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Jewish Political Thought


Convention, Morality and Policy

Presentation to the Rabbinical Assembly, 1988


Daniel J. Elazar


It is a pleasure for me to be here with so many friends and colleagues with whom I have worked, and have been associated, over many years. I can talk with you, in a way that I would not necessarily talk with other groups. This may make me something of the bad guy tonight, though after Yosef Goell has divorced politics from morality altogether, I may not be as bad as I thought I would be.

While I agree with almost everything that Yossi said, I do think that there is a relationship between politics and morality that decent nations try to preserve collectively as well as individually. But there are two qualifiers to that. A politics of morality can only exist within a system that has rules that provide room for morality. The international system has never really had such rules. At times we have come close to establishing them in some fields, but most of the time we have not.

Just to give you an example, let us take the United States, the pre-eminent nation of the modern world that has emphasized the relationship of politics and morality in its most ordinary day-to-day activities, where Presidents run on moral platforms and where every political decision made is subject to moral scrutiny, often based on the fads of the day, but nevertheless moral scrutiny. The United States at this present moment is supporting Iraq against Iran, which means that it is closing its eyes to the massive use of poison gas, the first such use of poison gas since WWI, unless you want to include Egypt's use of poison gas in what is now North Yemen some years ago, to which the United States also turned a blind eye.

Far worse that that, the United States is playing a leading role in the effort to turn Cambodia or Kampuchea back to an anti-Vietnam coalition whose strongest member is the Khymer Rouge, headed by Pol Pot, so that they can kill another several millions of their citizens. If you looked at the International Herald Tribune recently, Prince Sihanouk who was nominal head of the anti-Vietnamese coalition in Kampuchea, has resigned, gone to the States, and announced that this is exactly what is going to happen, that Pol Pot is going to come out of the jungles and take over and do just that. The United States has been instrumental in bringing that about, and we will yet hear of the consequences, I have no doubt, in the next year or two. The United States has gone so far as to distort the number of people killed. The newspapers today, and I am sure it is a result of State Department briefings, now say that only a few hundred thousand were killed by Pol Pot, instead of the millions that we know were killed. All this is done by a country which I believe is sincerely and honestly committed to trying to find some relationship between politics and morality, but in the international arena that is a very difficult thing to do.

The other qualifier is that the relationship between politics and morality is never a simple one. Even examining one's premises when one seeks to make moral decisions does not often lead to an easy way out. Unfortunately, all too often you stand depends upon where you sit, and that is true of moral as well as other issues. How much is preached in the name of morality by people who are embarrassed with regard to their relations with their peers, and whose moral concerns are basically concerns that their own reputations remain intact, not that morality be truly advanced! How often is morality preached by people who do not have to expose themselves to the consequences of their preaching! How often is morality preached by people who have not thought through an issue, but rather have gotten some partial information and have decided to draw dramatic conclusions, usually based on a false analogy with some other phenomenon with which they are more familiar! We see a lot of that in so many ways.

Nevertheless, believing that there is a relationship between morality and politics and the use of power, I believe we have some serious obligation to begin to come to grips with that in Israel and within the Jewish people as a whole. Here it seems to me that the moral issue is not in the field with the soldiers, but among the policy-makers of Israel and the Jewish world. The boys in the field are given a very detailed set of instructions by the IDF. There are some nineteen points, if I recall correctly, as to how to behave if there are patrolling in Judea, Samaria and Gaza. When one reads through those detailed prescriptions, one is left not knowing what to do next. Even assuming that under a barrage of rocks that can kill, Molotov cocktails that can explode, etc., one has the time to decide which of the nineteen principles applies in this case, how does it relate to some other principle which seemingly contradicts it? But even if one had time to reflect and to decide, the message really is that you are out there, it is your hide, do the best you can in the split second that you have to make the decision.

That is the case in all military combat situations. And this is, in its way, a military combat situation. To me, that is not the central moral issue.

Yes, we certainly can strengthen our young people's sense of right and wrong, and though the ones I talk to really do have the right sensibilities. If anything, they are angry because they are being accused of being insensitive when they are trying so hard. We can punish those egregious abuses that do occur, some of which occur because even the best of people under certain circumstances lose their cool, and under other circumstances there are always some people who are by nature cruel and take advantage of opportunities. I don't think that is the problem. When I talk to my son and his friends about beatings that do occur, their response is that in some cases, they would rather rough somebody up who is throwing stones at them than shoot him. For them, that is a considered moral position.

The real moral issues, as I say, are not in the field but with the policy makers. With a state, we as Jews, for the first time, have a real moral challenge. Powerlessness does not involve moral choice. The King of the Khazars was right when he challenged the moral claim of the Jews in galut. To have no power and not shed blood is not a great distinction. I do not happen to think it is a great benefit, either. It is only when one has the choice to make that one really is confronting a moral issue. And it certainly is better, if one wants to live, to be able to make the choice. I myself would prefer the latter option.

What it does teach, especially to Jews in the Diaspora who come here (and we delight when they come here to enjoy Israel) is that Israel is not a summer camp. It can be a lot of fun, but basically Israel is a life and death matter for those of us who live here, for our children who are on the line, and for the Jewish people as a whole. For that matter, it is for those whom we confront as adversaries, though perhaps less so because we start from a position of far greater restraint and we end up using far greater restraint than others might.

