Read The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977 Online
Authors: Gershom Gorenberg
Tags: #History, #Politics, #bought-and-paid-for, #Non-Fiction
43.
Jerusalem Report,
Shalom, Friend
, 94; Beilin, 161–62.
44.
Rabin, 559–60. Jerusalem Report,
Shalom, Friend
, 94.
45.
Rabin, 560–63.
46.
YTA 15Galili/4/10/70, Apr. 12, 1977.
47.
YTA 15 Galili/2/3/108, Nov. 8, 1976; YTA 15Galili/2/2/117, Jan. 16, 1977; YTA 15Galili/2/3/138, Mar. 1, 1977; YTA 15/Galili/4/9A/13, Apr. 14, 1977.
48.
PS, memo of Mar. 29, 1977, requesting permission for purchase, signed by Peres, Galili, and Agriculture Minister Aharon Uzan.
49.
Demant, 500.
50.
Rabin, 563.
51.
Ma’ariv
, May 16, 1977, 3.
52.
Penniman, 179.
53.
Penniman, 161.
54.
Haim Gouri, “Bamarbolet,”
Davar,
June 10, 1977, 2.
55.
As noted above, for technical reasons there are slight discrepancies in listings of settlement numbers. As of June 20, 1977, when the Rabin government left office, there were 79 settlements. The number is based on the listing at Admoni,
Asor
, 202–6, and Admoni, interview. From the list I have subtracted settlements that did not become permanent or that were established after June 20, 1977, and have added Ofrah, Kaddum/Elon Moreh, and Kfar Ruth, located in what had been no-man’s-land between Jordan and Israel before 1967. This number includes Snir, located in a pre-1967 DMZ, on land that had been claimed by Israel but de facto controlled by Syria on June 4, 1967. Note that Galili (YTA 15Galili/2/3/77) gives the number of settlements “beyond the Green Line” as 68 on Aug. 9, 1976, of which 24 were established under the Rabin government. Admoni, Ad. MS 77:40, lists a total of 33 settlements during the Rabin government, indicating that nine more were established by the end of Rabin’s term than appear in Galili’s count. The total would therefore be 77. That figure does not include Kaddum/Elon Moreh or Ofrah, so the actual total, again, is 79.
56.
Galili, YTA 15Galili/4/7/9, gives a population of 8,090 as of Feb. 18, 1976. Demant, 524, cites an estimate of 11,000–13,000 by the end of Rabin’s term. I have used the lower figure, since an increase of over 50 percent in 15 months appears unlikely, even given the wide construction of new housing.
57.
Demant, 524, cites an estimate of 45,000, noting this is “generous” and based on a count of 10,300 housing units.
58.
Meir Shalev,
Roman Russi
(Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 1988), 343–44, published in English as
The Blue Mountain,
trans. Hillel Halkin (Jerusalem: Domino, 1991). The translation here is mine.
59.
Ma’ariv, Yediot Aharonot
, May 20, 1977.
Epilogue: Ephemeral, for the Fourth Decade
1.
BAGATZ 1661/05, statement of the respondents.
2.
Negbi 44. The position was originally put forward by Attorney General Gavriel Bach during a Supreme Court hearing in BAGATZ 606/78 in which Palestinian landowners challenged expropriation of their property for the settlement of Beit El.
3.
According to tables provided by the Population Administration of the Interior Ministry, 247,378 Israelis listed their legal addresses in West Bank settlements on July 31, 2005. According to the Peace Now Settlement Watch, 101 unauthorized outposts also existed at that time in the West Bank. “The West Bank—Facts and Figures—August 2005,”
www.peacenow.org.il/site/en/peace.asp?pi=203&docid=1430&pos=0
. Settlement Watch director Dror Etkes (interview) estimated the total population of the outposts as 1,500–2,000. Most outpost residents were probably registered as residing in recognized settlements, so their number does not increase the West Bank total.
4.
As of Dec. 31, 2003, 179,600 Jews lived in Jerusalem neighborhoods outside the Green Line.
Statistical Yearbook of Jerusalem 2004
(Jerusalem: Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies, in preparation), chap. 3.
5.
