 |
Haaretz on Oxford and Beyond
Are two states still viable?
Last update - 10:09 14/11/2007 | Haaretz
By Seth Anziska
OXFORD, England - Oxford dons were reeling at their high table dinners late last month, in the wake of a startling controversy over the Middle East. A debate at the Oxford Union on the motion "This house believes that one state is the only solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict" was compromised by external political pressure, generating serious concerns about academic freedom and the principles of free speech. Given the nature of this contentious debate and its implications for the trajectory of the conflict, those dwelling outside Oxford's hallowed college halls have every reason to take notice as well.
The venerable Oxford Union, training ground for countless British prime ministers and world leaders, has a long history of provocative debates. Yet criticism over the lineup of speakers for the October 23 event was especially fierce, resulting in the withdrawal of an invitation to Prof. Norman Finkelstein. Finkelstein, whose book "The Holocaust Industry: Reflections on the Exploitation of Jewish Suffering" (2000) and strident views on a host of other issues have drawn ire from all corners, had nevertheless been asked to speak in support of a two-state solution. The ensuing drop-out by several other invitees over what they perceived as violation of free speech in the decision to disinvite Finkelstein, and the fallout among Union members spread to both the local and national press, making it abundantly clear that Oxford is not insulated from disturbing trends afflicting the academy in America.
For all its left-wing orthodoxy, Oxford still manages to provide a space where people can talk freely about any aspect of the conflict. Such openness, after all, is central to the spirit of academic freedom, which suffers greatly as a result of heated campaigns by the pro-Israel Campus Watch and tenure disputes arbitrated by university alumni in the United States. Yet even as the Oxford community awakens to this new and unpleasant reality, astute observers of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict should be asking far more important questions about the substance of the Union debate itself.
How is it that the one-state argument has managed to carve out such a comfortable intellectual niche in recent years, and why are more experts on the conflict giving up on the viability of a two-state solution? One surprising voice of despair that has always adhered to the two-state solution belongs to Prof. Avi Shlaim, a historian of the Arab-Israeli conflict at Oxford. Shlaim's scholarship, together with the indispensable work of fellow Israeli "New Historians," has engendered difficult questions about Israeli and Palestinian nationalist narratives and forced a painful, but necessary, reexamination of the underlying causes of the conflict.
In lectures and tutorials at Oxford, Prof. Shlaim has consistently defended Israel's right to exist within its pre-1967 borders, while at the same time criticizing expansionist settlement policy in the West Bank and arguing for the establishment of a viable Palestinian state. His position on the legitimacy of both Jewish and Palestinian national aspirations stands out amidst the intellectually attractive but naively impractical calls for a binational state often voiced at Oxford. Hence my great surprise at seeing his name printed on the Union term card debating for the proposition of a single state.
During a forthright discussion of this apparent about-face, Shlaim stressed his abiding belief that a two-state solution is still the only legitimate way out of this conflict. Nevertheless, he agreed to speak for the proposition in order to critique Israeli policy, which he sees as destroying the basis for such a solution. In Shlaim's view, the construction of the security barrier over the Green Line, and other Israeli actions in the West Bank, undermine the very possibility of a contiguous and viable Palestinian state.
Although Shlaim withdrew from the debate in protest, the implications of his decision to discuss the proposition extend much farther than the Oxford Union. As Shlaim is one of the few remaining "New Historians" to occupy an ethically compelling middle ground regarding the conflict, his despair should serve as a wake-up call to liberal advocates of a two-state solution.
Heightened uncertainty about the possibility of two viable states existing side by side has been building for some time. Even the current American government, which has been on paid vacation from Middle East policy for the last seven years, seems to have finally recognized this reality ahead of the upcoming Annapolis peace summit. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Mideast Policy three weeks ago, admitted as much when she warned that the U.S. is concerned "we will lose the window for a two-state solution." Several prominent policymakers have recently issued similar warnings about what is at stake with this last-ditch effort, including former U.S. National Security Advisors Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft.
It would certainly be easy to dismiss the idea of the one-state solution as mere ivory tower chatter, or worse, to shut down the conversation about what the post-Oslo status quo has wrought upon the region altogether. But the current reality forces us to grapple with them both, especially as the possibility of justice in the form of two sovereign states continues to unravel. The latest iteration of the one-state/two-state debate at Oxford, coupled with the genuine fears being expressed by Middle East experts, simply cannot be rejected as a fit of anti-Israel hysteria. While the future of Israel and Palestine won't be decided in the chamber of our august debating society, the consequences of the two-state solution's collapse will be felt far beyond this city's dreaming spires.
Seth Anziska is an M. Phil. candidate in modern Middle Eastern studies at St. Antony's College, Oxford.



