|
Pakistan
“Recognizes”
Israel
In June 2003,
Pervez Musharraf
,
Pakistan
’s self-appointed President and
strongman, was summoned to
Washington
. He returned with two errands from
President George Bush.
Pakistan
must recognize
Israel
and dispatch its troops to police
America
’s illegal occupation of
Iraq
. There was money in it for
Pakistani rulers: three billion dollars over the next five years.
Still
in
Washington
, Musharraf told Pakistani reporters
that he had made no “deal” with the
United States
. “Whatever we are doing, we are
doing in our national interest, and fortunately our national
interest coincides with those of the
United States
, which is the beauty of our
relationship.” At the least, one must thank the strongman for his
frankness. Here is his public confession that his government,
unreservedly, accepts the new American contract in the Islamic
world.
Pakistan
is fighting – and will fight –
America
’s war against terrorism, which
many Muslims see as a cover for
America
’s emasculation of Islamic
societies.
Is
there “beauty” in this relationship? It is a relationship that
was cemented within minutes of Colin Powell’s call to the
strongman on the night of September 11. Instantly,
Pakistan
offered not only its airspace to
American warplanes and missiles; it invited Americans to launch
their invasion of
Afghanistan
from half a dozen bases within
Pakistan
. Soon, American operatives were
stationed in Pakistani cities and making arrests on Pakistani
territory. It would be difficult to come up with another example of
a country which surrendered its sovereignty more precipitously. And
the strongman sees “beauty” in this surrender.
Now the strongman
has a new charge from
America
’s Likudniks. “Recognize the
state of
Israel
,” they demand. This Israeli state
had its origin in a brilliant conspiracy that leveraged the power of
the very peoples who hated the Jews. The Zionists made a compact
with their ancient tormentors: We will rid you of your Jews if you
help us to establish a Jewish colonial-settler state in
Palestine
. In addition, the Jewish state
could serve as imperialist
Europe
’s outpost in the Arab world.
Western anti-Semites found the offer irresistible.
Britain
first signed the compact in 1917,
but when it wavered, the
United States
stepped in to establish
Israel
, and since the mid-1960s it has
been its chief protagonist, softening the Islamic world for Israeli
hegemony with wars and bribes.
In order to
establish a lasting hegemony,
Israel
demanded unconditional recognition
from its Arab neighbors. The first break-through came in 1978 when
Egypt
recognized
Israel
in return for an annual
US
payment of two billion dollars. The
second break-through came in 1993, after the end of the Cold War,
when Arafat and his aging cronies bartered the Palestinian’s
historic claims to 78 percent of historic Palestine1 for the right
to police Occupied West Bank and
Gaza
. Most Arab states would have
happily followed suit – and a few did -- but for the growing
Islamist opposition at home.
The American
pressure on the Pakistani junta to recognize
Israel
could not have come at a worse
time. There are precious few in the Islamic world who believe any of
the lies used to justify
America
’s illegal invasion of
Iraq
; they are convinced that this was
the action of a Likudnik American administration acting at the
behest of
Israel
. The grand deception of a “peace
process,” inaugurated by the Oslo Accords in 1993, is now in
complete tatters.
Israel
continues to strengthen the
foundations of an apartheid state, completing the separation of
“unequal races” with a wall that reaches twenty feet high. Under
the circumstances, the
US
pressure can only be seen as more
evidence of the Israeli tail wagging the American dog. The
United States
is pressing an Israeli demand on
the Pakistani junta.
Incredibly, the
Pakistani strongman has the chutzpah to argue the case for
recognition. “In my view … if the Palestinians themselves
undertake discussions and go for friendship with
Israel
… then what’s the problem with us? What is our enmity with
Israel
?” Is the strongman willing to
wait until the Palestinians have made their peace with Israel; until
they have their own sovereign state on a mere 22 percent of historic
Palestine; until the four million Palestinian refugees –
ethnically cleansed in 1948 and 1967 – can return to their homes
inside Israel? It is clear that the strongman is in no mood to wait
for these results, or that he has any interest in helping to advance
these results. He must do the bidding of
Washington
: and he wants to do it now.
The General asks:
“What is our enmity with
Israel
?” Has he forgotten that
Pakistan
is the only Muslim country to
possess nuclear weapons, and although these weapons are pointed at
India
,
Israel
cannot regard
Pakistan
’s nuclear assets with equanimity,
with or without Pakistani recognition of
Israel
? As the military chief, Musharraf
should know that the
Pakistan
military expects and prepares
against a pre-emptive strike on its nuclear facilities from
India
as well as
Israel
, or a coordinated strike by both.
