July/August 1995, pgs. 76, 99
Special Report
Settlement Symposium Focuses on Obstacles to
Peace
By Greg Noakes
The Center for Policy Analysis on Palestine and Georgetown University's
Center for Contemporary Arab Studies co-hosted a June 2 symposium
on "Settlements and Peace: The Problem of Jewish Colonization
in Palestine." A multinational panel of experts and analysts
moderated by Harvard University's Bishara Bahbah discussed the history
of Zionist colonization, the extent of Jewish settlements in the
occupied territories, changes in American policy toward Israeli
settlement activity and the impact of dispossession on Palestinian
society. Far from being simply what the Clinton administration terms
"a complicating factor," the panelists argued that Jewish
settlements are the key to the future of Middle East peace as well
as a determinant factor in the daily life of Palestinian society.
Walter Lehn, a Canadian linguist and Middle East scholar who taught
at universities in both North America and the Arab world before
his retirement, discussed attempts by the Jewish National Fund (JNF)
to purchase land in pre-1948 Palestine and their impact on the geographic
and demographic profile of the area. The JNF, founded in 1901, was
charged with buying as much Palestinian land as possible and bringing
it under Jewish control. Although legally a separate entity, the
JNF was under the control of the World Zionist Organization.
The fund operated under strict rules which prohibited the sale
of JNF-acquired land and barred the lease, sub-lease or settlement
of such land by non-Jews, according to Lehn. These regulations were
designed not only to consolidate Jewish landholdings, but also to
promote the early Zionist vision of "self-labor," which
held that Jews should work the land and "make the desert bloom."
A History of Dispossession
Lehn, author of the landmark 1988 study The Jewish National
Fund (available through the AET
Book Club), said that until 1930 the JNF concentrated its acquisition
efforts on large absentee landowners, most of whom lived in Lebanon
or Syria and were willing to sell for a good price. These acquisitions
accounted for fully half of the JNF's land purchases at the time
of Israeli independence in 1948.
Between 1930 and 1938, the JNF also turned to large Palestinian
landholders. Although the concomitant rise in Palestinian nationalism
put public pressure on such families to reject the JNF's overtures,
these purchases made up another quarter of the JNF's total pre-1948
purchases.
Having exhausted these sources by 1938, the JNF then adopted a
policy of buying any available land regardless of value or location,
at times using means of "dubious legality," according
to Lehn. At the creation of the State of Israel in 1948, the JNF
possessed 936,000 dunums of property, over half of the Jewish-owned
land in the mandate territory. Yet despite these efforts, Jewish-owned
land totalled only 3.5 percent of the land of Palestine. While some
Israelis argue that the meager results of the JNF's efforts were
due to a lack of funds, Lehn said a more important factor was the
unwillingness of resident Palestinians to sell their land to the
Zionists.
Although it is not a high-profile organization, the JNF continues
to exist, Lehn pointed out, and still collects rents on its property
and receives large donations from diaspora Jews via organizations
like the U.S. tax-deductible United Jewish Appeal and through bequests
of land or money. In fact, the JNF still holds title to properties
in Lebanon, Syria and Jordan which it bought before 1948 with an
eye toward an enlarged Jewish state. Lehn said the JNF continues
with its mission of "guaranteeing the Jewishness of the land
in perpetuity," a task deemed too important to be entrusted
to the government of Israel itself.
Ibrahim Matar, deputy director of American Near East Refugee Aid
(ANERA) in Jerusalem since 1986, discussed the extent of Israeli
settlement activity in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, in
addition to the rationale behind settlement development. According
to Matar, the settlements have been used to break up the continuity
of Palestinian territory, thus precluding the establishment of a
Palestinian state.
Palestinian population centers in Jerusalem and the West Bank are
surrounded with settlements in an attempt to isolate them. In the
event, according to Matar, it was the settlers themselves who were
surrounded during the intifada and left vulnerable to attacks.
Matar also discussed the pretexts used by various Israeli governments
when establishing Jewish settlements in the occupied territories.
Between 1967 and 1980, most settlements were established for "security
reasons," though it is actually the settlers who have required
protection over the years. Nevertheless, the rationale is still
used today by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who declares
that the so-called "security settlements," especially
in the Jordan Valley, must remain intact. Matar noted that following
the peace treaty between Israel and Jordan the need for a line of
armed settlements along the border seems to have disappeared, though
Rabin's argument has not.
"The New Sultans"
After 1980, Israel began to seize land for settlements on the basis
that the properties had reverted to the state, i.e., the Israeli
government, in accordance with an 1853 law which provided for the
return to the Ottoman state of land parcels which were less than
50 percent under cultivation or which were not cultivated for three
consecutive years. Referring to this use of Ottoman law, Matar noted,
"The Israelis have become the new sultans of the West Bank!"
Despite Israeli claims, Matar said a review of deeds shows that
some 95 percent of the land seized by Israel in the territories
was Palestinian-owned, with the remaining five percent being public
land.
