Israel’s Settlers Are Here to Stay
Israel’s Settlers Are Here to Stay
By DANI DAYAN
Published:
July 25, 2012
WHATEVER word you use to
describe Israel’s 1967 acquisition of Judea and Samaria — commonly referred to
as the West Bank in these pages — will not change the historical facts. Arabs
called for Israel’s annihilation in 1967, and Israel legitimately seized the
disputed territories of Judea and Samaria in self-defense. Israel’s moral claim
to these territories, and the right of Israelis to call them home today, is
therefore unassailable. Giving up this land in the name of a hallowed two-state
solution would mean rewarding those who’ve historically sought to destroy
Israel, a manifestly immoral outcome.
Of course, just because
a policy is morally justified doesn’t mean it’s wise. However, our
four-decade-long settlement endeavor is both. The insertion of an independent
Palestinian state between Israel and Jordan would be a recipe for disaster.
The influx of hundreds
of thousands of Palestinian refugees from Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and elsewhere
would convert the new state into a hotbed of extremism. And any peace agreement
would collapse the moment Hamas inevitably took power by ballot or by gun.
Israel would then be forced to recapture the area, only to find a much larger
Arab population living there.
Moreover, the
Palestinians have repeatedly refused to implement a negotiated two-state
solution. The American government and its European allies should abandon this
failed formula once and for all and accept that the Jewish residents of Judea
and Samaria are not going anywhere.
On the contrary, we aim
to expand the existing Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria, and create new
ones. This is not — as it is often portrayed — a theological adventure but is
rather a combination of inalienable rights and realpolitik.
Even now, and despite
the severe constraints imposed by international pressure, more than 350,000
Israelis live in Judea and Samaria. With an annual growth rate of 5 percent, we
can expect to reach 400,000 by 2014 — and that excludes the almost 200,000 Israelis
living in Jerusalem’s newer neighborhoods. Taking Jerusalem into account, about
1 in every 10 Israeli Jews resides beyond the 1967 border. Approximately
160,000 Jews live in communities outside the settlement blocs that proponents
of the two-state solution believe could be easily incorporated into Israel. But
uprooting them would be exponentially more difficult than the evacuation of the
Gaza Strip’s 8,000 settlers in 2005.
The attempts by members
of the Israeli left to induce Israelis to abandon their homes in Judea and
Samaria by offering them monetary compensation are pathetic. This checkbook
policy has failed in the past, as it will in the future. In the areas targeted for
evacuation most of us are ideologically motivated and do not live here for
economic reasons. Property prices in the area are steep and settlers who want
to relocate could sell their property on the free market. But they do not.
Our presence in all of
Judea and Samaria — not just in the so-called settlement blocs — is an
irreversible fact. Trying to stop settlement expansion is futile, and
neglecting this fact in diplomatic talks will not change the reality on the
ground; it only makes the negotiations more likely to fail.
Given the
irreversibility of the huge Israeli civilian presence in Judea and Samaria and
continuing Palestinian rejectionism, Western governments must reassess their
approach to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They should acknowledge
that no final-status solution is imminent. And consequently, instead of
lamenting that the status quo is not sustainable, the international community
should work together with the parties to improve it where possible and make it
more viable.
Today, security — the
ultimate precondition for everything — prevails. Neither Jews nor Palestinians
are threatened by en masse eviction; the economies are thriving; a new
Palestinian city, Rawabi, is being built north of Ramallah; Jewish communities
are growing; checkpoints are being removed; and tourists of all nationalities
are again visiting Bethlehem and Shiloh.
While the status quo is
not anyone’s ideal, it is immeasurably better than any other feasible
alternative. And there is room for improvement. Checkpoints are a necessity
only if terror exists; otherwise, there should be full freedom of movement. And
the fact that the great-grandchildren of the original Palestinian refugees
still live in squalid camps after 64 years is a disgrace that should be corrected
by improving their living conditions.
Yossi Beilin, a
left-wing former Israeli minister, wrote a telling article a few months ago. A
veteran American diplomat touring the area had told Mr. Beilin he’d left
frightened because he found everyone — Israel, the Palestinian Authority,
Jordan and Saudi Arabia — content with the current situation. Mr. Beilin finds
this widespread satisfaction disturbing, too.
I think it is wonderful
news. If the international community relinquished its vain attempts to attain
the unattainable two-state solution, and replaced them with intense efforts to
improve and maintain the current reality on the ground, it would be even
better. The settlements of Judea and Samaria are not the problem — they are
part of the solution.
Dani Dayan is the
chairman of the Yesha Council of Jewish Communities in Judea and Samaria.
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