More on the Oxford Union
- The bottomless capacity for falsification at Oxford
(To: Dr B Simms, "RE: Dr. Alan Mendoza - Executive Director HJS") 11.18.2007
- Haaretz on Oxford and Beyond
(Haaretz: "Are two states still viable?" ) 11.15.2007
- Avi Shlaim on Oxford Farce
(Avi Shlaim: "Israel, Free Speech, and the Oxford Union") 11.13.2007
- More Oxford Fantasies
(Haaretz: "VIEWPOINT / 'Israel Lobby' book may have sinister impact in U.K.; Finkelstein comments at the bottom of this article." ) 11.12.2007
- What really happened at Oxford
(Finkelstein comments: "Insofar as the lies about what happened at the Oxford Union...;" Reader letters) 11.01.2007
- Rewriting history before the ink has dried
(Dr Alan Mendoza, Executive director, Henry Jackson Society, The Guardian "No pressure put on Oxford Union;" w/ reader letters) 11.03.2007
- More Oxford fantasies
(Haaretz: "High-profile invitees to Oxford Union debate on Israel walk out") 11.04.2007
- Israeli soldier writes President of Oxford Union
(From Ronen Berelovich (Israel) to Luke Tryl, President of Oxford Union (Oxford University, UK)) 10.24.2007
- Still more on the Oxford Union
(Peter Tatchell: "Free speech threatened by ban on Norman Finkelstein") 10.25.2007
- More on the Oxford Union
The Guardian: "Intellectual terrorism. For the sake of free speech, British organisations should confront pro-Israel bullies, not appease them.") 10.25.2007
- Shouldn't there be a mandatory decent interval before history is rewritten?
(The Jerusalem Post: "Oxford cancels one-state debate;" w/ Finkelstein's comment) 10.23.2007
- Isn't it time to seek therapy for his obsession?
(Alan M. Dershowitz, FrontPageMagazine.com: "Oxford Union Is Dead") 10.20.2007
SHARE THIS POST:
|
 |
 |
 |



What we can do:
On Gaza, West Bank, East Jerusalem & the Occupation:
On the Lobby & "the New anti-Semitism"
On Hezbollah & Hamas:
- The Guardian: Hamas acted on a very real fear of a US-sponsored coup. (06.22.2007)
- Haaretz: Haniyeh: Hamas willing to accept Palestinian state with 1967 borders. (11.09.2008)
- Henry Siegman, International Herald Tribune: Bring in Hamas. (03.04.2008)
- The Washington Post: No Peace Without Hamas. (04.17.2008)
- Al Jazeera English: Talk to Jazeera - Khaled Meshaal. (03.05.2008)
- International Herald Tribune: Bring in Hamas. (03.04.2008)
- "the Hezbollah model"
and "There is this claim that the obstacle [to peace] is that Hamas won't recognize Israel..." (09.30.2006)
"Israel always depended on the fact that its adversaries were stupid, incompetent... and, in fact, they were right... That when they were dealing with a Nasser, he was a blowhard; a Saddam Hussein,
he was a windbag; when they were dealing with Yasser Arafat, he was a hot air ballon.
They were nothing of any substance... [inaudible]... That was Israel's ace in the hole. Now comes along an Arab leader who says we have to use "reason."
It's a very remarkable thing to read. We have to use "reason."
We have to think, plan, organize."
- Hamas: A reasonable statement. (Los Angeles Times, 07.10.2007)
- The Guardian: Hamas condemns the Holocaust. (05.12.2008)
- Salon.com: The "hiding among civilians" myth. (07.28.2006)
- AIPAC v. Norman Finkelstein: A Debate on Israel's Assault on Gaza. (06.29.2006)
- Foreign Policy: Habitat for Hezbollah. (08.2006)
- The Irish Times: Hizbullah rockets cannot be fired from buildings. (07.31.2006)
Finkelstein on Israel:
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
Video: On the place of civility
in academic life (10.18.2007)
Finkelstein's talk at the academic freedom conference
Tenure Denial Letters
(June - November, 2007)
On How Actual Survivors Were Cheated by
Jewish Organizations:
- Haaretz: "The Claims Conference intentionally defrauded Holocaust survivors." (09.25.2008)
- Ynet: Where did the Shoah money go? (12.11.2006)
'First Class flights around the world, accommodation at deluxe hotels, dining at fancy restaurants and a series of credit cards, this is how the Claims Conference, which deals with restitution of stolen Jewish property from the Holocaust, operates.'
- Haaretz: Survivors' protest makes foreign journalists gasp, security vanish (08.06.2007)
"I want the Germans to know where the money they gave Israel went," he said angrily. "I want the Germans to know that Israel took the money we should have received. I want them to answer one question: Where did our money go?"
- AP: Holocaust survivors blast $20 stipend (07.31.2007)
'Survivors have long claimed that European countries treat them far better than Israel, where many elderly survivors live in poverty.'
- Jewish Week: Holocaust Cash Went To Shadowy Pal Of Ousted WJC Leader (05.04.2007)
'Israeli finance minister, now being probed for corruption, urged death camp tour group to hire little-known N.Y. consultant; Singer friend Curtis Hoxter can't explain what he did for $709,000.'
- Jewish Week: "Survivors Balking At Lawyer's Fee" (03.02.2006)
- Shocking revelation in the London Jewish Chronicle. ("The man on the left earns $437,811 a year handling Shoah claims. So why are so many survivors pleading poverty?"; 05.30.2006)
- Survivors Protest Holocaust Industry Shakedown (08.29.2000)
- Finkelstein: Will The Holocaust Industry Incite Anti-Semitism? (08.11.2000)
- Finkelstein: Lessons of Holocaust Compensation (2001)
Finkelstein on Jimmy Carter:
Israeli civil libertarian's introduction to German edition of Beyond Chutzpah. (03.27.2006)
Communication for Middle East Journal. (02.19.2006)
Alleged Errors in Beyond Chutzpah. (2005)
MEMRI NAZIS (again) (10.23.2006)

New evidence of old lies (2005)
Under the heading DIABOLICAL PLOTS, I stated in Beyond Chutzpah...



Articles and Reviews Related to The Holocaust Industry

Preface to German edition of The Rise and Fall of Palestine
Postscript to German edition of The Rise and Fall of Palestine
The Dershowitz File:
|
 |