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Ethnic cleansing in the current conflict

JVL Introduction

We repost here the latest edition of the Pickle, Vashti’s weekly newsletter, discussing the probability of further, widespread ethnic cleaning of Palestinians, using the current conflict as the occasion and the opportunity.

Moshe Machover, a founder of the Israeli Socialist organisation Matzpen in the sixties, is interviewed here by his grandson Eli whose introduction below explains the context.

RK


Hey, Eli here.

Israel’s genocide of Palestinians continues to escalate. In the last week, Gaza has experienced the most intense period of bombing during Israel’s war, airstrikes on the Jabalia refugee camp, explicit targeting of hospitals, and the beginning of the ground invasion. In the West Bank, settlers and soldiers are committing acts of terror against Palestinians amid curfews, lockdowns and the distribution of weapons by Israel.

We ask that you consider a contribution to the solidarity fund for the urgent relief of West Bank Palestinian communities, facilitated by the Center for Jewish Non-Violence.

This horrific violence flows directly from Israel’s regime of apartheid and occupation – rooted in settler-colonialism and cultivated by global imperial powers – that began long before the Hamas attacks of 7 October. Yet this understanding is actively obscured by Israeli hasbara and those within the Jewish diaspora who uncritically accept it. The Jewish community’s inability – and at times, the Jewish left’s unwillingness – to describe reality as it is lived by Palestinians, results in an inexcusable gap that leaves Palestinians and solidarity activists open to unfounded and politically-motivated allegations of antisemitism. The Jewish left must intellectually keep up in order to play our part effectively within the broader movement for Palestinian liberation from the river to the sea.

To do so we must draw from the lineage of Jewish pariahs who have been dissenting for generations. The work of the radical Arab and Jewish group Matzpen – perhaps best known for their 1967 Haaretz advert clearly stating the inevitable costs of the occupation – is central to this heritage. And indeed it is central to my own, as Moshé Machover – the group’s last living founder – is my grandfather.

For this week’s Pickle, I spoke to Moshik to gain a better understanding of this moment in its historical context. His analysis of internal and geopolitical dynamics, documented antecedents, and the role of the Jewish left in a joint struggle against Zionism and for Palestinian liberation continues his essential work of the past 60 years▼


The following interview was originally conducted on 20 October with help from Vashti editor Evan Robins. It was updated on 28 October to reflect Israel’s ground invasion of Gaza, and has been edited for length and clarity.

Matzpen advert in Haaretz, 22 September 1967.

‘For Israel to perpetrate ethnic cleansing, it needs a regional conflagration. That is happening now’

Eli Machover speaks to Moshé Machover

A picture of a Hebrew advert hangs on the wall of my grandfather’s study [see image above]. It reads in English: “Our right to defend ourselves from extermination does not give us the right to oppress others. Occupation leads to foreign rule. Foreign rule leads to resistance. Resistance leads to repression. Repression leads to terror and counter-terror. The victims of terror are mostly innocent people. Holding on to the occupied territories will turn us into a nation of murderers and murder victims. We must leave the occupied territories immediately.”

Eli: You’ll have seen that the advert you and 11 others published in Israel’s liberal Haaretz newspaper in the immediate aftermath of the June 1967 war is once again doing the rounds online. As the last surviving signatory, what do you make of it being recirculated now?

Moshé: I feel horrible, because our dire predictions long ago are coming true. The balance of power is such that the Israeli regime is much stronger than the Palestinian resistance, but not strong enough to completely annihilate it. This escalation goes on and on. Israel has, from its point of view, a way out from this vicious circle, and this is ethnic cleansing.

I didn’t predict it would start in Gaza, but what you have in Gaza now is ethnic cleansing. Look, bombing on this scale, starving a population of 2.3 million, denying food and water, telling over 1 million people to move out of their homes and go where they can’t find shelter, bombing hospitals, and now this massive ground invasion. Either by expulsion or by extermination, this is major ethnic cleansing.

In this context, what Hamas did on 7 October is going to make the slim chance of preventing ethnic cleansing even slimmer. This was a horrible massacre. It was a crime, morally but also politically, because it has terrible consequences.

Most people, especially in the west, can see the massacre, but they cannot relate it to the root cause, which is the occupation.

And the Nakba before it.

And the Nakba before it. The oppression of the Palestinians, the colonisation of Palestine by the Zionist project – this is the root cause.

What are some of the deeper dynamics behind what happened on 7 October?

If Hamas is a monster, it is a monster that was fostered by Israel – going back to the 1980s and even earlier, when Ariel Sharon was the Israeli minister of defence. The idea was that the PLO, and especially Fatah, were the terrorists. Hamas was simply the local Gaza branch of the Muslim Brotherhood. And it was regarded as a more or less pacifistic organisation, which was concerned with social welfare. So, to undermine the PLO/Fatah, the Israelis fostered Hamas.

