Our shared humanity in a time of crisis

As global crises typically do, the Coronavirus – its spread, and the looming threat it poses to humankind – provides us with a sense of perspective.

COVID-19 does not discriminate between Israelis and Palestinians. When threatened by this deadly virus, the two peoples worry together and work together to save lives.

When the forces of nature remind us how vulnerable we are – how equally vulnerable we are – we are humbled. And humbled before these forces, we demonstrate our shared humanity.

When Israel was hit by a monstrous fire, Palestinian firefighters crossed the Green Line with their firetrucks and risked their lives to save Israelis. And when Palestinians are hit by COVID-19, Israel’s public health professionals work side by side with their Palestinian colleagues, supplying them with test kits, medicine and knowhow. “There are no borders here…There is no ‘them’ and ‘us,’” Brig. Gen. Ghassan Alian, the commander of Israel’s Civil Administration in the West Bank, told Israel Radio last week.

In such times, you cannot but wonder why Israelis and Palestinians do not harness their shared humanity, their common sense and their sense of common future to end the bloody conflict between them. Unlike pandemics, wildfires and earthquakes, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is manmade. And this manmade calamity can be undone by humans – if they find it within themselves to relate to the other as humans, as equals, as equally human.

We at Americans for Peace Now know as well as anyone how complicated the conflict is. We’ve been documenting it and advocating ways to address and resolve its components for many years. We know how difficult it is to untangle the knots of problems like Jerusalem sovereignty, Palestinian refugees, security arrangements, and Israeli settlements in the West Bank. We know that this is not a “senseless” conflict, as some often depict it. It is a conflict between two national movements which claim the same piece of land. In some ways, this is a zero-sum conflict.

But we also know that in recent years, it was mainly attitudinal problems – attitudes among Israeli and Palestinian publics and leaders (and now the White House as well) – which obstructed progress toward conflict resolution. And we know that despite the zero-sum nature of the conflict, there is a win-win compromise solution for it, waiting to be adopted and implemented.

The COVID-19 pandemic will eventually abate and eventually disappear. We don’t know when and we don’t know how many of us, here in America and in the Middle East, it will impact.

We also know that once Coronavirus is contained and defeated, the Israelis and Palestinians that we so deeply care about will be left with a malignant conflict that has been plaguing their societies for almost a century.

There is a viable solution to this conflict, and we hope that the traumatic experience we are currently experiencing will make the solution easier to comprehend, grasp, and achieve.

We at APN, and our brothers and sisters at Israel’s Peace Now movement, will committedly continue to make our contribution to resolving the conflict.

In the coming days and weeks, APN’s staff members will be working offsite, away from our Washington DC office. Regardless, we will do our utmost to provide you with the high-quality educational materials on the conflict that you expect from us.

This is a difficult time for all of us, a truly tumultuous time for nonprofit organizations like ours. Knowing that we can rely on your support allows us to brave the challenges and continue working – both in Israel and the United States – to help pave the way toward conflict resolution.

Thank you for your support,

James B. Klutznick, Chair of the Board
and
Aviva Meyer, Vice Chair of the Board and Acting CEO

Letting a religious zealot like Ambassador Friedman decide the future of the West Bank is like allowing the NRA chief to distribute the U.S. army's rifles among the most fanatical gun enthusiasts 

by Ori Nir (Mar 09, 2020)

While we are following the roller coaster of American and Israeli politics, and as we seek shelter from the alarming spread of the Coronavirus, a committee representing the government of Israel and the Trump administration is carving out vast swaths of the occupied West Bank territory – some 30 percent – for Israel to annex. The mapping will apparently be completed in a matter of weeks, and an Israeli government could go ahead and annex the territory shortly after the committee completes its work.

Let it sink in: After decades of efforts by Republican and Democratic U.S. administrations to reign in Israeli governments’ West Bank settlement practices, the Trump administration is now leading the effort to determine the contours of the settlements, recognizing as them as part of sovereign Israel. 

