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             "Ideological Views of the Palestinians"
                HOLIDAY, Vol. 18 (November 1982)

                         by Gordon Welty
                     Wright State University
                      Dayton, OH 45435 USA

I.  [November 14, 1982]
     It is necessary to begin with a disclaimer.  It is not
possible for anyone validly to represent the Palestinian people
except for its sole legitimate representative, the Palestine
Liberation Organization (P.L.O.).  The P.L.O. has consistently
affirmed the national identity of the Palestinian people and its
historic right to its homeland in Palestine.  
     While principled, the Palestinian position has not been
inflexible.  In 1969 it advocated the establishment of a secular
democratic republic in Palestine; after 1977 the Palestinian
National Council, the legislative body of the Palestinian
government in-exile, advocated the establishment of a nation-
state in the West Bank and Gaza as soon as those territories were
liberated from Israeli occupation.
     This Palestinian programme must be contrasted to those of
the Zionist entity.  Israel is neither a secular nor a democratic
republic.  Israel is a Jewish theocracy, and Israel does not
have, and presently does not care to have, a constitution.  We
will return to assess the issue of religion in a moment.  
     With reference to the absence of a constitution, it has been
suggested that the Israeli position accords on the one hand with
its pretense to tribalism and, on the other hand, its inability
to justify in writing its theocracy, especially to the American
Zionists, those Jewish tourists and Christian tourists to whom
the excesses of Orthodoxy and Zealotry are scandalous.
     The Palestinian position does not lend itself to
interpretation as religious controversy.  It is rather a secular
demand for the re-establishment of its historic homeland, a
demand to be pursued through national liberation struggle.  Only
when we turn to other ideological positions does the possibility
of understanding the conflict in the Middle East in terms of
religious controversy emerge.
     In the complex pattern of Middle East politics, we can
identify three interested parties.  It is convenient to
distinguish several ideological positions which are contending
within each of these three parties, regarding the Palestinian
people.  The three parties are Israel, the United States, and the
several Arab countries.
     What are the contending ideological positions in Israel
regarding the Palestinian people?  The dominant ideological
position is called Revisionist Zionism.  The other major position
is called Labor Zionism.

REVISIONISM 
     Revisionist Zionist arose in the 1920's under the direction
of Vladimir Jabotinsky and is a member of the family of
ideologies known as radical nationalism.  In brief, any people
without their own homeland doesn't deserve to exist.  
     Moreover, any people which does have a homeland will remain
isolated within that land.  This isolation will either come from
that people's own affirmation of their racial purity, or else it
must be enforced by other, neighboring peoples who have
homelands.  
     This ideological position is held by the Israeli Herut Party
under the leadership of Menachim Begin, regarding the
Palestinians in particular and Arabs in general.  It finds its
most receptive audience in the Sephardic Jews, the Israeli ethnic
group caught between the hegemonic Ashkenazim and the oppressed
Palestinians, constantly aspiring to the higher status of "real
Jew," constantly threatened by the status of "just an Arab,"
susceptible to religious superstition and adulation of "great
men."  
     In fact, Israeli Sephardim publicly worship Menachim Begin
as a "living saint."  Gross manipulation of religious sentiment
may be an element of the conflict between Israel and the
Palestinians.
     Parenthetically, the ideological position of the Phalange
Party in Lebanon, lately under the leadership of Bashir Gemayel,
has a close family resemblance to Revisionism.
     Since Israel has deprived the Palestinian people of its
homeland, and has also deprived the vast majority of Palestinian
persons of their homes and landed property, the Herut Party and
the Likud Alignment consistently consider the Palestinians to be,
in Begin's terms, "two-legged beasts."  
     As such, Palestinians are appropriate victims of pogroms
such as those perpetrated at Deir Yassin in 1948 and at Shatila
in 1982.  Those who fled from the Nazi holocaust in Europe would
perpetrate one of their own in the Middle East.
     Parenthetically, since the Palestinian people has been
deprived of its historic homeland and has come to reside in
refugee camps in Lebanon, the Phalange Party considers itself to
be the appropriate agent, and agent under Israeli tutelage and
with both U.S. government and Israeli consent, to perpetrate
pogroms such as those at Tel Zataar in 1976 and Shatila in 1982.