Later on, Bibi Netanyahu, especially after 2009, had a policy of actually being complicit in the promotion of Hamas against the PLO. For him, the “danger” was that the Palestinian Authority and the PLO in the West Bank were pressing for a two-state solution. He wanted to undermine them. He wanted first of all to split the Palestinian leadership into two, so they would not be in a position to make any binding agreements.

Divide and rule.

How do we know this? Because he said so. I’ve got it in Hebrew, I’ll translate it for you. According to a report of the Jerusalem Post, Netanyahu was asked in 2019 why he allows Qatar to send so much money to the Gaza Strip. He replied that this is part of the strategy to separate the Palestinians in Gaza and in the West Bank. “Whoever is against the creation of a Palestinian state should be for” the transferring of money to the Hamas government, he said.

So this was the short- and medium-term plan?

This was his stupid, idiotic strategy of preventing pressure for a two-state solution. Which succeeded! The two-state solution is now not a serious option, if it ever was serious, which I don’t think it was. But there was always international pressure for it, and PLO pressure for it. He wanted to resist that.

He failed to predict the onslaught last month, which caught Israel completely by surprise and is a huge failure of the Israeli regime – worse than the failure in the Yom Kippur War on almost exactly the same date 50 years ago, which is also symbolic. But in this case it was a failure because the Hamas assault happened in refutation of positive Israeli policy actually to foster Hamas. Netanyahu did not regard Hamas as a danger to this extent. He was satisfied if from time to time there was any “need” to attack Gaza; he did it. But without ever intending to destroy Hamas, because he found it useful.

Can we go into the broader geopolitical context of what we’re seeing now?

There was the alliance that was being hatched between Saudi Arabia and Israel with American mediation, as it were, bypassing the Palestinian people altogether. So Israel will be accepted as an ally of the major, richest Arab state and the Palestinians completely ignored.

And this would also sideline Jordan, Lebanon and Syria?

I think Jordan wasn’t very happy either. I can go into the rivalry between the Hashemite dynasty and the Saudis.

Jordan’s Hashemite rulers have custody of Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque, the third holiest site in Islam, going back of course before 1967, but after the war of ’67, Moshe Dayan specifically made an agreement with the Hashemite rulers (King Hussein at the time, the father of Abdullah). And according to this agreement Jordan had the custodianship of the third holy place of Islam. Mecca and Medina also used to be under the custodianship of the Hashemites, but the house of Saud dislodged them in the 1920s.

This rivalry goes far back into the history of the Arabian peninsula and the machinations of imperialism in this era. Jordan likely feared the Saudis could have been granted custodianship of the al-Aqsa compound too, in exchange for their alliance with Israel, to complete the three and dislodge the Hashemites.

And what would be the significance of unseating Jordan?

There is a well-documented scheme of attempting to overthrow the Hashemite regime in Jordan and making it the new Palestine. Of course, under Israeli control.

Is this why you said earlier that you did not predict this phase of ethnic cleansing would start in Gaza?

What I believed was that the Gaza concentration camp would remain an enclave controlled by Israel with 2.3 million people incarcerated. Israel could live with it for a further period. I thought this latest wave of ethnic cleansing of Palestinians would start in the West Bank because Israel has the possibility of using Jordan.

A year before the invasion of Iraq, when it was clear to people in the know that it was going to happen, an Israeli military historian wrote an article describing what he refers to as the “Sharon plan” of the then-prime minister of Israel, to get rid of Palestinians from the West Bank, and indicated he would do so in case of this major upheaval in the region. In order to perpetrate ethnic cleansing, you need a conflagration in the region, which is happening now.

Moreover, there was another, earlier indication of such an agenda too, during the Tiananmen Square events in Beijing in 1989. An Israeli politician made a speech – he was not aware that he was being recorded – at Bar-Ilan University, saying that Israel would be stupid not to use this opportunity to carry out a major ethnic cleansing in the West Bank. This was reported later in the Jerusalem Post. He denied it, but they had the recording. Who was this politician? Binyamin Netanyahu. He was then a junior minister in the Israeli foreign office.

By the way, if you follow the news, the ethnic cleansing is now spreading to the West Bank.

How would you sum up your thoughts about the current moment and the resonance of the ad?

I think now we are returning to the beginning. We are in the middle of an act of ethnic cleansing.

From time to time people discover the ad and say “Ah! You were prophetic”. But you didn’t need the gift of prophecy to predict something so simple. Occupation leads to such and such consequences. It was just common sense.

So what is the common sense thing to do now?