As of Dec. 31, 2004, 16,100 Jews were resident in the Golan. Central Bureau of Statistics, spokesperson’s office, provisional figures. The Interior Ministry’s Population Administration does not tabulate separate figures for the Golan.
6.
As of July 31, 2005, 9,053 Israelis lived in seventeen recognized settlements, according to the Population Administration of the Interior Ministry. An estimated 174 lived in four unauthorized outposts, according to the Peace Now Settlement Watch. See “Disengagement: Profiling the Settlements—July 2005,”
www.peacenow.org.il/site/en/peace.asp?pi=203&docid=1369&pos=2
. It is likely that most outpost residents were registered as living in the authorized Gaza settlements, so their number does not increase the total for the Gaza Strip.
7.
Population Administration, Interior Ministry: 31,106 registered residents on July 31, 2005.
8.
Ofrah: 2,443 residents, July 31, 2005. Population Administration, Interior Ministry.
9.
Talya Sason, “Havat Da’at Beinayim Benose Ma’ahazim Bilti Murshim,” legal opinion presented to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, 2005.
10.
Gershom Gorenberg, “At What Price?”
Mother Jones
, July–Aug. 2003; Dror Tzaban, “Omdan Helki Shel Taktzivei Memshalah Hamufnim Lehitnahaluyot Bagadah Hama’aravit Uvirtzu’at Azah Veshel Hatiktzuv Ha’odef Bishnat 2001,” report prepared for Peace Now, January 2003; Yehezkel Lein, “Land Grab: Israel’s Settlement Policy in the West Bank,” trans. Shaul Vardi and Zvi Shulman (Jerusalem: B’Tselem, 2002).
11.
As of Dec. 31, 2004, 21,800 non-Jews were resident in the Golan. Central Bureau of Statistics, spokesperson’s office, provisional figures.
12.
As of Dec. 31, 2003, 228,700 Arabs lived within the Jerusalem city limits, 98% in the land annexed in June 1967.
Statistical Yearbook of Jerusalem 2004
(Jerusalem: Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies, in preparation), chap. 3.
13.
Official figures of the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics and its Palestinian counterpart showed that on the eve of Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza, 49.3% of the population in Israel, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights was Jewish; another 2.7% were non-Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union; 46.2% were Arabs. The remainder were foreign workers in Israel. Amiram Bareket, “Larishonah: Shi’ur Heyehudim Bashetahim Shebishlitat Yisrael—Pahot Me-50%,”
Ha’aretz
, Aug. 11, 2005: A1.
14.
See pages 50–51.
15.
YAOH VI: 13.
16.
Gorenberg,
End of Days
, 117–18, 132–37; Ehud Sprinzak,
Brother Against Brother: Violence and Extremism in Israeli Politics from Altalena to the Rabin Assassination
(New York: Free Press, 1999), 155–72; Segal,
Dear Brothers
, passim.
17.
While the name “Gush Emunim” continued to be used loosely to describe the religious settler movement, the organization ceased functioning. Amana, the settlement organization it had established, continued the work of planning and establishing new settlements, while the Council of Settlements in Judea, Samaria, and the Gaza District represented the settlers publicly and politically.
18.
Jim Hoagland, “Sharon Sees Time Ripe to Regain Defense Post,”
Washington Post
, Nov. 7, 1988; Gershom Gorenberg, “A Belief in Force,”
American Prospect
, Apr. 8, 2002; Gershom Gorenberg, “Road Map to Grand Apartheid?”
American Prospect
, July 3, 2003.
19.
Yishuvei Gush Katif: Hagevul Hehadash—Etgar Lehityashvut
(Sept. 1982).
20.
Morris,
Victims
, 565.
21.
In 1995 the political scientist Ehud Sprinzak would estimate members of what he termed the “Gush Emunim culture” as comprising about a fourth of all West Bank settlers. The proportion is much smaller if Jewish residents of East Jerusalem are included.
22.
At the end of 1984, there were 102 settlements in the West Bank, with 35,300 residents, and 10 in Gaza, with 1,600 residents. At the end of 1988, there were 110 West Bank settlements with 63,700 residents, and 12 Gaza Strip settlements, with 2,700 residents. Central Bureau of Statistics, spokesperson’s office.
23.
