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  • US turns blind eye to Israel's new separation policy
  • The IDF – Israel's organ grinder
  • The first Israeli Jew in Fatah’s parliament
  • Boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel now urgent – Israeli academic
  • Israeli fascism: the “Bogie” Ya’alon horror show
  • The long struggle to reclaim Beersheva’s Great Mosque
  • Israel turns up the heat to evict Bedouin from desert lands
  • The travelling music is always the same
  • Prof Yehuda Hiss: the missing link in Palestinian organ theft?
  • Palestinian embassy in London strangely silent as Israeli terror-strikes and land-grabs continue
  • Israeli advertisements warn against marrying non-Jews
  • Israel’s Arab citizens call general strike in response to wave of “racist” measures
  • Israel blocks money to Gaza’s disabled
  • Branded “an enemy of Palestine” – should I laugh or cry?
  • How low will Israel stoop to win the propaganda war?
  • The not-so-hidden persuaders
  • How US tax breaks fund Israeli settlers
  • UN General Assembly president “frustrated” in his attempts to end blockade of Gaza
  • Israel’s fear of Jewish girls dating Arabs
  • On Palestinian civil disobedience
  • The comic genius of Binyamin Netanyahu
  • Binyamin Netanyahu’s UN speech: the pathology of evil
  • Gaza peace protester is prisoner in own home
  • Goldstone report's fate sealed by threats to Palestinian economy
  • Deception, spin and lies
  • “Silly season” fatwa
  • Israeli police don Arab disguise: notorious army method to be used inside Israel
  • Self-defence stories from Gaza
  • “Where have all the friendships gone...”
  • How the “most moral army in the world” wages war on students
  • Time for Britain to make amends for crimes against Palestine
  • A line in the sand: Barack Obama’s treachery in the Middle East
  • Spotlight on Palestine: an interview with Stuart Littlewood
  • The United Nations should acknowledge Palestine’s statehood
  • “Campus Watch” copycats close in on Israeli professors
  • Arab teens need “protecting from Israeli justice”
  • NATO had better steer clear of Israel
  • Have Israeli spies infiltrated international airports?
  • What festive cheer will the West bring to the Holy Land this Christmas?
  • “...And a little child shall lead them”
  • Israel’s Arab women workers need not apply
  • Israel’s notorious Hannibal procedure: army directive behind shooting of mental patient
  • Rules of human decency apply to Israelis too
  • Spot the difference: Israel’s Prussian heritage – and destiny?
  • Israeli-style “justice” for Palestinian student Berlanty – official version
  • Israeli war crimes suspect says quest for justice is for losers
  • Partition in Palestine is still the issue
  • Egypt’s President Mubarak blows his chance to behave decently
  • Gaza's untold story
  • Reaching the Gates of Hell is not so easy
  • Tactics of desperation: using false accusations of “anti-Semitism” as a weapon to silence criticism of Israel’s behaviour
  • Egypt lacks the milk of human kindness
  • The Iron Wall
  • Gaza robbed of the most basic human right: the right to health
  • Spiteful Mubarak succeeds only in creating a PR disaster for Egypt and himself
  • What next, Viva Palestina?
  • Truth will prevail: Israel panicking as the truth catches up with it
  • Israel's new rocket defence system
  • Gaza: what are promises of humanitarian aid worth?
  • In memory of Martin Luther King
  • The Liebarak
  • “Lost tribe” on fast track to Israel
  • Barack Obama’s paralysis in face of Zionist lobby
  • Arab politicians face tide of “persecution” in Israel
  • Israel stole 2 billion dollars from Palestinian workers: 40-year deception exposed
  • Israel’s war on protest: army used to deport activists against Apartheid Wall
  • Losing patience with squabbling “two-rump” Palestine
  • Sex, lies and videotape
  • Jews-only homes for Ajami
  • Israel’s re-branding exercise in Haiti backfires as past catches up
  • The long arm of Israel must be amputated
  • The new McCarthyism in Israel
  • Mossad’s murderous reach: the larger political issues
