The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 11, 2002 - 5A $ $l Retired Israeli Air Frc Brigadier General Relik S Shafir sekrwas the keynote spae t"Israel Under Acdmcthe Lens: An Conference" part of the Caravan for Democracy, ropan advocacy g upsponsoring speakers regarding Israeli democracy. After the conference, Shafir sat down wit The Michigan Daily for an exclusive "Interview. Excerpts foill: By David Enders RS: The bad thing about democracy is Daily Staff Reporter that things evolve very slowly. The good thing about it is that if enough people reach The Michigan Daily: You have called a conclusion or see things my way, if people what's going on in Israel now a 'sine wave like myself are able to put forward an offer of violence.' Does this get worse before it which is palatable, then it would create gets better? pressure on the government. I would think Relik Shafir: 'Sine wave' in the sense most Israelis - don't ask them tomorrow, that we are in the high tide part of violence. during this emotional phase - most Israelis I should expect it will spend itself; at a cer- would be willing to abide by what we talked tain time, I would expect the Palestinians about - to take down settlement without and ourselves should revert to different compromising security to a great degree. types of conflict resolution than killing TMD: How do you view the Israeli each other. retaliation to the suicide bombings? Is it TMD: Is there a foreseeable end to the fair? current violence? RS: Where you stand is where you sit. RS: I hope the Palestinians will realize That is, if you are a native of Natanya, and that the Israelis are resolute in their will to you have people blowing up or attacking live and that violence and terrorism will not you in a coffee shop, you will have a hard get their ambitions fulfilled. I think the time refraining from retaliation. This is an Israelis will realize that we should use tac- emotional response that is natural, but it tics other than military strength. will probably never end, it just brings more TMD: You said essentially that the rela- animosity. It takes courageous leadership to tionship between (PLO leader Yasir) offer something else.... Make a trust-build- Arafat and (Israeli Prime Minister Ariel) ing maneuver that will not look like (it was Sharon is irreparable. What do you do made from) a position of weakness ... that until there are new leaders? will give the Palestinians a reason to con- RS: I would say it's difficult at this point trol the terrorism. I hope Arafat will prove in time to envision a true brinkmanship himself a partner in that. He hasn't proven between these two individual leaders. That himself that in the past, but we should hope does not mean they can people as go- we can at least build something with his betweens, but on a one-to-one level I do not peers. think they would strike a harmonious tune. TMD: What sort of trust-building steps TMD: What about the current Arab should be taken? proposal? Are the 1967 borders some- RS: Sharon recently said we will talk thing Israel would ever concede to? about a cease fire under fire. In the past he RS: I think as dialogues go, certainly as said six weeks of complete quiet before sit- the eastern part of Mediterranean, one does ting down to talk, and then he said seven not expect to fulfill 100 percent of their days, and then he said he would speak even wishes. I think the proposal is a good start- though there is violence because he knows ing point, and I can envision a situation in it is not stopping. He certainly shows signs which each side gives in to one another on of flexibility Maybe he could make.big- strategically important points. I can envi- ger step, but he is certainly not as adamant sion a situation in which both sides are as he was conceptualized before. equally dissatisfied. I think the 1967 border TMD: Do you think Arafat is capable is a starting point. of stopping Palestiniatiterrorism in TMD: Can the Saudi deal be seen as a Israel? springboard to further negotiations? RS: I think he's afraid of trying. We have RS: The Saudis have their own agenda, a saying that he has released the tiger from both on the internal scene and the struggles its cage, and he is riding on the back of the for power. ... We understand that they have tiger. If he gets off the back of the tiger, he their own agenda, but I would not use that might be eaten up. It's a good question it is in the best interest of the western world. Israel is a small part of it. They didn't attack Kuwait because of Israel, they didn't attack the Iranians because of Israel, they didn't fire 39 scud missiles at Saudi Arabia because of Israel, and they didn't in fact fire 39 scud missiles at Israel because of Israel, they did it to break up the Arab coalition. ... If the Iraqis attack Israel, than I think we will use our prerogative to attack Iraq in, of course, coordination with the U.S. at that point in time. Let's hope we don't get there. TMD: How would Arafat react to a U.S. attack on Iraq? RS: I think at that point in time, he would refrain from doing something at all. I think that this is such an obvious