See “Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,” Sept. 28, 1995,
www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Peace%20Process/Guide%20to%20the%20Peace%20Process/THE%20ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN%20INTERIM%20AGREEMENT
.
24.
Dan Be’eri, “Shuv Ha’Saison’ Bapetah,”
Nekuda
, Mar. 1994: 22–26.
25.
See Gorenberg,
End of Days
, 203–8. The Hamas campaign of suicide attacks began at the end of the customary forty days of mourning after the Hebron massacre.
26.
Sprinzak,
Brother Against Brother
, 253–55.
27.
Ha’aretz
, Oct. 6, 1995.
28.
Morris,
Victims
, 646–48; “Provocative Words Raise Mideast Tensions,” CNN, Nov. 16, 1998,
www.cnn.com/WORLD/meast/9811/15/mideast.wrap/
.
29.
See Sason, “Havat Da’at.”
30.
Leslie Susser and Isabel Kershner, “The Tragedy of Errors,”
Jerusalem Report
, July 16, 2001: 10–16.
31.
Ari Shavit, “Oto Sharon,”
Ha’aretz
Weekend Magazine, Apr. 13, 2001: 19–22.
32.
“Address by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon at the Fourth Herzliya Conference, December 18, 2003,” Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Government/Speeches+by+Israeli+leaders/2003/Address+by+PM+Ariel+Sharon+at+the+Fourth+Herzliya.htm
.
33.
Yoel Marcus, “Hapinui Hamtukhnan: Esrim Hitnahaluyot Birtzu’at Azah Uvagadah Betokh Shanah-Shenatayim,”
Ha’aretz
, Feb. 3, 2004.
34.
Olmert floated the trial balloon for unilateral withdrawal before Sharon’s first speech on the subject, quoting Ben-Gurion on preferring a Jewish state to the Whole Land.
Yediot Abaronot
, Dec. 5, 2003: B2.
35.
Ari Shavit, “Beshem Marsho,”
Ha’aretz
, Oct. 8, 2004.
36.
Ephraim Yaar and Tamar Hermann, “Peace Index: July 2005: The Disengagement as a Done Deal,” spirit.tau.ac.il/socant/peace/peaceindex/2005/files/july2005e.doc.
37.
Haim Gouri, “Predah,”
Yediot Aharonot
Shabbat magazine, Aug. 12, 2005: 14–15.
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Aalleiqa
Abu Dis shooting
Abu Hilu, Suleiman Hussein Udah
Abu Nidal (Sabri al-Banna)
Adjusting Sights
(Sabbato)
Admoni, Yehiel
Agnew, Spiro
Agnon, S. Y.
Agranat, Shimon
Agriculture Ministry
Ahdut Ha’avodah party
Al-Arish agricultural station
Al-Bureij refugee camp
Algeria
Alignment, Labor-Mapam
aliyah
Allenby Bridge attack of 1946
Allon, Yigal
Alon Shvut and
Arab “entity” concept and
background of
Dayan vs.
economic integration and
elections of 1973 and
elections of 1977 and
Etzion Bloc and
Jerusalem and
Labor Party and
Meir and
Oslo Accords and
Palestinian state
peace negotiations and
Rabin and
redraws map of Israel
resolution of June 19, 1967, and
Sebastia and
settlement ideal and
settlement post-1967 and
Sinai evacuation of 1979 and
Six-Day War and
Yom Kippur War and
Allon Plan
broken by settlements
Dayan plan vs.
Eshkol and
Galili and
Gouri and
Gush Emunim and
Meir and
peace negotiations and
private development and
Rabin and
religious Zionism and
results of, by 1977
Sebastia and debate on
settlement decisions and
Sharon and
Alon Shvut
Al-Saika
Altalena
affair
Alterman, Nathan
American Jews
Amir, Aharon
Amir, Yigal
Amital, Yehudah
Anabta
anarchism
annexation
Arab Legion
Arab nationalism.
See also
Palestinians
Arab revolt of 1936
Arab riots of 1929
Arafat, Yasser
Aran, Zalman
Argaman Nahal outpost
Argov, Shlomo
Ariel
armistice lines (1949).