  • Do you have to be Jewish to report on Israel for the New York Times?
  • “Peace or apartheid” are not the only options for Israel
  • The truth about Israel as only Gideon Levy can tell it
  • Is Europe planning seal of approval for Israeli settlers?
  • Does Israel hope to spark a new wave of suicide bombing?
  • Rachel Corrie family finally puts Israel in dock
  • The decline of Israel and the prospects for peace
  • Israel’s “No renting to Arabs” policy
  • Israelis unhappy with weak loyalty of “British dogs”
  • Israel’s provocation at al-Aqsa
  • “By way of deception, thou shalt do war”
  • Samson and the second Nakba: a short history of the Jewish Hercules
  • Israel unveils “green” strategy to defeat enemies
  • Palestine's "turbulent priest" delivers a blistering Easter message
  • The so-called “only democracy in the Middle East”
  • Israel and the “delegitimization” oxymoron
  • The Palestinians are winning the legitimacy war: will it matter?
  • Israel: total boycott against total occupation
  • Rule by law or defiance
  • Reversing Israel’s faux legitimacy
  • Was Israel ever legitimate?
  • Israel and the question of legitimacy
  • The dark underbelly of Israel's security state
  • Mossad operation threatened against reporter
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  • Israel’s rebranding strategy focuses on delegitimizing critics and opponents
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  • Gaza humanitarian flotilla versus Israel’s evil navy
  • Israeli butchery at sea
  • Criminal pirate Israel makes a fool of the OECD only days after it clasped the viper to its bosom
  • The concentration camp that is Gaza
  • The madness of arrogance: Israel's attack on the Gaza aid flotilla
  • Israeli MP’s terror on aid ship: “Plan was to kill activists and deter future convoys”
  • Pirates in the Mediterranean: Israel’s shameful justification for murdering peace activists
  • “Mad dog” diplomacy: a cornered Israel is baring its teeth
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  • Rise people, rise: call for zero tolerance of Israeli crimes
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  • Israeli MP who joined flotilla faces witch-hunt
  • An open letter to the Israeli Jewish public: support the Gaza Flotilla!
  • Israel's Gaza blockade: letting the chips fall where they may
  • Israel plans dig at burial place of Prophet Muhammad’s companions and Saladin warriors
  • The Israel/Palestine one-state solution sounds like a good idea, but...
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  • Letters from Palestine: a must-read book
  • Lieberman’s “peace" plan: strip Palestinians of citizenship
  • Jerusalem politicians face expulsion by Israeli occupation authorities
  • Boycott Israel campaign wants Israel to abide by international law
  • Witch-hunt begins in Israeli schools and colleges
  • Israel's new “video game” executions
  • Israel’s parliamentary mob
  • Netanyahu: I deceived US to destroy Oslo accords
  • This Time We Went Too Far: review of Norman Finkelstein’s book on Israel’s Gaza blitzkrieg
  • Israel’s secret police exposed
  • Ethnic cleansing in the Israeli Negev
  • Israel classifies its past as top secret
  • Revered Israeli rabbi preaches slaughter of gentile babies
  • Israel’s teenage barbarians at ethnically cleansed village
  • Israel plans mass forced removals of Bedouin
  • Suspected Israeli torturer gets key police job in Jerusalem
  • Legalizing injustice in the Negev and implications for “democracy” in Israel
  • No room for Arab students at Israeli universities
  • Hamas must rebrand and take the wind out of Israel’s and America’s sails
  • Who is the Israeli state loyal to?
  • The secrets in Israel’s archives
  • A case of decency deficit: Israel’s sickness goes beyond one soldier and her Facebook pictures
  • Binyamin Netanyahu and Mahmoud Abbas: what are the possibilities?
  • Israeli and US Zionists mount ferocious attack on liberal academics in Israel
  • More pointless talks with Israel? Send in the clowns
  • Bedouin land fight: claim for native title threatens Israel’s racial exclusiveness
  • George Mitchell hoping for a quick-fix fake peace?
     
