6 days and 50 years | ישראל היום

6 days and 50 years

Israel's military triumph over three enemy states in June 1967 was among the most successful wars in recorded ‎history. The Six-Day War was also deeply consequential for the Middle East, establishing the permanence of the ‎Jewish state, dealing a death-blow to pan-Arab nationalism, and (ironically) worsening Israel's status in the ‎world because of its occupation of the West Bank and east Jerusalem. ‎

Focusing on this last point: How did a grand battlefield victory translate into problems still tormenting ‎Israel today? ‎

First, because of rejectionism -- the refusal to accept anything Zionist dominates the Palestinian attitude ‎toward Israel and renders Israeli concessions useless, even counterproductive. Rejectionism crystallized with ‎Hajj Amin al-Husseini (1895-1974), a malign figure who dictated Palestinian politics from 1921 until his death. He ‎so absolutely abhorred Zionism that he collaborated with Hitler and even had a key role in formulating the ‎Final Solution. Husseini's legacy remains a powerful force in Palestinian life -- its latest manifestations include the ‎‎"anti-normalization" and the boycott, divestment and sanctions movements. Assorted Israelis and do-‎gooders, however, ignore rejectionism and instead blame Israel's government for not making sufficient efforts. ‎

Second, Israel faces a conundrum of geography and demography in the West Bank. Its strategists want ‎to control the highlands, its nationalists want to build towns, and its religious want to possess Jewish holy sites; ‎but Israel's continued ultimate rule over a West Bank population of 1.7 million mostly hostile Palestinians takes an immense toll both domestically and internationally. Various schemes to keep the ‎land and defang an enemy people -- by integrating them, buying them off, dividing them, pushing them out or ‎finding another ruler for them -- have all come to naught. Israelis are stuck in an unwanted role they cannot ‎escape. ‎

Third, the Israelis in 1967 took several unilateral steps vis-a-vis Jerusalem that created future time bombs: They vastly expanded its borders, annexed it, and offered optional Israeli citizenship to the city's Arab ‎residents. This led to a long-term demographic and housing competition that the Palestinians are winning, ‎jeopardizing the Jewish nature of the Jews' historic capital. Furthermore, 300,000 could at any time choose to apply for ‎Israeli citizenship. ‎

This raises the question: Had Israeli leaders in 1967 foreseen the current problems, what might they have ‎done differently in the West Bank and Jerusalem? They could have:‎

  • Made the battle against rejectionism their highest priority through unremitting censorship of every ‎aspect of life in the West Bank and Jerusalem, severe punishments for incitement, and an intense ‎effort to replace rejectionism with a more positive attitude.‎

  • Invited back in the Jordanian authorities, who had ruled the West Bank since 1949, to run that area's ‎‎(but not Jerusalem's) internal affairs, leaving the Israel Defense Forces only the burden to protect ‎borders and Jewish populations. ‎
  • Extended the borders of Jerusalem only to the Old City and uninhabited areas. ‎
  • Thought through the full ramifications of permitting Jews to build residences in the West Bank and ‎Gaza. ‎
  • And today, what can Israelis do? The Jerusalem issue is relatively easy, as most of the Arab residents ‎have not yet taken out Israeli citizenship, so Israel's government can still stop this process by reducing the size ‎of Jerusalem's borders and terminating the offer of Israeli citizenship to all the (enlarged) city residents. ‎Though it may lead to unrest, cracking down on illegal housing sites is imperative.

    The West Bank is tougher. So long as Palestinian rejectionism prevails, Israel is stuck overseeing an ‎intensely hostile population. This situation generates a vicious, ‎impassioned debate among Israelis (recall the atmosphere of divisiveness in the lead up to the Rabin assassination) and harms the country's international ‎standing (think of U.N. Security Council Resolution 2334). But returning to 1949's "Auschwitz lines" and ‎abandoning 400,000 Israeli residents of the West Bank to the mercy of the Palestinians is obviously not a ‎solution. ‎

    Instead, Israel needs to confront and undermine Palestinian rejectionism, which means convincing ‎Palestinians that Israel is a permanent state, that they are a defeated people, that they are sacrificing for naught. ‎This Israel can do by making victory its goal, by showing Palestinians that continued rejectionism brings only ‎repression and failure. This it can do if the U.S. government offers a green light. ‎

    This way, the astonishing triumph of those six days in 1967 can be translated into a lasting solution, ‎whereby Palestinians accept the permanence of the Jewish state.

    Daniel Pipes (DanielPipes.org, @DanielPipes) is president of the Middle East Forum.

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