See also
Green Line
Armored Corps (Israeli)
Aron, Raymond
Aronoff, Myron
Asad, Hafiz al-
Ashkelon
Ashkenazi, Motti
Atarot
Aviner, Shlomo
Avshalom Center.
See also
Yamit
Ba’al Hatzor.
See also
Ofrah
Bab al-Mandeb straits
Ball, George
Banias
Bank of Israel
Bar, Carmel
Barak, Ehud
Barbour, Walworth
Bardawil Lagoon
Bar-Ilan University
Bashan
Baumgarten, Albert
BBC
Bedouin
expulsions
Beersheba
Begin, Menachem
background of
Likud and
Nablus and
as prime minister
Six-Day War and
Beitar
Beit Furik
Beit Ha’aravah
Beit Hashitah
belligerent occupation
Ben-Ami, Shlomo
Ben-David, Ofer
Ben-Gurion, David
Ben-Meir, Yehuda
Ben-Tzvi, Rachel Yana’it
Ben-Yehudah, Rafael
Benziman, Uzi
Berman, Paul
Bethlehem
Bialik, Haim Naham
binational state
Bin-Nun, Yoel
Bir Zeit College
Blue Mountain, The
(Shalev)
Bnei Akiva youth movement
Brezhnev, Leonid
British Palestine (British Mandate)
Brown, George
Bundy, McGeorge
Doctrine
Bundy, William
Byzantine Empire
cabinet, Israeli
Camp David summit of 2000
Camp Kaddum.
See also
Elon Moreh settlers; Sebastia settlement bids
Carter, Jimmy
Chasani, Michael
cheap labor issue
Clausewitz, Carl von
Clinton, Bill
Cohen, David
Cohen, Geula
Cold War
colonialism
communists, Israeli
community settlement
Council of Women Workers
creating facts
Czechoslovakia
Dafnah
Dahab
Davar
David, King
Davies, Roger
Dayan, Moshe
advocates holding land for full peace
Allon vs.
archaeology and
background of
death of
economic integration and
Egypt-Israeli accord of 1979 and
functional compromise and
Hebron and
Jerusalem and
Jordan Rift and
Khartoum and
Labor Party and
Meir and
Meron opinion and
military rule and
Palestinian refugees and
peace proposals of 1971 and
Rabin vs. Peres and
Rafi party and
resolution of June 19, 1967, and
Sebastia and
settlement plan and
Sinai and
Six-Day War and
West Bank and
Yom Kippur War and
Dead Sea
de Borchgrave, Arnaud
Defense Ministry
Deganiah Bet
Deganiah
Democratic Movement for Change
Diaspora Jews
Diklah
Dinitz, Sincha
Dir al-Balah
Dir Yassin massacre of 1948
Di-Zahav
Dome of the Rock
conspiracy to blow up
Dori, Latif
Drori, Ya’akov
Druckman, Haim
Druse
Dulles, John Foster
East Bank
East Jerusalem.
See also
Jerusalem
Eban, Abba
Meir and
economic integration
Education Ministry
Efrat, Yonah
Efratah
Egypt
Khartoum and
negotiations and
Resolution 242 and
Six-Day War and
War of Attrition and
Yom Kippur War and
Eichmann, Adolf
Eilat
Ein Gedi
Ein Tzurim
Ein Yabrud
Eisenhower, Dwight
Elazar, David
Eldad, Yisrael
elections
of 1965
of 1969
of 1973–74
of 1977
of 1984–2000
Eliav, Arie
Elkins, Michael
Elon Moreh settlers.
See also
Camp Kaddum; Sebastia settlement bids
end of days
Epstein, Moshe
Eshkol, Levi
Allon Plan and
background of
Dayan Plan and
death of
Eliav and
end of Six-Day War and
Etzion Bloc and
Geneva conventions and
Golan Heights and
Hebron and
illegal actions and
Jerusalem and
Khartoum and
Labor Party formed by
Johnson and
Nixon and
Palestinian Arabs and
peace negotiations and
settlement decisions of
Settlement Department and
Six-Day War and
U.S. objections to settlements and
West Bank and
Eshkol, Miriam
Etzion, Hayah
Etzion, Yehudah
Etzion Bloc.