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Trump's "Peace" Plan Resource Page - APN Items, Recommended Reading, and More

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Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.

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PeaceCast: "From Bereavement to Peace" with Parents Circle's Bassam Aramin and Rami Elhanan

This episode is based on a live recording of a March 6th, 2020 talk with Bassam Aramin and Rami Elhanan of the Parents Circle. The two are the protagonists of Apeirogon, the new novel by Colum McCann.

Rami and Bassam lost their daughters to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and both made the decision to harness their bereavement to the cause of Israeli-Palestinian peace.  

Listen to the full episode

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Hard Questions, Tough Answers with Yossi Alpher (March 3, 2020) - The March 2nd Elections: Ongoing Deadlock but Important Strategic Trends

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Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.


Knesset election results as of early afternoon Israel time, with 90 percent of votes counted: Likud: 36 Blue-White: 32 Joint Arab List: 15 Shas: 10 Torah Judaism: 7 Labor-Gesher-Meretz: 7 Yisrael Beitenu: 7 Yamina: 6

Blocs: right-religious 59, center-left 54 (Yisrael-Beitenu 7)

There were 6.3 million eligible voters and over 10,000 polling stations, including 16 mobile stations for about 4,000 quarantined corona voters.

The above count does not include some 265,000 votes of soldiers, diplomats abroad, the Corona virus quarantined, and prison population, all of whose ballots take longer to document and count (it is not even clear who will dare physically count the Corona voters’ paper ballots). This is the equivalent of seven or eight mandates. The bulk of these, the soldiers’ votes, generally have the effect of removing a mandate from one or more religious parties and adding a mandate to one or more of the secular parties.

Note: the movement of one or two mandates could prove decisive in ultimate efforts to form or block a coalition--a possibility that is of necessity ignored in the following analysis.


Q. You are writing this Q & A about the elections against a deadline, yet without final results. Given this constraint and based on the results at hand, what significant conclusions can you offer about the next government?

A. First and foremost, for the third time in less than a year, there is no obvious “next government”. There is no obvious coalition of at least 61. On the face of it, this is another hung election.

Yet, second, Netanyahu’s Likud is once again the largest party, leading Blue-White by four mandates, and the right-religious bloc is again the largest, by a four-mandate margin. This is Netanyahu post-indictment, with his trial commencing in two weeks! In this election he demonstrated that despite the corruption charges and with the help of endless ugly maneuvers, dirty tricks and uninhibited mudslinging, he can maintain the loyalty of nearly half the electorate to his party and its allies.

In the eyes of the other half, Netanyahu demonstrated that for too many Israelis the rules of law and decency are not important, and that the primacy of sovereign national values (“mamlachtiut”) introduced by David Ben Gurion is no longer respected.

Third, “nearly half” is an important stipulation. Netanyahu is still two mandates shy of the 61 mandate Knesset majority he needs to form a government and, through legislation, try to shield himself from prosecution and conviction.

Fourth, Blue-White’s decline to second-largest party reflects a failure to counter Netanyahu’s blunt tactics and boundless conspiratorial energies. Netanyahu blitzed voters with endless clips and robot-calls promising victory if only his supporters will get out the vote. He concocted endless preposterous lies and allegations about Gantz, from fear of attacking Iran to an affair with a minor. It was enough that even a little of the mud stuck.

Gantz’s response was a far more civilized campaign aimed at stopping Netanyahu, but little more. If the outcome is a fourth round, Blue-White leader Benny Gantz may step aside. He has emerged as too mild-mannered and upstanding for the Israeli electorate with its consistent drift to the ultra-nationalist right. His rhetorical skills, compared to Netanyahu’s, leave something to be desired. The Blue-White party may now be in danger of disintegrating into the three smaller lists that formed it.

If Bibi is the clear winner of this round--though still short of a government--Gantz is the clear loser. Indeed, all three of Blue-White’s ex-IDF chief of staff leaders, all raised on “mamlachtiut”, proved no match for Netanyahu’s consistent sleaze tactics.

