Israel and its war in Lebanon 4



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Contents


Editorial 2

Theme


Israel and its war in Lebanon 4

includes


Pax Hebraica 4

Emmanuel FarjQun

The Lebanese communities and their

little wars 13

Magida Salman

Letter from the West Bank 21

'Adil Samara

Review of two books on the war 25

* Class divisions in Israeli society 29

Emmanuel Farjoun

* The Oriental support for Begin - a critique

of Farjoun 40

A vishai Ehrlich

Observations in Gaza 47

S. Ur

The rise of Islam: What did happen



to women? 49

Azar Tabari

Discussion forum

State capitalism in Egypt - a critique

of Patrick Clawson 73

Clive Bradley

Reply to Israel Shahak 100

Roberto Sussman

Book reviews 115

Editorial

The present issue of Khamsin goes to the press almost exactly one year

after Israel's invasion of Lebanon. The events of the war -the

invasion, the siege of Beirut, the massacre of Sabra and Chatila - have

received wide coverage in the press and in a number of books. The

central theme of the present issue is not a description of these events

themselves, but their broader context.

In his article Pax Hebraica, E. Farjoun shows that the Israeli inter-

vention in Lebanon was but a first step towards implementing a far-

reaching plan. This plan - openly discussed in Israel, where it is

referred to as the 'Big Thing' -aims to re-draw the map of the Arab

East and place it under the hegemony of a new imperial Israel. Part of

this plan, associated particularly with the name of Ariel Sharon, is to

'solve' the Palestinian problem by establishing a puppet state on the

East Bank of Jordan, and compelling hundreds of thousands of Pales-

tinians presently living in Lebanon and the West Bank to move into that

state. Only against this larger background can Israel's genocidal

conduct of the war be properly understood. Farjoun's article, written

just before the Sabra-Chatila massacre, also helps to explain how that

massacre fits in with broader Israeli designs. This analysis lends added

credence to the growing body of evidence that when Sharon and his

generals invited the Phalange into Sabra and Chatila, they were fully

aware of the probable consequences. (The Kahan Commission

dismissed this possibility, without giving it proper consideration.)

Recent events in Lebanon did not happen in a vacuum; the Lebanese

body politic was in an advanced state of disintegration long before the

Israeli invasion. As the civil war dragged on, any initial political distinc-

tion between right and left tended to get drowned in the blood of

sectarian killings. Magida Salman's article describes the political

psychology of the warring sects, their continuing feuds and their new

illusions.

In this section we also print a letter from a reader in the West Bank,

'Adil Samara, who comments from an independent leftist viewpoint on

the war and the dilemma which its consequences has posed to the PLO.

Future developments in the Middle East will depend crucially on the

internal political evolution of Israel. In this connection it is important

to understand the nature of the support which the Begin government

has won among Israel's Oriental Jewish working class. E. Farjoun's

article Class divisions in Israeli society as well as A. Ehrlich's critique of

2

Editorial



that article constitute a debate on this important topic. Although the

two writers differ on several points, they are at one in rejecting the wide-

spread view that the mass support for Begin is motivated purely, or even

predominantly, by ideology. Rather, this support has important

material causes, which must be sought in the specific socio-economiC

structure of Israeli society.

The first section of the present issue ends with an eye-witness report

on the everyday realities in the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip.

Apart from articles on Israel and its waf in Lebanon, this issue contains

an article by Azar Tabari, in which she subjects to critical examination

the widespread view that the rise of Islam improved the lot of women

compared to their situation in pre-Islamic Arabia.

The Discussion Forum in this issue contains two contributions by our

readers. Clive Bradley's contribution criticises certain aspects of P.

Clawson's analysis of the development of capitalism in Egypt (Khamsin

9). Roberto Sussman's reply to I. Shahak's essay on the Jewish religion

(Khamsin 8 and 9) criticises Shahak's 'moralistic' attitude and disputes

his view of Jewish history in the Middle Ages. Shahak's controversial

essay has attracted much comment, and the debate around it will no

doubt continue.

~ ~~

~~

In the Spring Issue of the



Journal of Palestine Studies

Included in the same issue:

Kahan Report: Israeli Government's

Investigation into Massacres in Lebanon

Also The Report of The International

Commission on Israel in Lebanon,

7b order your spring issue

please send $8 to:

Institute for Palestine Studies

P,O. Box 19449

Washington, D.C. 20036

I-I;;!!I The Institute for Palestine Studies publishes over 150 periodicals, monographs &

II 5 series in English, French & Arabic on the Arab-Israeli conflict and Palestinian affairs. For your

free brochure, please write to the Institute at the above address.

