January 18, 2012
Welcome to the World’s First Bunker State
The wheel is turning full circle. Last week the Israeli parliament
updated a 59-year-old law originally intended to prevent hundreds of
thousands of Palestinian refugees from returning to the homes and lands
from which they had been expelled as Israel was established.
The purpose of the draconian 1954 Prevention of Infiltration Law was
to lock up any Palestinian who managed to slip past the snipers guarding
the new state’s borders. Israel believed only savage punishment and
deterrence could ensure it maintained the overwhelming Jewish majority
it had recently created through a campaign of ethnic cleansing.
Fast-forward six decades and Israel is relying on the infiltration
law again, this time to prevent a supposedly new threat to its
existence: the arrival each year of several thousand desperate African
asylum seekers.
As it did with the Palestinians many years ago, Israel has criminalised these new
refugees – in their case, for fleeing persecution, war or economic collapse. Whole families can now be locked up, without a trial, for three years while a deportation order is sought and enforced, and Israelis who offer them assistance risk jail sentences of up to 15 years.
refugees – in their case, for fleeing persecution, war or economic collapse. Whole families can now be locked up, without a trial, for three years while a deportation order is sought and enforced, and Israelis who offer them assistance risk jail sentences of up to 15 years.
Israel’s intention is apparently to put as many of these refugees
behind bars as possible, and dissuade others from following in their
footsteps.
To cope, officials have approved the building of an enormous
detention camp, operated by Israel’s prison service, to contain 10,000
of these unwelcome arrivals. That will make it the largest holding
facility of its kind in the world – according to Amnesty International,
it will be three times bigger than the next largest, in the much more
populous, and divine retribution-loving, US state of Texas.
Israeli critics of the law fear their country is failing in its moral
duty to help those fleeing persecution, thereby betraying the Jewish
people’s own experiences of suffering and oppression. But the Israeli
government and the large majority of legislators who backed the law –
like their predecessors in the 1950s – have drawn a very different
conclusion from history.
The new infiltration law is the latest in a set of policies
fortifying Israel’s status as the world’s first “bunker state”- and one
designed to be as ethnically pure as possible. The concept was expressed
most famously by an earlier prime minister, Ehud Barak, now the defence
minister, who called Israel “a villa in the jungle”, relegating the
country’s neighbours to the status of wild animals.
Barak and his successors have been turning this metaphor into a
physical reality, slowly sealing off their state from the rest of the
region at astronomical cost, much of it subsidised by US taxpayers.
Their ultimate goal is to make Israel so impervious to outside influence
that no concessions for peace, such as agreeing to a Palestinian state,
need ever be made with the “beasts” around them.
The most tangible expression of this mentality has been a frenzy of
wall-building. The best-known are those erected around the Palestinian
territories: first Gaza, then the areas of the West Bank Israel is not
intending to annex – or, at least, not yet.
The northern border is already one of the most heavily militarised in
the world – as Lebanese and Syrian protesters found to great cost last
summer when dozens were shot dead and wounded as they approached or
stormed the fences there. And Israel has a proposal in the drawer for
another wall along the border with Jordan, much of which is already
mined.
The only remaining border, the 260km one with Egypt, is currently
being closed with another gargantuan wall. The plans were agreed before
last year’s Arab revolutions but have gained fresh impetus with the
overthrow of Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak.
Israel is not only well advanced on the walls of the bunker; it is
also working round the clock on the roof. It has three missile-defence
systems in various stages of development, including the revealingly
named “Iron Dome”, as well as US Patriot batteries stationed on its
soil. The interception systems are supposed to neutralise any
combination of short and long-range missile attacks Israel’s neighbours
might launch.
But there is a flaw in the design of this shelter, one that is
apparent even to its architects. Israel is sealing itself in with some
of the very “animals” the villa is supposed to exclude: not only the
African refugees, but also 1.5 million “Israeli Arabs”, descendants of
the small number of Palestinians who avoided expulsion in 1948.
This has been the chief motive for the steady stream of
anti-democratic measures by the government and parliament that is
rapidly turning into a torrent. It is also the reason for the Israeli
leadership’s new-found demand that the Palestinians recognise Israel’s
Jewishness; its obsessions with loyalty; and the growing appeal of
population exchange schemes.
In the face of the legislative assault, Israel’s Supreme Court has
grown ever more complicit. Last week, it sullied its reputation by
upholding a law that tears apart families by denying tens of thousands
of Palestinians with Israeli citizenship the right to live with their
Palestinian spouse in Israel – “ethnic cleansing” by other means, as
leading Israeli commentator Gideon Levy noted.
Back in the early 1950s, the Israeli army shot dead thousands of
unarmed Palestinians as they tried to reclaim property that had been
stolen from them. These many years later, Israel appears no less
determined to keep non-Jews out of its precious villa.
The bunker state is almost finished, and with it the dream of Israel’s founders is about to be realised.
Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His latest books are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is www.jkcook.net.