LABOR ZIONISM
      Turning to the other major ideological position in Israel,
Labor Zionist arose toward the end of the Nineteenth Century and
is a member of the family of ideologies known as herrenvolk
democracy.  It views the world in pragmatic and optimistic terms,
always looking for the "quick fix."  
     It is Eurocentric and fundamentally racist.  The racism of
the Israeli Ashkenazi justified colonial rule over the
Palestinian people to bring civilization to the Sephardim, and
incidentally superprofits to the metropole.
     In case the Sephardim don't just now appreciate this
European civilization, carefully engineered anti-Semitic scares
can enhance their understanding.  In case the Palestinians don't
appreciate this colonial rule, carefully orchestrated night-
riders and Jewish thugs can facilitate their emigration from the
"Promised Land."
     This ideological position is held by the Israeli Labor
Alignment under the leadership of Shimon Perez (or is it Yitsak
Rabin).
     It is clear that these ideological position accord no place
to the Palestinian people.  The populace of the surrounding Arab
lands can perhaps be subjugated and balkanized by Imperial
Israel.  But not so the displaced Palestinian people.  The
popular phrase of the Israeli Defense Force is to "kill the
Palestinian while they are young" while the weak sisters in the
Israeli populace simply wish the Palestinian out of existence,
tacitly acquiescing in the deed of the fascist state.

II. [November 21, 1982]
     Next, what are the contending ideological positions in the
United States regarding the Palestinian people?  The dominant
ideological position, although an increasingly questioned
position, is what can be called "Dual Loyalty."  The other major
ideological position in the United States regarding the
Palestinian people is the U.S. Department of State "official
position."

DUAL LOYALTY ZIONISM
     Dual Loyalty Zionist fully emerged in the Fifties and is one
of the earliest of the family of ideologies known as "ethnic" or
"single-issue politics."  It recognizes, promotes, and even
depends upon the profound ignorance and apathy of the American
people regarding the Middle East in particular and foreign policy
issues in general.  
     It has thus been a relatively easy task for Dual Loyalists
to "screen" political aspirants on a seemingly innocuous topic:
how does this candidate feel about Israel?  On the one hand,
those candidates who mindlessly and unconditionally support
Israel will themselves be supported.  
     Those who have minor misgivings can be reassured by the
allegation of the identity of interests of Israel and the U.S.
(hence the name "Dual Loyalist"), by all-expense-paid trips to
the Holy Land, by the promise of campaign contributions and
speaker's honoraria.  Much of these items take the form of the
Dual Loyalists' tax-deductible contributions.  
     On the other hand, those who have serious doubts about the
justice of Israeli aggression and aggrandizement in the Middle
East, or about the wisdom of U.S. support for Zionist land-
grabbing and terrorism, can unceremoniously be dumped by the Dual
Loyalists at an early and practically invisible stage of the
political process.  Meanwhile that process presents an unruffled
surface to the electorate.
     According to this ideological position, itself about as
well-informed as the typical tourist mentality, Palestinian are
depicted as terrorists, barbarians, etc. and the U.S. would do
well to consider withdrawing from the United Nations or any other
international context where representatives of the Palestinian
people are, or even might some day be, present.  
     Parenthetically, it might be noted on the issue of terrorism
that it is the Israeli practice of taking no prisoners in border
violations and its policy of "no negotiations" with the
Palestinians which precipitate the fire fights during which
Israeli citizens are cut down by the Israeli Defense Forces.
     Like the Israeli Zionist, there is no place for the
Palestinian people in this Dual Loyalty brand of Zionism.  In
fact, this Dual Loyalty Zionism, the philosophy of tourists and,
one surmises, Rev. Jerry Falwell, appears at times to be more
blood-thirsty from the safety of American shores than its Israeli
counterparts.