Pax Hebraica

Emmanuel Farjoun

One thing is utterly clear and obvious about Israel's war in Lebanon.

Namely, that the level of violence and destruction inflicted upon the

population in general and the Palestinians in particular has been much

higher than needed in order to occupy Lebanon south of Beirut and to

destroy the military power of the PLO, driving its armed forces out of

the country. With all their deep-seated, though eroding, pro-Israeli bias

the Western media have captured this elementary truth. The highlights

of Israel's violence were:

1 Utter destruction of whole Palestinian communities in Lebanon.

This was done not only during the fighting itself, by massive bombard-

ment, but also by systematic house-to-house destruction of the largest

refugee camps in Tyre and Sidon (Al-Rashidiyya and' Ain Hilwa) and

Beirut - using bulldozers, dynamite etc.

2 Systematic elimination (by killing, expulsion or detention in

concentration camps) of all male Palestinian population between the

ages of 14-65. According to well-corroborated reports, no Palestinian

males of these ages are to be found in the area controlled by Israel.

3 Deliberate destruction of Lebanese towns, especially along the

coast, but also elsewhere.

4 Attempts to expel as many Palestinian families as possible out of

Lebanon. An Israeli reserve colonel, Dov Yirmiah, resigned his post in

the army after he had been specifically instructed by the government

not to extend any help to the Palestinian children and women who were

wandering around the destroyed communities. In fact, on 18 June, he

was told by a cabinet minister to 'push the Palestinians eastwards'. Hè

was not to allow them to set up tents as shelter against the intense heat.

He was not even allowed to let anyone else take care of these refugees.l

The Israeli hope was that this combination of starvation, lack of

shelter, and mass arrest of the male population would eventually force

hundreds of thousands of Palestinians out of Lebanon into Syrian-held

territories.

5 Brutal bombardment of Beirut, using anti-personnel weapons such

as cluster bombs and phospherous shells, under the pretext of flushing

4

Pax Hebraica



out the PLO. The two main Palestinian neighbourhoods in Beirut were

destroyed by combined attacks from air, sea and ground - driving all

the population to the heart of Beirut, where they were subjected to

further anti-civilian showers of bombs. The siege of Beirut lasted more

than nine weeks and deprived the population of food, water, gas and

electricity. This, as well as the destruction of hospitals and the deliber-

ate bombing raids against blocks with heavy Palestinian refugee

population, has been amply documented and widely reported.

Genocide

In the light of all this, we see that the war in Lebanon has been much

more than a war of occupation against the Palestinian forces and their

Lebanese allies. In plain language it amounts to nothing less than a

policy of genocide against the Palestinian people in Lebanon. Genocide

in the literal sense of the word, namely the physical destruction of as

many Palestinians as possible and the expulsion, scattering and deten-

tion in concentration camps of the rest. Israeli soldiers were under

specific orders to kill as many 'PLO members' as possible. But, for

better or worse, the PLO in Lebanon was a sort of quasi-state, with its

own extensive bureaucracy and services - schools, clinics, hospitals etc.

Therefore virtually every Palestinian in Lebanon was associated with it

from birth to death in one way or another. The call for the destruction,

annihilation and killing of the PLO infrastructure was simply a euph-

emism for a policy of utter destruction of the 500,000 strong Palestinian

community in Lebanon as a national entity, and their elimination as

individ uals.

Dov Yirmiah, who had resigned his post as head of an Israel army

unit dealing with the civilian population, wrote:

'Whoever put the unit together did not assign to it the right people.

Most of them knew no Arabic and some hated Arabs to such an extent

that it obstructed the activity of the unit. . . The Red Cross aid was not

accepted and I know of other attempts to help which were rejected-

among them aid from Jewish and Israeli organisations. Is it not

hypocrisy and cruelty to mention in this context that we distributed

3000 blankets? The story of the tens of thousands of Pålestinian

children, women and elderly refugees will be told some time in the

future and we will all have to pay the heavy human and moral cost. I

shall mention only three things. . .

'1 When Minister Meridor [assigned to the matter by the government]

was asked about the fate of the Palestinians on 18.6.82 he replied,

"Push them eastwards".

'2 The only policy of our commanders towards them was strict

prohibition to deal with them in the framework of the unit. "Let

UNRWA take care of them".

5

Pax Hebraica



'3 They were not allowed to set up tents plenty of which were in

UNRW A's hands. This was an inhuman and cruel act and it teaches us

about the "humanity" boasted of by [the present commander]

Maimon. '2

Notice that Co!. Yirmiyah refers only to children, women and elderly

Palestinian refugees. The menfolk were nowhere to be seen. They had

'vanished' into the concentration camps and eastward to Syria.