See also
Kfar Etzion; Massu’ot Yitzhak; Ein Tzurim
expropriation of land
extraterritorial status
Ezrahi, Yaron
F-15 warplanes
Faisal, king of Saudi Arabia
Fanon, Franz
Fatah
Feingold, Avshalom
Feldman, Moshe
Felix, Menachem
Festinger, Leon
Filber, Ya’akov
Finance Ministry
Ford, Gerald
Foreign Ministry
France
Frankl, Victor
French Guiana
Fried, Yohanan
“functional compromise,”
Gadot
Gahal alliance
Galilee
Galili, Yisrael
Sebastia and
Galili Document
Garment, Leonard
Gaza city
Gaza Strip,
xx
Gazit, Mordecai
Gazit, Shlomo
Geneva Conventions
Geva
Gilgal
Ginnosar
Ginsburg, David
Golan Heights (Syrian heights),
xx
annexation of
Goldberg, Arthur
Goldstein, Baruch
Goren, Shlomo
Gouri, Aliza
Gouri, Haim
background of
Sebastia (Nablus) and
Six-Day War and
Great Britain.
See also
British Palestine
Great Era, The
(Kasher)
Greenberg, Uri Zvi
Green Line,
xx
international perception of
Gur, Mordechai
Gush Emunim (Bloc of the Faithful)
Gvati, Haim
Gvat
Ha’aretz
Ha’etzni, Elyakim
Haganah
Hague Convention on war (1907)
Halbertal, Moshe
Hamahanot Ha’olim (Ascending Camps)
Hamas
Hammer, Zevulun
Hanani, Binyamin
Hanita
Harel, Yehudah
Harel, Yisrael
Har Etzion yeshivah
Harman, Avraham
Harnoy, Meir
Har-Tzion, Meir
Hashomer Hatza’ir (Young Guard)
Hawarah
Hazan, Ya’akov
Hebron
Hebron hills
Hebron Settlers Secretariat
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Heineman, Ben-Tzion
Herder, Johann Gottfried von
Herod, King
Herut party
Herzl, Theodor
Herzog, Yaacov
Hillel, Shlomo
Histadrut labor union
Ho Chi Minh
Hod, Mordechai
Holocaust
Holzman, Haim
Housing Ministry
Howe, Stephen
Humphrey, Hubert
Hussein ibn Talal, king of Jordan
Khartoum and
PLO and
peace negotiations and
Rabat and
Six-Day War and
Ibrahimi Mosque.
See
Tomb of Patriarchs
illegalism
illegitimacy complex
Immigration Ministry
Indig, Dov
Interior Ministry
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
international law
intifadas
invisible rule
In Your Covenant
(pamphlet)
Iraq
Irgun Tzva’i Le’umi
irredentism
Iskaka
Islamic holy sites
Ismail, Hafiz
Ismail, Mohammed Zakariya
Ismailiya
Israel, map of,
xx
Israel Air Force
Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
Israeli-Arab negotiations.
See also specific nations and people
London talks of 1968
of 1967–68
of 1974
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
See also
Palestinians
Oslo Accords and
Sharon and
Jabari, Muhammad Ali al-
Jaffa
Jarring, Gunnar
Jenin
Jericho
Jerusalem.
See also
East Jerusalem
Old City
unification of
“Jerusalem of Gold,” xvi
Jerusalem Post
Jewish Agency.
See also
Settlement Department
Jewish majority issue
Jewish National Fund
Jewish Solidarity Conference (1975)
Jezreel Valley
Johnson, Lyndon B.
Jordan
Jordanian option
“Jordanian-Palestinian” state
Jordan Rift
Jordan River
Judea and Samaria.
See also
West Bank
June 19, 1967, resolution
Justice Ministry
Kalyah Nahal
Kanan, Hamdi
Karameh refugee camp
Kasher, Menachem
Katif Bloc
Katzenbach, Nicholas
Katzover, Benny
Katzover, Binah
Kaunda, Kenneth
Kazaz, Nisim
Keating, Kenneth
Keshet
Kfar Darom
Kfar Etzion
Khan Yunis
Khartoum summit (1967)
Khatib, Ruhu al-
kibbutzim.
See also specific kibbutzim and parties
Kiryat Arba