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The Sun
Orbits the Palestinian State
By
Arieh Eldad
IsraPundit.com 08 May 2009
For hundreds of years, the Catholic Church believed
that the sun orbits the earth. Whoever dared oppose this view was branded
insane or a heretic.
Religious dogmas are not overturned by logic. An
argument between the believers of different faiths is rarely resolved by
rational argument. The prophet Habukuk says, “The righteous man lives by
his faith.” (Today we say, “A man lives by his faith,” and by this we mean
that every man has his own personal belief system, and all do not need to
believe in one thing.)
But political positions are not matters of mystical
faith. They are supposed to be logical. At their best they serve the
interests of he who propounds them. Occasionally they fail because the
analysis on which they are based is faulty. We can understand countries
that demand Israel accept the program of “two states for two nations”
because they think that the creation of a Palestinian state west of the
Jordan River serves their interests. If, Heaven forbid, such a state is
established and as a result the State of Israel falls, their own interests
will be hurt, but this will simply be one more political miscalculation in
a history full of miscalculations.
We can even understand those who demand the creation of
a Palestinian state alongside Israel because they are hostile to Israel
and wish to help Arabs. More than 3,500 years of recorded history bear
witness to many attempts to destroy the people of Israel or to prevent its
political independence. Indeed, the first time the nation of Israel is
mentioned in human history outside of the Bible is on the stele of the
Pharaoh Merneptah on which is written, “Israel has been destroyed, its
seed no longer exists.” They tried in the past, they’re still trying, and
apparently they’ll continue to try.
However, when the demand to
establish an independent Palestinian state comes not from an attempt to
served the speaker’s interests but rather as part of a “search for
justice” or under an assumption that one is benefiting Israel, we can no
longer relate to the demand with the tools of logic. This is a sort of
“religious dogma” that will be difficult if not impossible to contradict
by reason. The establishment of a Palestinian state will necessarily
bring about the destruction of Israel. Whoever blindly and closed mindedly
repeats the mantra “two states for two nations” can apparently not
understand this,* just as the Popes in the Middle
Ages could not be convinced that the sun does not orbit the earth.
The late Yitzchak Rabin said, “A Palestinian state
can rise only on the ruins of the State of Israel.” He understood that
the Arabs desire to destroy Israel. He was familiar with the geography and
history of the Land of Israel and knew that a Palestinian state would
always be an irredenta longing to take over Israel and inherit the land.
This writer is a doctor, and as a doctor I know that he
who wrongly diagnoses a disease cannot hope to cure it. The most
widespread error made by those considering the conflict between Jews and
Arabs in the Land of Israel lies in the diagnosis that it is a territorial
dispute. If it were a territorial dispute, it should be curable by a
territorial compromise. (Dozens of such attempts have been made in recent
centuries, and all of them have ended bloodbaths or war.) But he who
recognizes even at the most basic level the attitude of Islam towards Jews
and the status of the Land of Israel in Islam knows that for Islam the
Land of Israel is a “Wakf” – holy land granted forever to Moslems.
Moslems are enjoined from recognizing rule by heretics – Jews or
Christians – in this Wakf. Thus, the Arabs can sign a political agreement,
even a peace treaty, with the State of Israel but they will never
recognize it as a Jewish state; and no such peace treaty will prevent
them from fighting a war with Israel, whether from within or without, in
order to turn it into a bi-national state and then, at a later stage, an
Arab state. The creation of an independent Palestinian state in the Land
of Israel serves this purpose well. This is exactly how Yassir Arafat
defined his Theory of Stages. So today, everyone who supports the
establishment of a Palestinian state west of the Jordan River is trying to
implement Arafat’s plan. Anyone who believes that an Israeli withdrawal to
the 1967 lines will resolve the conflict should remember that the
Palestine Liberation Organization, which Arafat led, was founded not as a
result of the Six Day War of 1967 but three years earlier, when Israel did
not possess the territories of Judea, Samaria, and Gaza; and the territory
of that Israel is precisely the “Palestine” that the Arabs want to
“liberate” as expressed in the name of the organization that Israel is now
being asked to sign an accord with, in order to give it a state.
But why is the establishment of a Palestinian state
west of the Jordan not only impossible for anyone who wants Israel to
continue to exist, but also unnecessary?