It is true that it is the Palestinians who are occupied. I think we cannot pretend, nor should we look at the situation any other way, and, on one level, my heart goes out to them. If I were one of them I would probably be doing the same thing they are doing. On the other hand, that does not mean we have to lie down, roll over and play dead. We have a serious conflict here. If Palestinians see themselves as occupied, for Jews, the lands are liberated.

We may decide, and I would not be opposed to deciding, that as part of a true peace settlement we will withdraw from territories liberated as a result of the 1967 war. But I will never stop thinking that those territories were liberated. I will know that when the opportunity presented itself, the Jewish people failed to supply another million or two million Jews to change the demographic situation here. I will know historically that the Jews have similarly failed on at least two other occasionsin this century. And I will adapt myself prudentially in response by deciding, in that case, that we do not want to rule over a million and a half Palestinians, especially in a narrowly dangerous demographic situation, in a situation where they are always going to be tempted to act to change their situation. We will have to cut our own losses in this regard, if that proves to be possible. But we need not lie to ourselves by suggesting that our land is not important to us and that we did not lose the opportunity of two millennia by our own failure as a people to respond to opportunities that come our way.

I feel for the Palestinians. I understand why they want their state, their homeland, their self-determination, whatever word they happen to use. But as Yossi Goell said, not everybody can have a state and maybe different groups have to achieve self-determination in different ways. Maybe the Basques are better off having an autonomous region in Spain than they would be if they were independent and were fighting among themselves. As Jews we do not have to solve that problem, but we do have to worry that the Jews in Israel are secure.

The Palestinians have revolted. They have revolted in a very intelligent way, using just enough force to make life difficult in certain parts of the country, but not enough to justify our bringing in the full weight of our force in response. And indeed a great part of our problem is the inadequate application of the power that we have, because we cannot adequately use the power that is at our disposal. I think they deserve credit for having been able to do that. On the other hand, as long as they remain in a situation where the only spokesmen who speak for them present the issue as "them or us," spokesmen saying that what they really want to do is dismantle the Jewish state, which is basically all their spokesmen have been saying, we have to draw our conclusions accordingly. This may change. I keep having hopes that it will change. It may be changing tonight. Maybe Faisal Husseini, who is reputedly the PLO chief in the territories, actually did appear not far from here at a Peace Now meeting to talk about plans for co-existence, side by side. I think that would be a great step forward and might offer some possibilities. But when Palestinian Arabs tell me quietly that they really do believe in co-existence but allow all public statements to be made by those who deny any possibility of even the meanest kind of co-existence for the Jews in this land, then I think we have to respond appropriately. And I think that it is the moral as well as the intelligent thing to do, as long as they present it as "them or us."

We are embarrassed by power. We are embarrassed by it in part because, for the first twenty years after 1967, we revelled in power. We exaggerated the degree to which the power was good, as a result of our 1967 victory. We are now exaggerating our embarrassment in having that same power when we need it to protect ourselves. We should not have gone overboard in one direction and we definitely should not go overboard in the other.

Some Jews are embarrassed by the fact that some two hundred Palestinians have been killed, and so few Jews have been killed. Would we feel better if two hundred Jews had been killed? Would we feel even better if five hundred Jews had been killed? I do not understand that argument at all. If we are strong enough to make them pay on their territory for starting up with us, why should we be embarrassed by that fact? Granted, none of us want this to continue. I do not think anybody enjoys it, certainly not the people who are doing it. But I do not think that losing more people, having a more equal casualty ratio, is going to make us feel better.

In that respect, the worst thing that we can do is what too many in Israel, I think principally in Israel because of the political situation, have started to do. That is to say, to spread panic for political gain. This is a time to keep our wits about us. This is a time to think through policies carefully, to hold on where we have to hold on, to look ahead to try to find ways to peace, or to some kind of reasonable interim settlement if peace is unattainable. Nor is it a time for failure of nerve. One must have the feeling, looking at the situation from historical perspective, that when there were forty thousand Jews here and three hundred thousand Arabs, it was a greater challenge for Jews to come into this land that it is for us, when there are three and a half million Jews and 2.2 million Arabs, or whatever, to try to defend our presence in this land.

I do not see how the Zionist vision can be justified by those who argue that it is immoral for us to try to maintain ourselves here. Like Shlomo Avineri, I do not want a separate Palestinian state. But I am not sure if I read the scenario in quite the same way. I do think that if a Palestinian state should go to war against us, we would be at them. and in each of the wars we have won, we have lost thousand of lives instead of one or two or three. Is that better? Does that make us feel better? When we have lost a thousand, two thousand, three thousand Jewish young people but have won the war? I would like to avoid that. And if avoiding that means taking the position that we have taken at the present time, I do not consider that an immoral position. What if they did not go to war against us? What if they just sent terrorists across the border every night? Would we invade them? Would we do the same thing? Where would we stand in that circumstance? And what if in either case we did win, as I think we would, what would we do then?


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