day War marked the end of any realistic possibility of a Middle East without a Jewish state. But the complete rout of Arab armies was a humiliation that, following the dictates of their culture, ruled out any logical turn to diplomatic solutions. For the Arab world's humiliated hu·mil·i·ate  
tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates
To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade.
 leaders, Israel's continued presence in the West Bank and Gaza proved a godsend god·send  
n.
Something wanted or needed that comes or happens unexpectedly.



[Alteration of Middle English goddes sand, God's message : goddes, genitive of God, God
, conveniently allowing them to deflect and redirect domestic anger that might have resulted in large-scale regime change.

The victory itself may have flipped the script for the international community, but the continued occupation solidified the worst impressions that fueled the new Middle East storyline--perceptions the region's oil states, just beginning to adjust to their new power on the world stage, were eager to exploit. More importantly for Israel, the permanence of the Jewish presence resulted in a sea change in how the Palestinians viewed their situation. No longer did they believe that their Arab brethren would ride to their rescue and deliver the house keys to the old family home in Haifa. Their destiny was now in their own hands, and their only armed options against a conventionally superior foe would be terrorism and guerilla warfare. In the soil of the accidental empire, the seeds of the intifada were sown.

In Gorenberg's view, Israel won the Six Day War but barely survived the peace. The nation was prepared for a stalemate, but victory proved its undoing--a few summer weeks of frenzied celebration followed by a four-decade hangover. The cost of the particular fusion of nationalism and faith birthed four decades ago has been steep: Settlements consumed resources at an epic pace (upwards of $14 billion for West Bank locations alone, according to one recent study) and gave the country's enemies an automatic excuse to avoid the bargaining table. Why waste time talking when Israel was busy building up facts on the ground?

In the end, says Gorenberg, the settlement venture has resulted in severe long-term damage for the conquering nation itself. The outposts that were supposed to guarantee Israel's security ended up fostering an increasing sense of national insecurity. "The process of settlement ... led to the state's gradual unraveling, blurring its borders, undercutting its authority," he writes.

There was no one willing or able to save Israel from itself. It's obvious the historic fallibility fal·li·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of making an error: Humans are only fallible.

2. Tending or likely to be erroneous: fallible hypotheses.
 of U.S. intelligence played a part in the American reluctance to press Israel on its settlement policy; but given Cold War considerations and domestic distractions, it's far from clear a definitive assessment of Israeli intent would have changed American actions all that much. Gorenberg describes some sternly-worded communiques from State Department officials to Israel's leaders. The Americans worried (presciently pre·scient  
adj.
1. Of or relating to prescience.

2. Possessing prescience.



[French, from Old French, from Latin praesci
, it turns out) about the long-term security and diplomatic consequences if settlement-building continued. But their words often seemed framed more like, suggestions than warnings--there were never any looming consequences if their wishes were disregarded. And back in Washington, Watergate kept an increasingly uninterested Richard Nixon from pressuring the Israelis into compliance. An ultimatum from Washington might have spared Israel from learning over the next thirty years the same costly lesson the United States has learned over the past three: that foreign administration of Arab land, no matter the motivation or might of the forces involved, inevitably ends in disaster for both occupied and occupier.

The comparison to the American experience in postwar Iraq may not be perfect, but the similarities are striking. Take a handful of ideologically-driven thinkers with a few well-placed government allies, a longtime interest in the area in question, and a national leader famously resistant to criticism (in Israel's case, a surprisingly thinskinned Golda Meir). Add the deep-rooted fears of a nation under siege, an unexpectedly easy rout of opposing military forces, and an overly optimistic view of the feasibility of foreign occupation in an Arab culture. Throw in an obsession with policy secrecy, a growing willingness to test the limits of international law, and a post-war planning process--hampered by political considerations--that didn't take shape until after the occupation had already begun. Finish off the mix with a continued failure to develop a clear exit strategy. For Israel, at least, this toxic brew has festered for nearly four decades. Gorenberg's account of how that mess began is a classic case study of the are of foreign policy misadventure misadventure n. a death due to unintentional accident without any violation of law or criminal negligence. Thus, there is no crime. (See: homicide)


MISADVENTURE, crim. law, torts. An accident by which an injury occurs to another.
 in a democratic society.

Rebecca Sinderbrand has reported from the Middle East (including Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank) for Newsweek, Slate, Salon, and others.
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Title Annotation:The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1997-1977
Author:Sinderbrand, Rebecca
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book review
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:2529
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