Because there already is
a Palestinian state, and it is Jordan. Whoever supports the establishment
of another Palestinian state, west of Jordan, supports the program of
“three states for two nations.” The Balfour Declaration of 1917 and
the League of Nations’ decisions in Geneva in 1920 and 1922 called for the
establishment of a national home for the Jews and granted Britain a
mandate in order to establish this Jewish National Home on both
banks of the Jordan River. The Arabs, who opposed this plan, initiated
the first wave of terror in 1920-1921 and put political pressure on
Britain, after which the British Secretary of State for the Colonies
Winston Churchill visited the Land of Israel and then published the White
Paper of 1922, by which he gave three-quarters of the Jewish National
Home’s territory to the Arabs and established east of the Jordan the
Emirate of Trans-Jordan, which eventually became the Hashemite Kingdom of
Jordan. Thus, at that point, the Land of Israel had already been
divided. An Arab state had been established, and all that remained to do
was establish the Jewish state west of the Jordan. But the Arabs of
course were not satisfied with that partition, just as they rejected all
proposed partitions afterwards, and they initiated another wave of terror,
and following each successive wave of terror, another international
commission arrived that again redrew the borders and repeatedly
re-partitioned the country, leading only to bloodier attacks.
In any case, a Palestinian state rose in Jordan.
Seventy percent of its citizens are Palestinians. Jordan is Palestine,
de facto and de jure. Nonetheless, those who believed that
the sun orbits the earth now say that one Palestinian state is not enough,
and because the Palestinians are demanding another one west of the Jordan
– if they are granted that state, peace will come to the Middle East.
Samuel Huntington in his book The Clash of
Civilizations counted over 130 armed conflicts around the world in the
year 2000. Approximately 95 percent of these were between Moslems and
their neighbors. Islamic borders are bloody. Almost everywhere on the
planet, Moslems are attempting to expand at the territorial expense of
their neighbors. The illness is global. But for some reason the believers
think that the conflict in the Land of Israel is local, of a different
nature, and territorial concessions will resolve the conflict. In like
manner did many Europeans believe in 1938 that territorial concessions to
Hitler would satisfy his hunger and bring peace. For who could believe
then that Hitler wanted to take over the world? And who believes today
that Islam wants to take over the world? If only the Jews would give up
their homeland, there would be peace.
Nonetheless, the solution of two states for two nations
should indeed be accepted by everyone. Fortunately, the Jews have a
state in Israel and the Palestinians have a state in Jordan. If they
don’t want a Hashemite king using a Bedouin minority to control 70 percent
of the population, they should change that regime. But a Bedouin minority
subjugating a Palestinian majority in Jordan should not be the reason for
the creation of another state at Israel’s expense. With worldwide
assistance, the Palestinian refugees can easily be resettled in the
expanses of Jordan, and energy and water sources, along with housing and
employment, can be promoted with sums much smaller that those that have
been invested by the world for over 60 years to maintain the refugees in
appalling conditions in their camps. Settling refugees in Arab countries
and mainly in Jordan will not completely resolve the conflict because, as
noted above, this is fundamentally a religious conflict, and Islam will
never accept Jewish rule in the land of Israel. But this is a
necessary humanitarian solution which will also diffuse many of the bombs
that have exploded and continue to explode in the Land of Israel. Perhaps
after the refugee problem has been solved, and after the West stops
funding the teaching of hatred and terror in UNWRA institutions and stops
mouthing platitudes instead of resettling the refugees, maybe then we will
see two sustainable states, Israel and Jordan, living side by side
quietly. Maybe then an Arab living in Ramallah as a citizen of the
Palestinian-Hashemite State of Jordan can vote for the parliament in Amman
and live peacefully in the Land of Israel.
But those who believe in the dogma of “two states for
two nations” and intend to establish another Palestinian state west of the
Jordan at the expense of Israel, step outside, look heavenward, they see
the sun shining in the east, moving along the sky and setting in the west
towards evening, and they know: The sun orbits the earth – and another
Palestinian state is necessary to bring peace. It won’t help to tell these
people the facts; facts would only confuse such people.
Posted 9 July 2009 - *All
emphasis added to original article
[Return to text]
I originally posted this exact
position on March 17, 2003. I'm encouraged to find someone else who
finally agrees with me! |