THE `OFFICIAL' U.S. POSITION
     The other major ideological position in the United States,
that of the Department of State, is also ambivalent in its
loyalties, but with different ambivalences.  Under the pretense
of promoting U.S. national interests, this position simply
promotes corporate interests in the Middle East.  
     This loyalty to corporate interests is not to be vulgarly
construed as promoting particular corporate interests such as
those of Aramco or Bechtel.  When we realize the official
position promotes these corporate interests _in general_,
paradoxical Department of State policies become more clear.  
     The most intriguing instance of that paradox is the official
support of "moderate Arab regimes" as well as the "special
friendship" with Israel.  Vulgarly, this can be attributed to
careerists loath to experience the wrath of the Dual Loyalists,
the charges of "anti-Semitism," etc.  
     More insightfully, this support is due to the Department of
State realization that the "moderate Arab regimes" are nothing of
the sort.  More on that point later.  Those regimes need Israel
to deflect the Arab masses from domestic concerns.  In turn, the
corporate interests need those regimes.  
     Despite the antipathy of much of the corporate leadership
towards Israel, the ideological position of the Department of
State promotes the corporate interests directly by supporting the
so-called moderate Arab regimes and indirectly by supporting
Israel.
     There is no place in this ideological position for the
national aspirations of the Palestinian people.  After decades of
dismissing the Palestinian people as refugees, decades of wishing
them out of existence, the Department of State appears to be
formulating a more active ideological position.   
     The Department of State seems to favor the assimilation and
_thereby_ the disappearance of the Palestinian people within a
reconstructed Lebanon, or Jordan, or _almost_ anywhere else.
     It is clear that this "official position" regarding the
Palestinian people is extremely dangerous.  it attempts to
_internalize_ the Arab-israeli conflict within Foggy Bottom, as
it were.  This is illustrated by the "Camp David agreement."  One
would suppose that the explosiveness of such policy would be
patent in light of the overthrow of the Egyptian monarchy after
the debacle of 1948.
     More recently, West Bank Palestinian resistance to Zionist
designs led the Israelis, with the complicity of the U.S.
government, to invade Lebanon and then Beirut to destroy the
legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.  That this
imperialist adventure failed, despite the five or six to one
numerical superiority of the I.D.F., portends the long-term
failure of U.S. schemes for the Middle East as well.

III. [November 28, 1982]
     Finally, what are the contending ideological positions among
the Arab countries regarding the Palestinian people?  The
dominant ideological position is that of the so-called moderate
Arab regimes.
     The other major ideological position is the Arab masses'
national aspirations in general and support of Palestinian
national aspirations in particular.
     The spokesmen of the so-called moderate Arab regimes pay lip
service to the national aspirations of the Palestinian people,
and even pay some of the bills, as it were, of the sole
legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.  
     These regimes are only marginally integrated with their Arab
masses, and are increasingly unable to maintain domestic accord
and the appearances of legitimacy.  In part this marginality is
due to the Arab nation's imperialist and colonial heritage.  
     The arbitrary divisions and regimes of the British, French
and other colonial powers were imposed as successors to the
religious or confessional divisions of the Ottoman Empire.  In
part this marginality is due to the regimes' own policies.  It is
a time-worn quip that the Egyptian army was ineffective in the
Sinai because it always had its sights trained on the Arab masses
in Cairo.  
     These are backward if not reactionary regimes; regimes of
the comprador class of the Arab world; thus they are in truth the
"extremest" Arab regimes.  The U.S. Department of State cannot
acknowledge this extremism because of the cognitive dissonance it
would occasion among the American electorate.
     The ideological position of the so-called moderate Arab
regimes barely tolerates the Palestinian people and its
legitimate representative.  
     On the one hand, the realization of the Palestinian national
aspirations would relieve the so-called moderate Arab regimes of
the highly educated and culturally modern Palestinian from their
midst, thus lessening the potential for social change in the Arab
world.  
      On the other hand, it would remove the lightening rod of
Middle East politics with consequences unimaginable from the
standpoint of these regimes.
  