mistake. I think that this now stems from mistakes he has made in the past year and a half. TMD: Do you think he would stay neu- tr al? Since Se pt. 11 he has been very much endearing himself to the U.S. RS: I think in the question of Iraq, he will have a problem being too outspoken for the Americans, because the perception is that they danced on the roofs during the last war. We can at least analyze why they were happy. I think that he will not want to against what he sees as the feelings of his own people. TMD: What about the Yesh Gvul move- ment - Israeli soldiers are saying 'this is n ot an issue o f security a nd we d on't want to be involved.' How does this inter- nal dissent play out in termst of wvhat Israel is doing. RS: Let's put the record straight. About 250 out of 170,000 Israeli reservists have signed the petition that you have alluded to. ... . TMD: Criticism of Israel revolves around it being called a poor democracy, that it is apartheid, even tyrannical. How would Israel respond to these criticisms? RS: I think if you take one of the oldest democracies in Europe, Muslim girls are not allowed to go to school with their heads covered. In Israel, they are much more respected than they are in (that) European country, where they speak French. ... Of course there could be criticisms as there is in other contries, but there is internal criti- cism in Israel and it is much stronger than it is in the outside world. Arabs and other denominations don't have to sit in different places on buses or planes or in theaters such as you might have found in the past in democracies. Going to court for civil rights is very easy in Israel, it costs a very small amount of money. TMD: How divided are Israelis? What are the things that people agree on, and where do the dichotomies begin? RS: I think all Israelis agree about Israel being a Jewish democracy and about the borders of the pre-1967 war. You would find adhesion to that view at a minimum. The disagreements go to where would the border go and how many of the settlements should come down. There are about six mil- lion Israelis; you could draw about six mil- lion borders. TMD: In terms of college campuses, at least liberal college campuses, Israel is painted as the oppressor to the Palestin- ian oppressed. How do you feel about calling what Israel is doing an illegal occupation? First, how do you feel about calling it an occupation, and second, that it's illegal? RS: I take the occupation for what it is, it is an occupation. A lot of Israelis will tell you that Hebron is the foundation of our forefathers; that being true, realistically speaking and practically speaking, it is an occupation. About the illegality, Israel did not come to occupy Judea-Sumeria by some accord, it was a result of the Six Day War, where we were attacked by the Jordanians who occupied it before us, and before the Jordanians occupied that area, the British occupied that area, and before the British occupied that area, the Turks occupied it for several hundred years. lb VIEWPOINT Israel under attack By Manish Raiji Daily Assoc. Editorial Page Editor Israel is suffering. This sounds odd, given the common percep- tion of Israel as an aggressor, an occupational- ist who tramples on the rights of the Palestinians who desire nothing more than their land, their autonomy. Certainly a nation so violent, a nation so vehemently opposed to its Arab neighbors, a nation whose Jewish her- itage demands a negation of the rights of other ethnic and religious peoples cannot be suffer- ing. After all, Israel is likened to the inter-war Germany, a surprising reversal of roles. Such a nation cannot be suffering. But Israel is suffering. And the perception that it has gotten - of an evil entity - only adds to its suffering. Israelis are suffering not only from terror- ism, violence and constant fear, but also from a poor perception in the eyes of various differ- ent factions. Arab nations in general - and Palestinians particularly - refuse to even acknowledge its very existence. In fact, Pales- tinian textbooks teach children that Israel does not exist as a state and is instead a remnant of British imperialism; a gift of land that the British did, not own in the first place and therefore did not have the right to give away. Israel's very statehood is threatened by this Arab perception. "Israel will not compromise on its existence," said Relik Shafir, the retired Brigadier General of the Israeli Air Force. But this is not cause to lose hope. "Books in Egypt are not sympathetic to Jews either, and if you read books from Nazi Germany, or even the rest of Europe at that time, you see a lot of Anti- Semitism." The historical perception of Jews and the current perception of Israel isn't a rea- son "to discourage us from trying." Israel is ready for peace - it has been ready for peace - as long as its own security is guaranteed. Though the more extreme Arab opposition to Israel rests on the idea that Israel shouldn't exist, there are certainly Palestinians who would accept Israel (with varying degrees of reluc- tance) if Israel would stop exacerbating the problem with its presence