With regard to East Jerusalem, Ibrahim Matar said the 150 acres
which Israel attempted to seize last spring pales in comparison
to the 6,500 acres in East Jerusalem already claimed under a 1943
British Mandate ordinance allowing the state to take land to be
used for a "public purpose." Matar said that of the 287,000
Israeli settlers living in the occupied territories in 1994, fully
121,000 were situated in an expanded East Jerusalem. The land seizures
and subsequent construction of Jewish settlements effectively have
surrounded the city's Palestinian residents. "The only area
open is the sky above us," Matar remarked sadly.
He closed by pointing to two steps Israel must take with regard
to settlements if it hopes to keep the peace process alive. First,
Tel Aviv should end "the quiet land war" of dispossession
being waged against the Palestinians, and secondly, Israel should
begin preparations to dismantle and evacuate settlements in the
occupied territories. Should the Likud or some other right-wing
party come to power, however, Matar warned that "they can expect
another intifada."
Geoffrey Aronson of the Foundation for Middle East Peace traced
the history of changing U.S. policy toward the settlements. Until
1980, American policy was based on four principles, not all of which
were mutually compatible, Aronson noted. First, Washington declared
that the Israeli settlements were illegal and violated international
law. Second, settlement construction prejudiced the eventual outcome
of future negotiations on the status of the occupied territories,
according to the U.S.
At the same time, Washington agreed that once the settlements were
built, they were not easily removed. Finally, American policymakers
declared that the final disposition of existing settlements should
be decided by the parties to the conflict, and was therefore a subject
for negotiations.
Under Ronald Reagan, however, American statements ceased to refer
to settlements as "illegal," calling them merely "obstacles
to peace." Aronson said that despite his strained relations
with then-Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, George Bush also
refrained from declaring the settlements illegal under international
law.
Bush's secretary of state, James Baker III, agreed to delay discussion
of Israeli settlements until final status negotiations in order
to coax Shamir to the 1991 Madrid Conference, and even during the
battle over U.S. loan guarantees did not demand a halt in settlement
construction. Aronson noted that the loan guarantee arrangement
worked out between Bush and incoming Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin,
designed to limit settlement activity, paradoxically sanctioned
for the first time Israeli construction in the territories by allowing
for the "natural growth" of existing settlements.
Bill Clinton has followed his predecessor's lead in allowing additional
construction within existing settlements, while also permitting
the establishment of new settlements so long as they are "privately
funded." In addition, the Clinton administration has taken
to calling the settlements a "complicating factor in the peace
process," in the words of Ambassador Robert Pelletreau, further
weakening Washington's historical criticism.
A Rationale to Remain
Aronson charged the administration with using the language of the
Oslo accords, specifically the agreement to delay negotiations on
the settlements' final status, to "soft-pedal" criticism
of Rabin's building activities in the territories. "Rabin is
presiding over a major expansion of settlement infrastructure and
population in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and, if you can believe
it, even Gaza," Aronson said. "Settlements and settlers
offer the Israel Defense Force a rationale for remaining in the
West Bank as something other than an occupying army," Aronson
argued.
Muhammad Hallaj, a former Bir Zeit University professor and director
of the Center for Policy Analysis on Palestine who currently serves
on the board of the Independent Palestinian Commission for Citizen's
Rights, closed the symposium by placing the impact of the settlements
in a Palestinian context. He declared the settlements "are
threatening to the Palestinian national future" and are a "central
issue" in ongoing Israeli-Palestinian talks.
Hallaj, speaking with a restrained passion, described the effects
of the settlements on Palestinians living in the territories. Settlement
activity requires large-scale dispossession of scarce economic resources,
particularly land and water. Decrying the Zionist myth of "a
land without a people for a people without a land," Hallaj
argued that settlements represent a major diversion of dwindling
resources from the majority of the area's residents to a small,
pampered minority.
He also pointed to the presence on Palestinian land of thousands
of armed settlers scattered among the Arab populace. "Armed
settlers are an armed militia," he stated, "a second army
of occupation." The settlements themselves are "instruments
of an apartheid system," according to Hallaj, complete with
a dual system of laws which systematically strips non-Jews of their
rights and privileges.
Hallaj also pointed out that settlements are made up not just of
the housing units themselves, but also green belts, industrial zones,
army camps and extensive road networks. These constructs break up
the "geographic continuity and demographic coherence"
of the West Bank, and do "violence to the rights and expectations
of dispossessed Palestinians," he declared.
Finally, Hallaj said, the settlements cast an air of uncertainty
over the future of the Palestinians. So long as land continues to
be seized and settlements continue to be built, Palestinian life
will be "uncertain, tense and impoverished," Hallaj argued,
subject to immediate and irrevocable threat. Hallaj ended by underlining
the gravity of the settlement issue for Palestinians. "It is
a matter of self-preservation," he said simply.
Greg Noakes is the news editor of the Washington Report
on Middle East Affairs. |