India
and
Israel
form a natural axis against
Pakistan
: and that is a hard geopolitical
reality that will scarcely be altered by recognition.
Several
commentators in
Pakistan
– with a naïveté that must be
rare for self-proclaimed realists – have offered a list of
advantages which recognition will bring to
Pakistan
. The list includes reduced risk of
a strike against
Pakistan
’s nuclear assets, access to
Israel
’s military technology, and
throwing a spanner in
Israel
’s growing special relationship
with
India
. These realists forget that
recognition is a one-time act, and once accomplished it carries
little or no leverage. What did the Palestinians get from their
recognition of
Israel
?
On the other hand,
let the realists be warned of some real liabilities that are likely
to flow from recognition. Nearly all Pakistanis will see this as
another treasonous sell-out, a costly concession extracted from
their spineless rulers in exchange for loans that will only deepen
Pakistan
’s foreign debt; and, this can
only strengthen the Islamist cause that the
United States
wants to keep at bay. Normal
relations with
Israel
will improve
Israel
’s intelligence gathering in
Pakistan
, making
Pakistan
’s nuclear assets even more
vulnerable to an Israeli or Indian strike. We should not discount
the disquiet this will cause to our Iranian neighbor; this may push
them even closer to
India
. Finally, the realists – who can
scarcely afford to ignore the probability of some real events –
should ask if the recognition will be allowed to stand, even if the
Islamists never manage to take power in
Pakistan
. Can
Pakistan
guarantee that the Israeli embassy
and consulates in
Pakistan
will not become the target of
violent attacks from Islamic extremists?
There is a reasonable chance, then, that this American move may backfire.
It could backfire because it ignores – like nearly all the
elements of American policy towards the Muslim countries – the
force of Newtonian dynamics. Just because every action does not have
an instant reaction in the world of social and political dynamics,
short-sighted US policy makers rarely work through the long-term
implications of their policy. If they do, they are convinced they
have the cluster bombs to handle any adverse consequences. For fifty
years, American policy has been building the grass-root forces in
the Islamic world that have now begun to challenge American hegemony
in their societies. It is tragic that as these forces become
visible, the
United States
responds with more of the same.
Perhaps, this is the only logic that makes sense to an imperialist
elite, which has come to believe in the invincible power of cluster
bombs and daisy cutters.
If
Pakistan
’s rulers had attended to their
country’s national interest – and did not imagine that these
interests were best served by doing
America
’s bidding – they would have
responded to US pressures by stating firmly that
Pakistan
and Pakistanis do
recognize
Israel
– and they always have recognized
Israel
– for what it is.
Pakistanis recognize that Israel is a colonial-settler state; they
recognize that this racist state was – and is – founded on
terror and violence; they recognize that Israel was founded on the
ruined foundations of a living Palestinian society; they recognize
that Israel created a Jewish majority by ethnically cleansing more
than a million Palestinians in 1948 and 1967; they recognize that
Israel has a massive arsenal of nuclear weapons aimed at Islamic
capitals; they recognize that Israel has armed and supported the
most reactionary regimes since its creation, including apartheid
South Africa and Idi Amin’s Uganda; they recognize that Israel
seeks to deepen its hegemonic dominance over the Arabs with American
men, money and arms.
And yet, even
today, I expect and hope that most Pakistanis would be glad to
extend recognition to a country (by whatever name) – between the
River Jordan and the
Mediterranean
– if it could grant equal rights
to all its peoples, Jewish and Arab alike, and grant Palestinian
refugees the right of return to return to their homes. But a
colonialist, racist, and hegemonic
Israel
is another matter. And, if Zengi,
Nur al-Din, Salahuddin and the Egyptian Mamluks refused to recognize
the Crusader states, can Muslims today be expected to choose
differently?
M. Shahid
Alam is professor of economics at
Northeastern
University
. His last book, Poverty from the
Wealth of Nations, was published by Palgrave in 2000. He may
be reached at
m.alam@neu.edu
. Visit his webpage at http://msalam.net.
© M. Shahid Alam
Recent
Commentaries:
Note:
Well argued
commentaries are welcome, please email your opinion to op-ed@majalla.org;
Op-Ed articles are not peer-reviewed.
|
|