Once this genocidal dimension is recognised as being the only one in

which one can comprehend Israel's conduct in the war, the question

naturally arises: Why did Israel go to such extremes of destruction,

alienating the whole Middle East, including its newly-found ally Egypt,

as well as both European and American public opinion? After all, the

policy of destruction of the Palestinians in Lebanon will not itself bring

any closer the resolution of the Palestinian problem; neither for the two

million Palestinians who live under direct Israeli contol in Palestine,

nor for the many hundreds of thousands of Palestinian diaspora

scattered around the Middle East.

The 'Big Thing'

To answer this question one must comrehend both the short-term and

long-term policies of the present government - plans which are direct

continuations of the former Labour government's policy of

colonisation of the territories occupied in June 1967.

The short-term policies are well known: destroy the PLO, thus

depriving the Palestinians of national cohesiveness and unity. This,

Israel hopes, will make a de facto, and later formal, annexatior:. of the

West Bank and Gaza Strip much easier.

Israeli political analysts had long predicted the war with many of its

appalling dimensions precisely on these grounds. The administrator of

the occupied territories, M. Milson, had said at the beginning of 1982

that 'we are entering into the most crucial stage of the war with the

Palestinians since 1948', thereby correctly setting the framework of the

present war. Thus in the immediate sense the war in Lebanon was a war

over the eventual possession of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Israel

hopes to set up there a collaborationist structure around the Village

League - an Israeli -sponsored organisation which however weak at the

present is already entrusted with the conduct of many aspects of civilian

day-to-day life such as licences, road building, emigration, schooling

etc. In addition, for the first time in Zionist history Palestinian armed

militias were formed to enforce the quislings' rule. These are still no

more than armed gangs who act as bodyguards and fascist thugs. But

given time Israel will try to develop them into the core of a Palestinian

repressive regime - to repress and help extinguish any opposition to the

policy of rapid colonisation and land-grabbing.

6

Pax Hebraica



This West-Bank dimension of the war is extremely important and

widely recognised. It explains the attempts to destroy the PLO as a

viable organisation. But it does not explain directly the genocidal aspect

of the war. This aspect is derived from the wider context, present and

future, ofthe war in Lebanon. Because, with all its immediate and far-

reaching implications, the war is but one link in a whole strategic plan.

This plan is the brainchild of Defence Minister A. Sharon and is

referred to in Israeli parlance as the 'Big Thing'. It revives an old

ambition for a drive to the north-east, which was on the cards already in

the days of the first Israeli prime minister, D. Ben-Gurion.3

The Lebanon war had its roots in the traumatic experience of the

1973 war with Syria and Egypt. No one in Israel has forgotten the

spectre of the two Arab armies attempting to recover their national

lands taken in 1967. Of course, the Egyptian army, even in a combined

attack with Syrian forces, represented no real danger to the State of

Israel as such. The trauma was caused by the fact that there could not be

a knock-out Israeli victory; that despite huge effort during three weeks

the Israelis could not roll back the Egyptian soldiers who were using

modern weaponry; that despite many thousands of losses on both sides

there was no decisive Israeli victory. The 3000 Israeli soldiers who lost

their lives had to be taken into account. In 1973 the mighty Israeli army

had lost its credibility as an invincible force in the eyes of the Arab

armies; and this state of affairs could not be tolerated for too long.

In the eyes of most Israeli politicians, the whole of Sinai was much

too high a price to be paid for a peace with Egypt. The Israeli army had

the awkward feeling that the loss of Sinai was the direct result of its

inability in 1973 to achieve a rapid victory and the need to get American

supplies in the midst of the war - supplies which emphasised Israel's

day-to-day dependence on the United States.

Therefore Israel undertook a complete renovation of its armed forces

from A to Z. New aeroplanes, tanks and troop carriers and huge stores

of supplies and ammunition were built, produced and bought with

generous American help. The next war was to be fought without an

American airlift of supplies - and with minimal Israeli casualties. Ever

since 1973 Israel had been looking desperately for a large-scale war to

test its renewed war machine and to re-establish its reputation as a local

military superpower.

When Begin came to power he drew far-reaching lessons from the

1973 fiasco. His conclusions were radical and clear. Israel could no

longer fight a major war on two distant fronts, north and south, and

still achieve a decisive victory at acceptable costs in terms of loss of life

and political dependence on the United States. One should not forget

that the 1973 fiasco had also brought in its wake a sharp increase in the

emigration of Israelis, with total net 'losses' from the immigration/

emigration balance of about 40,000 Israelis according to official

statistics: a very large number indeed by Israeli standards. Unable to

fight wars successfully on two fronts, Begin decided that Israel's future

7

Pax Hebraica



strategy would be to concentrate military action on one front - the

north-eastern. In order to achieve this, he agreed to give up Sinai to the

last inch of territory - in exchange for peace with Egypt. Israel's

relations with the Arab world, including Egypt, with the Palestinians

both in Palestine and outside, as well as with the United States would be

determined and decided by the military development on this one front.

