On this Passover, face the truth: Peace is dead
Advocates of the two-states-for-two-peoples solution have always insisted that any reasonable, practical person can see that there is no other choice, that it has to happen, that any other scenario is madness. Because only the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel will avert the demographic disaster that a loss of the Jewish majority would entail; only this will prevent apartheid, the international isolation that would ensue from annexation, the continuation of the messianic occupation – hell on earth, basically.
But it won’t happen. There are many reasons for this, and there’s no point going into them. They’re all so terribly dull and tiresome by now. The myth used to be that Israelis were all sitting around on their balconies chomping on slices of watermelon that dripped juice onto their shirts, or gathered in their living rooms on Friday evenings around bowls of sunflower seeds, as they passionately argued late into the night, in something akin to a national ritual, about partitioning the land. That’s over and done with. Most Jews in Israel just don’t care. They don’t think that the establishment of a Palestinian state symbolizes normalcy and sanity. They think they’re already normal and sane.
Optimists will say – all hope is not lost. Let’s see what they have to say after the third intifada. But then the third, like the second, will only bolster the naysayers in their view. Others will pin their hopes on an economic embargo – It will hurt the big shots where it really counts, in their pockets, and then they’ll be ready to sell out their mother. Perhaps. But that will take time. By then it will be too late to save the two-state idea. These are the same optimists who were so stunned when Benjamin Netanyahu came to power after Rabin. The faith that, when the day of reckoning arrives, Israelis will support concessions is just as pathetic and unrealistic as the faith that following annexation all the Jews of the world will make aliyah and the Messiah will come.
It’s time to come out of denial, you’re just hallucinating: Israeli Arabs will never be part of the coalition; among the Jews in the Knesset the right has a big majority, and this will only increase. On Passover 2014, look the truth in the eye: Peace is dead.
Rogel Alpher