    The Liebarak

    Israel’s diabolical hybrid: Avigdor Lieberman and Ehud Barak

    By Uri Avnery

    24 January 2010

    Uri Avnery highlights the future and present dangers posed by Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman and Defence Minister Ehud Barak, the former an openly racist settler who advocates the expulsion of Israel’s Arab citizens and the latter a criminal who has just awarded university status to a settler college in the occupied West Bank.

    ”The Spanish government has already declared a boycott of the Ariel college and cancelled its participation in an international architectural competition run by Spain. 

    “I hope that more governments and academic institutions will follow this example and declare a boycott on this ‘university’.

    “...an academic institution cannot be indifferent to a boycott by its peers around the world. And if the Israeli academic community does not rise up against this prostitution of its ideals by the setting up of a university of the settlers under military auspices – it is inviting a boycott on all Israeli universities.”

    The business is registered in the name of Binyamin Netanyahu. But the reality is different.

    Netanyahu has never been more than a slick patent medicine salesman. That is a type that appears frequently in American Westerns and sells an elixir that is good for everything: against the flu and against tuberculosis, against heart attacks and against lunacy. The main weapon of the vendor is his tongue: his stream of words builds castles in the air, blows up glistening bubbles and silences all doubt.

    Since the election almost a year ago, his biggest (literally) achievement has been the setting up of a cabinet: 30 ministers and a bunch of deputies, most of them without any perceptible duties, some of them in charge of ministries for which they are the most unsuited of all possible candidates. From then on his main occupation has been the one in which he is most adept: political survival.

    In this governmental zoo, the one really important creature is the Liebarak – a two-headed monster that terrifies all the other animals. This animal is 50 per cent Lieberman, 50 per cent Barak, 0 per cent human.

    When Lieberman first appeared on the stage, many looked on him with disdain. Such a person, they decided, has no chance in Israeli politics...

    The last elections put an end to this belief. Lieberman’s party won 15 Knesset seats, two more than Barak’s party, and became the third biggest Knesset faction. Not a few “real” Israeli youngsters, Sabras through and through, voted for him. They saw him as a good address for their protest vote.

    The establishment was not too upset. OK, so there was a protest vote. In every Israeli election campaign there appears an election list from nowhere that wilts the next day, like the gourd of the prophet Jonah. Where are they all now?

    But Lieberman is not General Yigael Yadin, who created the Dash party, or Tommy Lapid, the leader of Shinui. He is a man of brutal power, lacking any scruples, a man ready to appeal – as Joseph Goebbels put it – to the most primitive instincts of the masses.

    We may yet see in Israel a coalition of all the malcontents and the angry, as the Bible says about David when he fled from King Saul: “And every one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented, gathered themselves around him, and he became a captain over them.” (1 Samuel 22:2). Lieberman’s home turf is the community of immigrants from the former Soviet Union who have not been absorbed into Israeli society and who live in a spiritual and social ghetto. They may be joined by other sectors: the settlers, the Oriental Jews who feel that the Likud betrayed them, young people who see him as a man who expresses openly what they believe in secret: that the Arabs should be expelled from the state, and from the entire country.

    Lieberman’s un-Israeli appearance may yet turn out to be an advantage for him. A person who is so un-Israeli may become the ideal leader of a camp united by its hatred of the “elites”, the Supreme Court, the police, the media and the other pillars of Israeli democracy.

    The police investigations, too, may elevate him in the eyes of this public. They believe that he is being persecuted by the hypocritical elites. The dark cloud of suspicion did not deter Netanyahu from giving him control of both the Ministry of Police and the Ministry of Justice, the two ministries charged with upholding the rule of law, which are now under the direction of his lackeys.

    This danger should not be underrated. Other historical leaders of his ilk were at first considered clowns and ridiculed, before they came to power and wrought havoc.

    But the second head of the Liebarak is more dangerous than the first. The danger of Lieberman lies in the future. The danger of Ehud Barak is immediate and real.

    This week, Barak did something that should turn on a another red light. On the demand of Lieberman, Barak accorded the settlers’ college in Ariel the status of a university.

    Unlike the “foreign” Lieberman, Barak comes from the epicentre of old-time Israel. He grew up in a kibbutz, was a commander in the elite “General Staff commando” and speaks perfect Hebrew with the right intonation. As a former chief of staff and a present minister of defence, he represents the might of the most formidable sector in Israel: the army.

    Lieberman has not yet succeeded in hurting the chances of peace, except by talking. Barak has acted. I once called him a “peace criminal”, in contradistinction to a “war criminal” – though nowadays many would accord him this distinction, too.

