palestine
MIRAGE IN THE DESERT

DAVID
SOLWAY
_____________________________________
David
Solway's most recent book is The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism,
and Identity. Mirage in the Desert first appeared in FrontPageMagazine.com
The
Small Dictionary of Middle East Stereotypes posted
online by the Metula News Agency is not far south of the truth
when it defines “Palestine” as “A small piece
of paper stuck on Arab maps and atlases to hide Israel.”
The Palestinian fiction has even been admitted by the Palestinians
themselves. In a 1977 interview with the Dutch newspaper Trouw,
Zahir Muhse’in of the PLO Executive Committee confirmed
that the “Palestinian people do not exist. The creation
of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle
against the state of Israel for our Arab unity…Only for
tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a
Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that
we posit the existence of a distinct ‘Palestinian people’
to oppose Zionism.”
Hollywood,
too, has contributed to the fiction. Director Paul Haggis’
anti-war film, In the Valley of Elah, locates the contest
of David and Goliath in Palestine, when no such entity existed.
Haggis may have been ignorant of his biblical history, but his
well-known leftish inclinations suggest a specific design at
work. It is highly appropriate that In the Valley of Elah
was filmed in Hollywood, an illusion factory that is about as
“real” as Palestine. It is no exaggeration to suggest
that the concept of “Palestine,” the simulacrum
of the “Palestinian,” is, when all is said and done,
not much more than a Tinseltown movie, an empty fabrication—the
historical grounding is absent and the sense of a cohesive national
identity has been artificially generated by a political cabal
working in tandem with the international media. The fact of
the matter is, to adapt a current catch phrase, that the Palestinians
are all keffiyeh and no sheep.
The
same applies to the Palestinian Authority itself, a crypto-political
construct invented by the West with Arab backing that has necessarily
proven incapable of governing, controlling its bellicose factions
and creating the conditions for peace and normal civil life.
The irony of the situation is especially mordant: the chief
obstacle to peace is the very institution that was formed to
facilitate its accomplishment. A synthetic contrivance improvised
in Oslo, it has in the current circumstances no alternative
but failure. In point of fact, Jordan is the only viable
nation state of the Arabs of Greater Palestine, problematic
as it may be. Let us remember once again that when Britain defied
the terms of the League of Nations in 1923 and created the protectorate
of TransJordan from the territory earmarked for Israel, it artificially
established a de facto Palestinian state which the West Bank
was never intended to be a part of. And when the United Nations
proposed its 1947 partition plan, further dividing up the Israeli
allodium, it was rejected by the Arabs who responded by launching
a massive attack against the fledgling Jewish state. Implausible
as this may sound in the present circumstances, another
Palestinian state in one shape or another may come to exist
one day, but I suspect it would prove to be little more than
the result of a process of political taxidermy.
Certainly,
there is no usable template in the rest of the Muslim Middle
East to serve as a pattern for emergent statehood—even
Turkey, the presumed beacon state, remains unstable. The Palestinian
mirage suffers from an even more debilitating version of the
Arab debacle which, as the Lebanese-American scholar Fouad Ajami
points out in The Dream Palace of the Arabs, derives
from the connate failure of Arab society in absorbing democratic
values and incorporating the principles of the modern nation
state. The problem, I would suggest, is that in the Arab mindset,
there is no tertium quid or intermediate structure
between the tribe, which commands the practical loyalty of the
individual, and the ummah, which invokes a mystical
allegiance to the far-flung Islamic collective. The nation state
is neither one nor the other, too dispersed and abstract an
arrangement to create a sense of intimate union, and yet insufficiently
numinous and “spiritual” to bind the individual
to the transcendent body of the people. Until this changes—which
is highly doubtful—the Arab “state” will remain
a synthetic contrivance to be exploited in the interests of
the ruling tribe or family and is thus condemned to be perennially
mercurial.
Indeed,
what Albert Camus said of Algeria in his 1958 Actuelles
III, that it was only a “virtual nation,” is
mutatis mutandis true of “Palestine”—as
it is, for that matter, of Iraq. The latter is not a real nation
but three tribal regions, or Ottoman vilayets, cobbled together
in the aftermath of the First World War and now, predictably,
sinking into a quicksand bog of internal strife and indiscriminate
slaughter. At best, it will be a magpie nation, assembled from
disparate materials, always threatening to come asunder, and
held together by American strength of will and concrete support.
It may manage to survive, as has Algeria, but, politically,
it will remain an active volcano. Camus’ skepticism of
“Arab demands” and raw emotionalism applies equally
to “Palestine,” which is not a genuine nation but
an internally riven enclave of competing jihadist cliques that
will likely prove incapable of unified and constructive self-government.
It does not take much in the way of aculeate insight to arrive
at this conclusion; it is a bit like predicting the past. In
the circumstances, it would be foolhardy to dismiss the Shakespearian
adage from Henry VI, Part 3, “that Beggars mounted,
run their Horse to death.”
Related
articles:
Tariq
Ali: Letter to a Muslim
Irshad
Manji: Faith Without Fear
Phyllis
Chesler: Secular Islam on the Rise
Edward Said: Chronicle of an Infitada Foretold
Confronting
Islam
Unveiling
the Terrorist Mind