Israel has a terrorism problem and it is not Palestinian terrorism, a term that the
country’s propaganda machine, the hasbara – Hebrew for explanation – has been
using for decades to describe any form of resistance against the illegal
occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
اضافة اعلان
In a bid to expel
them from their native landIsrael’s problem
has to do with Jewish terrorism preached and adopted by ultra-nationalist and ultra-religious
Jews whose end-game goes as far as killing as many Palestinians as possible in
a bid to expel them from their native land—the term once coined by the
notorious fanatic and racist rabbi-politician, Meir Kahana, was “transfer” that
includes expelling
Israel’s Arab minority.
A risk of being
labeled as anti-Semitic
And for decades
any attempt to negate the hasbara’s narrative and talk about
Israeli state terrorism in the form of collective punishments, use of banned weapons against
civilian population and arbitrary killings of activists or even innocent
bystanders was shot down; the risk being that one could be labeled as
anti-Semitic. But that is now changing.
It is top
Israeli officials who have come out recently to warn their leaders of the impending
danger of Jewish terrorism.
A cold-blooded
murder
On Sunday, the
head of
Israel’s Shin Bet Ronen Bar warned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
about the rise of “Jewish terrorism”, while former Defense Minister Benny
Gantz, slammed the phenomenon of “dangerous Jewish nationalist terrorism”. Both
were reacting to the cold-blooded murder of a 19-year-old Palestinian boy by
rampaging Jewish settlers in Burqa village on Friday. In a rare rebuke, the US
State Department condemned the incident as “terrorism by suspected Jewish
settlers.”
Compounding the
problem for Israel is the fact that a number of Netanyahu’s coalition partners
actually support terrorist settlers. National Security Minister, Itamar
Ben-Gvir said the settlers suspected of the murder of the Palestinian youth
deserve praise, describing them as “heroes”.
Jewish terrorism,
once a taboo subject, is now open for public discussion.
Compounding the problem for Israel is the fact that a number of Netanyahu’s coalition partners actually support terrorist settlers. National Security Minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir said the settlers suspected of the murder of the Palestinian youth deserve praise, describing them as “heroes”.
The crimes of Jewish
terrorists are inseparable from the
history of Israel even before the birth of
the state.
One of the
earliest instances of Jewish terrorism in Palestine was the formation of the
Jewish Defense Party (HaShomer) in 1909, which carried out attacks on Arab
villages. But it was in British Mandate Palestine that organized and
well-financed Jewish terror groups were formed. In the 1930s, as tensions
between Jewish immigrants and Palestinians escalated, several Jewish
underground organizations emerged. These groups sought to counter Arab attacks
and British restrictions on Jewish immigration and land purchases. The most
notable among them was the Irgun Zvai Leumi (National Military Organization),
commonly referred to as the Irgun, and the Stern Gang (also known as Lehi,
short for Lohamei Herut Yisrael). Both groups employed terrorism as a means to
achieve their political goals.
The bombing of
King David HotelThe Irgun, led by
Menachem Begin, who later founded the Likud Party and became prime minister in the
1970s, carried out numerous attacks against Arab civilians and British
authorities. Their most infamous act was the bombing of the King David Hotel in
Jerusalem in 1946, which housed the British Mandate administration and resulted
in many civilian casualties.
While all of
these groups, including the Haganah, were later disbanded and included into the
Israeli army, the ultra-nationalists and ultra-religious groups continued to be
part of the country’s political setting. It was after the 1967 war and the
occupation of the West Bank and Gaza that these groups began to play a more
active role in Israeli politics, with one major goal: building Jewish
settlements in the West Bank and Gaza, with the final aim of annexing all the
territories into Greater Israel.
As successive
Israeli governments opened the newly conquered Palestinian territories for
illegal settlers—most were fresh immigrants from the US and later from Eastern
Europe and the former Soviet Union—the ultra-nationalist and ultra-religious
groups began to expand their political base in a country that was supposed to
be secular, progressive and democratic.
Right wing
governments, most were led by Netanyahu, opened the floodgates of Jewish
immigration, the majority were housed in new illegal settlements. From 2012 to
2022, the
population of Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank,
including East Jerusalem, had grown from 520,000 to over 700,000.
Extremism
morphing into terrorism
It is in these
illegal settlements that the seeds of a vigorous wave of Jewish extremism,
quickly morphing into terrorism, were planted. The settlement movement,
driven by religious, ideological, and security motivations, gained momentum
over the years, leading to the establishment of numerous settler organizations
and groups.
These settlers
often advocate for the expansion of
Israeli settlements into Palestinian
territories, viewing it as an essential part of Jewish identity and fulfilling
biblical prophecies, believing that they have a divine mandate to establish Jewish
sovereignty over all of historic Palestine.
A toxic mixtureMotivated by a
toxic mixture of racism and radical religious beliefs, extremist settlers began
carrying out violent attacks against Palestinians, including assaults on
individuals, homes, crops, and places of worship. The most horrific attack was
the massacre at the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron in February 1994, which was also
the 15th day of Ramadan, when Baruch Goldstein, a Zionist extremist from
the far-right Kach movement opened fire at praying Muslims with an automatic
weapon, killing 29 of them and injuring about 150 others.
Israel’s problem has to do with Jewish terrorism preached and adopted by ultra-nationalist and ultra-religious Jews whose end-game goes as far as killing as many Palestinians as possible in a bid to expel them from their native land—the term once coined by the notorious fanatic and racist rabbi-politician, Meir Kahana, was “transfer” that includes expelling Israel’s Arab minority.
The current Far
Right government has empowered these terrorist/settler groups and the fiery
rhetoric by the likes of Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich is
normalizing and glorifying Jewish terrorists in the occupied territories. The
most militant of these groups are Hilltop Youth, Price Tag Attacks, Lehava,
Jewish Underground, Kach and Kahane Chai; the latter is considered a terrorist
organization by the US and Israel. All of these settler groups openly advocate
violence against the Palestinians.
While
Israel’s dilemma with Jewish terrorism will not go away so long as the occupation and
settlement building continue, the real problem lies elsewhere.
Evangelical
ChristiansIt is in the
backing and support that these terrorist and radical groups receive from one
particular, but influential, group of US voters and politicians:
Evangelical Christians. While not all evangelical Christians hold the same views,
most believe in the biblical significance of Israel; as a fulfillment of the
prophecy and evidence of God's faithfulness to His covenant with the Jewish
people.
Some evangelical
Christians believe that the existence and
flourishing of Israel is linked to
their interpretation of end-times prophecies. They see Israel as a necessary
precursor to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ and the fulfillment of God's
ultimate plan. And they openly advocate policies that align with Israeli
interests, such as recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and opposing
international efforts to pressure Israel on issues like illegal settlements and
resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by ending occupation.
Israel today
recognizes that it has a serious Jewish terrorism problemWhile
Israel today recognizes that it has a serious Jewish terrorism problem, it will be
difficult for US politicians to renounce crimes committed against Palestinians
for fear of losing the evangelical and Jewish votes. This will only empower the
Jewish terrorists more and while Palestinians will suffer, as they have always
done, the fractures that will hit Israel’s foundations as a result of the
growing militancy of the settler groups will be unprecedented.
Osama Al Sharif
is a journalist and political commentator based in Amman.
Read more Opinion and Analysis
Jordan News