The essential difference between the new north-eastern front, which

includes Lebanon, Syria and Jordan, and the old Egyptian front is that

in the former wars must be fought in densely populated areas. Three

major Arab capitals - Beirut, Damascus and Amman - are within

about an hour's drive from Israeli-held territories.

Begin and Sharon decided that this fact opens up an immense new

possibility for Israel. From now on, while concentrating on this front,

Israel would strive to go much further in its wars. The aim of war would

be not only to destroy Arab armies in order to defend old territorial

expansions and acquire more land. An important strategic aim on this

front would be to intervene directly in the political structure of the Arab

countries around it. Israel would try to set up regimes which would suit

its colonialist ambition on the West Bank, in southern Lebanon and

beyond. For that it needs direct lines of communication and control

over the nearby-Arab capitals. This shift in Israel's war aims has been

amply illustrated recently.

First, one of the aims of the war in the Lebanon was to establish there

a 'strong state' which would make peace with Israel and would be

controlled by Israel's allies in the Maronite community. The model of

this state was set up by Israel several years ago in the shape of 'Free

Lebanon' under Major Haddad - a direct Israeli agent. Israeli papers

discussed openly day after day the need to establish direct Israeli-

Phalangist control over the whole of Lebanon. This was achieved by the

forced election of Bashir Gemayel to the presidency. B. Gemayel was

not exactly an Israeli stooge but a longstanding ally, who would have

depended on Israel for his very stay in power. The 'need' to station

Israeli troops in Lebanon for the foreseeable future was pointed out by

many Israeli analysts.

Another example of the same kind is the famous statement by

Defence Minister Sharon that, had he been Prime Minister, he would

have given King Hussein of Jordan 48 hours to leave Amman, his

capital, thereby opening the way to the establishment of a 'Palestinian

State' on the East Bank of the Jordan river.

The ideological and political driving force behind this new strategy is

of course the old and by no means exhausted Zionist colonisation

project of 'The Land of Israel' whose exact boundaries are to be

determined by future developments.

The Israeli leaders shudder at the prospect of a hurried peaceful

solution to the Middle East tangle which would integrate Israel too

quickly into the region. It was realised with horror in Israel that the

Sadat initiative, fuelled by Begin's agreement to give up Sinai, would

8

Pax Hebraica



have a natural continuation. The continuation, as exemplified by the

Saudi plan of King Fahd (which was endorsed in September 1982 by the

Arab summit conference at Fez) implies Arab willingness to accept

Israel into the Middle East club, on one condition: namely, that it is cut

down to its 'natural size' -the 1967 borderline. This would imply that

Israel must playa relatively minor role in the region's politics, that the

Palestinians would get a mini-state and that Israel's further territorial

ambitions are to be checked. This prospect is abhorrent to the Israeli

leaders, not because they do not want peace, but rather because it would

seal Israel within the 1967 border and throttle the Zionist project which

they believe is still in its full swing.

Sharon and Begin do want to join the Middle East club but only on

their own terms: as a local military and political superpower. Therefore

as soon as the Sadat peace initiative started to spread to other Arab

countries and especially to the PLO itself, something had to be done

quickly to halt this development. The PLO's approval of King Fahd's

plan and its rigorous adherenc~ to the 1981 cease-fire agreement along

the Israeli-Lebanese border weJe signs of moderation and acceptance of

the diplomatic approach. This moderation is the very thing Israel fears

most. Professor Yehoshua Porath, a distinguished scholar of Middle-

East history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, author of several

important books on the history of the Palestinian national movement,

went so far as to say that Israel started the war precisely because of the

very clear signs of moderation and strict control shown by the PLO.4

But this is only one part of the picture.

After Lebanon - Jordan?

In order to understand the nature of the Lebanon war one must put it in

the context of Sharon's grand plan, which goes far beyond the

Lebanese involvement. It has at least two further interlinked elements:

transforming Jordan into a Palestinian puppet state and concentrating

the Palestinian people on the East Bank of the Jordan.

Let us recall that an eventual annexation of the West Bank and Gaza

- which is the official government policy and the single most important

project of Begin - implies a grave problem for the Jewish character of

Israel. This is because in Palestine as a whole there are two million

Palestinians living alongside about three and a half million Israeli Jews.

If these Palestinians were granted Israeli citizenship, then in a



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