To save Blue-White, the best bet to replace Gantz at the party’s helm is Gaby Ashkenazi, another former IDF chief of staff who in three straight elections has displayed more charisma that Gantz. It was Ashkenazi who, scarcely a year ago, brought together Gantz’s and Moshe Yaalon’s nascent parties with Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid to form Blue-White. And as a Mizrachi or Sephardic Jew of mixed Syrian-Bulgarian heritage he might be better suited to draw votes from Netanyahu’s Likud and even from Shas, which performed surprisingly well this time around.

Fifth, the United Arab List with 15 mandates, up from 13, is growing from election to election by recruiting more and more Arab votes. It is declaring that, politically, Israel’s Arab sector can no longer be ignored. The United List’s achievement this time around is truly dramatic, possibly overshadowing Netanyahu’s.

Sixth, if anyone needed proof that the parties of old that used to run things in Israel have become totally defunct, this election delivered it. Labor, together with Meretz and Gesher, is down to 7 mandates. Yamina, which embodies the remains of the National Religious Party, the “Mafdal”, is down to 6 mandates. Labor along with what is today Meretz and the NRP used to run the country. How the mighty have fallen!

Q. Assuming no significant change in this outcome in the next day or two, what can we expect? What are your scenarios?

A. Here they are, in no particular order (order seems impossible in the current chaos):

A fourth round next October or November cannot be excluded. Still, a rising wave of disgust among the public and the politicians, supported by President Rivlin, could motivate one or more parties or politicians to cross over the political divide, if only to form a “temporary” coalition with the goal of legislating our way out of this mess.

Here the prime candidate is Avigdor Liberman and his “right-secular” Yisrael Beitenu. Throughout these three consecutive elections, Liberman has placed himself beyond the two blocs, thereby helping prolong Israel’s political stagnation. He has promised voters “no fourth round”. Will he now opt to rejoin Netanyahu in a right-religious coalition? Alternatively, will he overcome his visceral opposition to the ever-growing Joint Arab List and agree to join Blue-White and Labor-Gesher-Meretz in a centrist minority coalition that is supported externally by all or part of the Arab members of Knesset?

Could Rivlin refuse to empower the winner, Netanyahu, to form a coalition, citing the fact that Netanyahu is under indictment on multiple counts of fraud and breach of trust? Such a courageous move could give the final word to the High Court of Justice, to which Netanyahu would appeal.

Could another right-wing party like Yamina bolt and join with Blue-White?

Could Blue-White be persuaded by Netanyahu and perhaps by Rivlin to join with Likud in a centrist coalition that features rotation of the premiership and some provision regarding Netanyahu’s pending trial? This option was rejected last time around by Blue-White. Among other objections, Blue-White consistently cited Netanyahu’s lack of credibility when he agrees to rotation.

Conceivably, too, Netanyahu could persuade two or three members of Knesset from the center-left to bolt their parties and, in return for ample political rewards like ministries, join or rejoin the Likud to give the right-religious bloc a 61 MK majority. Netanyahu and his closest allies have been hinting at this possibility for days, ever since pre-election polls showed the Likud pulling ahead of Blue-White in the vote count. Candidates with known right-wing inclinations include Orly Levi-Abakasis of Gesher, the ultra-Orthodox Omer Yankelevitch of Blue-White, and former Likudniks Zvi Hauser and Yoaz Hendel of Blue-White.

Speaking of coopting, Netanyahu has in the past not shied away from doing deals with Arab parties. Could he try to offer all or part of the Joint Arab List inducements to support, even passively, a Likud-led government?

Anything is possible.

Q. At the level of values and issues, can you point to Netanyahu’s advantage and Gantz’s disadvantage as demonstrated in these elections?