To point out that the Palestinian people are not collectively responsible for what Hamas did, and that Hamas itself was fostered by Israel – initially as a mild substitute for the terroristic PLO, now as a more militant organisation that would foil the peace overtures of the abject Palestinian Authority.

And what do you see as the specific role of Jewish left organising now in Israel and in the UK, America, and elsewhere?

In Israel there is no role for a separate Jewish organisation – I don’t believe in it. The situation is quite different in a place like Britain or America, because Israel is claiming to act in the name of Jews everywhere.

If Jews want to speak as radical leftist Jews, I think they have a role here. And that is to disabuse the left and the general public of the falsehood that Israel acts and speaks on behalf of all Jews all around the world. It doesn’t. It has no right. And it has no place to speak in this way▼


Reproduced with permission from Vashti

Eli Machover is a PhD candidate in politics at the University of Oxford and an editor at Vashti.


  • Moshe is right. It is not just a human catastrophe that is unfolding, but also a political disaster. Now on the agenda is the ethnic cleansing of Gaza and the West Bank, followed soon by the ethnic cleansing of Arabs from Israel.

    The killing of civilians is indefensible, whether committed by Israel or Hamas, and Hamas’s attack represents a significant setback to the cause of Palestine in Israel. In the aftermath, it will be difficult for Israelis and Palestinians who believe in mutual liberation to find the space to work together. Around the world, those Jews already committed to the cause of Palestine will remain so. But those who need persuading of Palestine’s cause will now be hard to reach.

    Israel’s response to Hamas’s attack, to kill many thousands whilst flattening Gaza, was entirely predictable. Israel thinks it can kill its way to peace. Everyone else, including Hamas, knows terror begets terror.

    Hamas’s strategy, if that’s what it was, was to halt ‘normalisation’ talks between Saudi Arabia and Israel. This has been achieved. A second aim, for the world to watch as Israel annihilates Gaza, is being played out now. We will have to see whether their third aim is successful – the destabilisation of the region. But Hamas could have achieved all of these without killing hundreds of civilians. Just engaging the Israeli army in Israel would have been enough to send Netanyahu apoplectic. They would have invaded Gaza and Hamas could have held the moral high ground. And how much better would things have been for the people of Gaza? But Hamas doesn’t care about the fate of Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinians. They are pawns. Nor does Hamas care to see Palestinians working with progressive Israelis. That’s a complete no-no to them.

    So who are the big winners? Russia. Putin is laughing all the way to Ukraine. Iran. It is the major player in the region. Hamas, or whatever Islamist group takes their place. They have paradoxically strengthened their grip on the Palestinian people. And finally, Iran’s and Hamas’s idea of an Islamic Palestine. Who are the big losers? The Palestinian people, and the idea of a democratic secular Palestine. I hope I’m wrong, but I fear not.

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  • Please correct typo: Hussein was the father of Abdullah II, not his great-grandfather….

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  • I recall an old Star Trek episode where a planet avoided war by agreeing that people from otherwise warring sides would be randomly chosen by computer….. and eliminated without permitted protest, in groups. Enterprise crew could not physically interfere( due to Prime Directive). Eventually Kirk persuaded combatants that
    War should not be painless, damage-free ,habitual…. or it becomes acceptable and permanent. Was he right?

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  • Jean-Jaques Turkie
    I’m sad to say this but you have little knowledge of what caused the War in Ukraine, it is down to the US, it’s their Proxy War, it’s aim was to cripple Russia’s economy.
    I found this very interesting, it adds to my knowledge of Israel’s thinking and motives that lead to where we are today. Thank you Moshe and Eli.
    There is a theme that’s never changed even after 75 years and that is, to clear Palestine of Palestinians and takeover their land.
    Whenever I’ve been debating/arguing with pro Zionists, you can always sense their hatred towards the Palestinians and towards us who support them and condemns the way they are treated by Israel.
    I cannot see a situation where Israel’s leaders, sit down with the Palestinian leaders and a group of outsiders that are not supporters of either side but would help put together a solution that brings true peace. The reason I say that is, because Israel has only one aim and that is to take their land at any cost. So they need to be forced to leave Palestine and the only way that is even remotely possible is for BDS to be put into place but it will never happen because of the United States, that will always support Israel as it sees Israel as its own Middle East, Fully Armed Military Base.

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  • Bernard Grant

    Let’s leave Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to one side and talk about your solution to the Israel/Palestinian crisis. It is that Israeli Jews be forced out. And go where? Have you even thought about that? And how might you force out seven million Jews? It is people like you who give anti-Zionism an anti-Semitic name. There is only one solution. For Jews and Arabs to live together peacefully and equally in one state, as they did for 2000 years. You nod a condescending thank you to Moshe and Eli. But if they read your post they would want to wring your neck. Where do you think their families live? Timbuktu?

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