in the West Bank. Israel's violent military presence, coupled with the dispersion of Palestinians from their homes in order to build Israeli settlements, is certainly aggravating the seemingly irreparable ties between Israelis and Palestinians ... right? "We should set the record straight," says Shafir. "Essentially all the lands that the settle- ments are built on were bought off of Palestini- ans." Though he personally opposes the Israeli policy of settlement building, he recognizes that the perception of strong-armed Israeli armed forces barging into innocent olive trees and slaughtering Palestinians is simply wrong - though it does provide for a compelling fable as to why Palestinians turn to terrorism. "When the intifada started, it was not because of a settlement. It started because Camp David failed. It started because Arafat thought he could improve his bargaining posi- tion by resorting to terror." An interesting political relations sleight of hand is being played out by Palestinians and Palestinian supporters - one that is effectively painting Israel in an unfortunate light. The perception of Israel in the media has been impacted by the liberal reflex: If anyone up by the media as signs of Israel's indiscre- tions toward Palestinian rights. Another inter- esting role reversal - Israelis as a whole get painted as opposed to the idea of a Palestinian state (even though 90 percent of Israeli citizens support such a state), while Arabs get painted as respectful of a two-state compromise (even though the majority of Arab states and Pales- tinian people loathe the very idea of Israel). It's a clever deception, to say the least. The importance of security is tangible to Israelis, for whom every goodbye is particular- ly meaningful - this trip to the grocery store may very well be your last. The idea that Israel should negotiate away its strategic safeguards is absurd-though both sides do, needtos bend. The West Bank, after the Six-Days War of 1967, was seen by Israel as "cards for the bargaining table," according to Shafir. "Unfor- tunately, for different reasons - mostly the Arab unwillingness to compromise with us - we forgot to look at things that way. It took a full cycle of the violence that we (have been) at for 30 years for people to realize that these are bargaining cards." Not exactly a confession that one reads about - or one that Palestinians like to hear. It's easy to win the PR war against a country opposed to negotiations; it's another thing entirely to win the PR war against a country who wants nothing more than to nego- tiate a secure peace. Besides the perception of Israel amongst Arabs and amongst the media, Israel is suffer- ing from its perception on liberal college cam- puses - including and especially this one. Terms like apartheid and segregation get thrown around in the same sentence as Israel. These pseudo-academic arguments demand that Israel hold itself to a higher standard of democracy. Certainly, the argument goes, a nation where Arab citizens get treated as sec- ond-class is not worthy of our - the right- eous, the moral, the educated - support. "Those who are citing apartheid and so on are using half truths and a distorted, out of context picture in order to prove their points. And half truths are worse than lies." Israel is not a perfect democracy by any means. But it is not only unfair to compare Israeli democracy to western democracies - it is also intellectually dishonest. Israel is an attacked democracy, one that has been under attack with only brief moments of respite for its entire existence. "Democracy is tested in times of peril," says Shafir. Israel is certainly not a stellar example of a democracy; its population is not treated with full equality. But it has managed to uphold some semblance of democratic values - above and beyond its "angelic" neighbors. "The western media is not really appreciative enough of the fact that democracy is tested in Israel perhaps more than anywhere else. I think that perhaps countries with a less strong democratic back- ground would curtail news media, reporting, dis- senting views, whereas in Israel, you can write anything, say anything; the Arab-Israelis can speak out loud with anti-Israeli rhetoric, which they couldn't anywhere else in the Middle East." Israel is being held not only to a different and higher standard than its incredibly non-demo- cratic opposition, but also being held to a differ- ent and higher standard than democracies at peace. The debilitating contradiction here should be self evident to everyone who claims to be righteous, moral and educated. "There are about six million Israelis; you could draw about six million borders." as a pretext not to take it seriously. TMD: And what do you think the Saudi interests are? RS: After 54 years of Israel's existence, they are ready to put their ideas in the cen- ter of world press, and be subjected to criti- whether he can do that. Some people say that not only is he not ready, but that he is not able to move into a statesmanship posi- tion and that he is still a warrior, a micro- tactical leader. TMD: What happens if the U.S. attacks