NATIONALISM
     What of the other major ideological position in the Arab
world regarding the Palestinian people, the Arab masses' own
national aspirations?  
     Arab nationalism fully emerged since the end of the Ottoman
Empire and is a member of the family of ideologies of national
liberation.  It holds that the Arab nation, today numbering over
150 million people, is an historically constituted nation
reaching from the Fertile Crescent and the Arabian Peninsula
across North Africa to Mauritania.
     It has artificially been dissected by the European colonial
powers and will reconstitute itself only through struggle against
contemporary imperialism.  It tends therefore to be anti-
imperialist but not anti-American except to those who would
presume to identify corporate interests in the Middle East with
the interests of the American people.  
     This position has been infrequently articulated in the West
during the last decade, in part because of the monopolization of
the mass media by the spokesmen of the self-serving regimes; in
part because of the distraction from more lasting themes provided
by the Sadat media hype.  
     But the magic still worked by Nasserism and Aflaq's Baath
doctrines is suggestive that the national aspirations of the Arab
masses are not to be dismissed.
     It is a key provision of Arab nationalism that the heartland
of the Arab world cannot remain occupied by European
colonialists, the Ashkenazim, and their Sephardic allies.   It is
common historical knowledge of Arabs that Algeria was rid of its
European colonialists after a century of occupation.
     Another key provision of Arab nationalism is that the
Palestinian people, an integral part of the Arab nation, cannot
remain displaced, dispersed throughout the world.  Thus the
recognition and active promotion of the national aspirations of
the Palestinian people is a necessary element of any viable
doctrine of Arab nationalism.  
     These are the doctrines which mobilize the Arab masses.
     There are compatibilities and affinities among these
ideologies which are revealing of profound and extensive social
relations.
     For instance, the three Zionisms increasingly manifest
affinity.  While the relations of Revisionist and Labor Zionism
have frequently been strained, the Likud Alignment's electoral
successes and the increasing demographic strength of the
Sephardim have brought a detente.  
     Likewise Dual Loyalists briefly recalled that Albert
Einstein, Hannah Arendt and other prominent Jewish intellectuals
had warned in the >New York Times< in 1948 against Begin's
Fascist tendencies.  But the Dual Loyalists soon and completely
accommodated themselves to the new realities of a politics they
had never really understood anyhow.
     The ideological position of the U.S. Department of State and
the so-called moderate Arab regimes have deep affinities,
although occasional divergences of the two positions are inflated
in the mass media.  The 1973 oil embargo is a case in point.  It
is convenient to forget that the price increase was initiated by
Iran to pay for the Shah's modern weapons systems _prior_ to the
October 1973 war.  It is convenient to forget that the Nixon
administration needed these arms sales to Iran because of the
steady deterioration of the Vietnam War and the attendant decline
in demand.  
     When the oil embargo was finally instituted, it merely
continued inflationary pricing tendencies already underway.  But
the mass media portrayed this as an Arab initiative, as the
fearsome "oil weapon."
     Finally, the several Zionisms and the "official" U.S./Arab
positions find an ultimate compatibility in there mutual need for
objects of distraction of their respective masses.  These
affinities reflect the unity among differences of the several
aspects of modern imperialism.
     The one position which tends to be incompatible with the
others is Arab nationalism.  The fear of Nasserism and Arab
radicalism recurrently grips ruling circles in Israel and the
United States, and the so-called moderate Arab regimes.  But this
ultimate incompatibility reflects the profundity of the anti-
imperialist struggle.

                               -o-