    The fatal blow dealt by Barak to the chances of peace came after the 2000 Camp David conference. To recount briefly: when he was elected in 1999 with a landslide majority, on the wave of enthusiasm of the peace camp and with the help of clear peace slogans (“Education instead of Settlements!”), he induced Presidents Bill Clinton and Yasser Arafat to meet him at a summit conference. In a typical mixture of arrogance and ignorance, he believed that if he offered the Palestinians the chance to found a Palestinian state, they would give up all their other claims. His offers were indeed more far-reaching than those of his predecessors, but still far from the minimum acceptable to Palestinians. The conference failed.

    Coming home from Camp David, he did not make the usual announcement (“Much progress has been achieved and negotiations will continue…”), nor an unusual one (“Sorry, I was wrong, I had no idea!”) Rather, he coined a mantra that has since become the centre of the national consensus: “I have turned every stone on the way to peace / I have offered the Palestinians everything they could ask for / They have rejected everything / We have no partner for peace.”

    This declaration by the leader of the Labour Party, who often calls himself “the head of the peace camp”, dealt a mortal blow to the Israeli peace forces, who had hoped so much from him. The vast majority of the Israelis believe now with all their heart that “we have no partner for peace”. Thereby he opened the way for the ascent to power of Ariel Sharon and Binyamin Netanyahu.

    Throughout his time in office, Barak established and enlarged settlements. On his orders, the commanding officer of Central Command issued a permit for a radio station of the settlers (which has lately started to broadcast, after a long delaying fight by Gush Shalom against it). In this respect, too, he has trumped Lieberman. His decision about the Ariel university fits into this pattern.

    “Wait a minute!” a sensible person may ask. “What has this to do with Barak? He is the minister of defence, isn’t he, and not the minister of education!”

    Ariel is occupied territory. In the occupied territories, the army is the sovereign power. Barak is in charge of the army. The directive to upgrade the Ariel College was given by Barak to the commanding officer. As Yossi Sarid, a former minister of education, pointed out, the “Ariel University Centre” is the only civil university in the democratic world set up by the army.

    An Israeli academic institution has to go a long way before being accorded university status by the competent authorities. There are many colleges in Israel, far more outstanding than the Ariel College, which aspire to this status. In the occupied territories, a general’s approval is enough.

    This fact throws light on the unprecedented Israeli invention: the eternal occupation.

    An occupation regime is by its nature a temporary situation. It comes into being when one side in a war conquers territory of the other side. The occupying power is supposed to rule it, under detailed international laws, until the end of the war, when a peace agreement must decide the future of the territory.

    A war may last some years, at most, and therefore the occupation is a temporary matter. Successive Israeli governments have turned it into a permanent situation.

    Why? At the outset of the occupation, the then minister of defence, Moshe Dayan, discovered that the occupation is really an ideal situation. It gives the occupier absolute power without any obligation to accord the inhabitants any citizenship rights whatsoever. If Israel were to annex the territories, it would have to decide what to do with the population. That would create an embarrassing situation. The inhabitants of East Jerusalem, which was formally annexed to Israel in 1967, did not receive citizenship, but only the status of ”residents”. Successive Israeli governments have been afraid that the world would not accept a “democratic” state in which a third of the population have no rights.

    A status of occupation solves all these problems. The inhabitants of the occupied territories have, de facto, no rights whatsoever – neither national, nor civil, nor human. The Israel government builds settlements wherever it sees fit, also contrary to international law, and now it is setting up a university, too.

    (Lately an original proposal was put forward by Sari Nusseibeh, the president of the Palestinian al-Quds University in annexed East Jerusalem: the Palestinians should demand that Israel annex all the occupied territories, without demanding citizenship. Nusseibeh hopes, so it seems, that in the long run Israel would not be able to withstand international pressure and would be compelled to accord them citizenship, and then the Palestinians would already be the majority in the state and able to do what they want. I appreciate Nusseibeh very, very highly, but feel the gamble would be too risky.)

    The Spanish government has already declared a boycott of the Ariel college and cancelled its participation in an international architectural competition run by Spain. 

    I hope that more governments and academic institutions will follow this example and declare a boycott on this “university”.

    True, the Liebarak couldn’t care less. This two-headed monster is indifferent to boycotts. But an academic institution cannot be indifferent to a boycott by its peers around the world. And if the Israeli academic community does not rise up against this prostitution of its ideals by the setting up of a university of the settlers under military auspices – it is inviting a boycott on all Israeli universities.


    Uri Avnery is an Israeli journalist, writer and peace activist.

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