A. This is not an easy task. Netanyahu convinced his electorate that the corruption accusations against him are trivial at best and that he can manage a government while dealing with them or, alternatively, legislating them away. He will prioritize some sort of rule of the masses, or just obscure and confusing reasoning, over the rule of law. Here, for example, is prominent Netanyahu supporter Yifat Erlich’s astounding logic, in Yedioth Aharonot on March 1: “Precisely because PM Benjamin Netanyahu can no longer be pressured and no one can threaten him with indictment because he already has three of them, he can restore the state of Israel to democratic normalcy.”

Netanyahu also clearly benefited from Trump’s ‘deal of the century’, which ostensibly demonstrated to Israelis that they can annex West Bank lands with the blessings of the world’s superpower, thereby dovetailing with Netanyahu’s election promises.

Here, by the way, Gantz stumbled. He knew a large majority of Israeli Jews were enthusiastic about Trump and his policies. A dove at heart, Gantz tried to persuade voters that he, like Netanyahu, would annex territories, but only “after consultation with the international community”. Too many potential Gantz supporters got the message: when the smoke clears, he won’t really annex because the international community and the Arab world have made it clear that they vigorously oppose annexation.

By the same token, Netanyahu repeatedly hammered away with the argument that without the Joint Arab List, Gantz would have no coalition and that the Arab MKs are a traitorous fifth column. Gantz denied unconvincingly that he would need the support of Arab MKs. Yet he could never point to alternative support from, say, another right-religious list besides Liberman’s. All those right-religious lists constantly pledged allegiance to Netanyahu’s “bloc”. Anti-Arab voters did the math.

Q. Let’s assume the atmosphere will continue to be one of uncertainty, due either to months of problematic coalition talks or a fourth round or one followed by the other. What harsh realities does the country face?

A. Besides the obvious cumulative and demoralizing dangers to the rule of law and to a healthy civil society? Beyond them, Israel faces a series of unresolved strategic issues that will seemingly remain unresolvable.

Take Iran’s threat from the north and its mismanaged nuclear threat for starters. The Palestinian issue--both the Trump plan and the Hamas/Gaza challenge—is once again gaining urgency and centrality. The economy has been functioning for a year without an approved budget, and virtually all national institutions are suffering as a consequence, beginning with the near-total absence of Knesset legislation and supervision. And last but by far not least, more than ten years of Netanyahu’s policies have brought about the growing alienation of the American Jewish mainstream, Israel’s key strategic ally.

Don’t be surprised if, one of these failed elections, something very central to Israel’s overall well-being “gives”.


For previous editions of Hard Questions, Tough Answers, go to the Index Page.

RECORDING: "Israel’s Election Results – A Strategic Analysis" with Yossi Alpher (Tues, 3/2)

Listen to the recording of the Tuesday, March 3rd briefing call with Israeli political and strategic affairs analyst Yossi Alpher, the day following the  Israeli election:

 

Yossi Alpher, an independent security analyst, is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with Israel’s Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. He is the author of Hard Questions Tough Answers, APN’s weekly analysis of Israeli and Middle Eastern strategic affairs.


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Join us for our upcoming live webinar (accessed via computer or phone), co-sponsored by APN and Partners for Progressive Israel:

"Deal of the Century": What Now for the Israeli Left?

Discussion with:
        · Aluf Benn, Editor-in-Chief of Haaretz
        · Akiva Eldar, columnist for Al-Monitor’s Israel Pulse

Moderator: Jodi Rudoren, Editor-in-Chief of The Forward.

Thursday, March 12

12:30 - 1:30pm Eastern Time / 9:30 -10:30am Pacific

REGISTER TO PARTICIPATE

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APN to Netanyahu: Reverse New Settlement Plans

Americans for Peace Now (APN) is alarmed at the Israeli government's advancement of three new settlement initiatives around East Jerusalem, which would deny contiguity to a future Palestinian state.

These are plans that in the past were blocked by US administrations, both Republican and Democratic. Now -- less than a week before Israel's general elections, and as a joint Israeli-American committee starts discussing the status of West Bank settlements – Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is going ahead with the most consequential settlement plan in years.

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Hard Questions, Tough Answers with Yossi Alpher (February 24, 2020) - Election Countdown

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Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.

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