Bantustans
and the unilateral declaration of statehood
The PA leadership in Ramallah is leading the Palestinian movement
of independence to a dead end with its proposed unilateral call for
Palestinian statehood.
Virginia Tilley, The Electronic Intifada, 19 November
2009
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10901.shtml
From a rumor, to a rising murmur, the proposal floated by the
Palestinian Authority's (PA) Ramallah leadership to declare
Palestinian statehood unilaterally has suddenly hit center stage.
The European Union, the United States and others have rejected it
as "premature," but endorsements are coming from all directions:
journalists, academics, nongovernmental organization activists,
Israeli right-wing leaders (more on that later). The catalyst
appears to be a final expression of disgust and simple exhaustion
with the fraudulent "peace process" and the argument goes something
like this: if we can't get a state through negotiations, we will
simply declare statehood and let Israel deal with the
consequences.
But it's no exaggeration to propose that this idea, although
well-meant by some, raises the clearest danger to the Palestinian
national movement in its entire history, threatening to wall
Palestinian aspirations into a political cul-de-sac from which it
may never emerge. The irony is indeed that, through this maneuver,
the PA is seizing -- even declaring as a right -- precisely the
same dead-end formula that the African National Congress (ANC)
fought so bitterly for decades because the ANC leadership rightly
saw it as disastrous. That formula can be summed up in one word:
Bantustan.
It has become increasingly dangerous for the Palestinian national
movement that the South African Bantustans remain so dimly
understood. If Palestinians know about the Bantustans at all, most
imagine them as territorial enclaves in which black South Africans
were forced to reside yet lacked political rights and lived
miserably. This partial vision is suggested by Mustafa Barghouthi's
recent comments at the Wattan Media Centre in Ramallah, when he
cautioned that Israel wanted to confine the Palestinians into
"Bantustans" but then argued for a unilateral declaration of
Palestinian statehood within the 1967 boundaries -- although
nominal "states" without genuine sovereignty are precisely what the
Bantustans were designed to be.
Apartheid South Africa's Bantustans were not simply sealed
territorial enclaves for black people. They were the ultimate
"grand" formula by which the apartheid regime hoped to survive:
that is, independent states for black South Africans who -- as
white apartheid strategists themselves keenly understood and
pointed out -- would forever resist the permanent denial of equal
rights and political voice in South Africa that white supremacy
required. As designed by apartheid architects, the ten Bantustans
were designed to correspond roughly to some of the historical
territories associated with the various black "peoples" so that
they could claim the term "Homelands." This official term indicated
their ideological purpose: to manifest as national territories and
ultimately independent states for the various black African
"peoples" (defined by the regime) and so secure a happy future for
white supremacy in the "white" Homeland (the rest of South Africa).
So the goal of forcibly transferring millions of black people into
these Homelands was glossed over as progressive: 11 states living
peacefully side by side (sound familiar?). The idea was first to
grant "self-government" to the Homelands as they gained
institutional capacity and then reward that process by
declaring/granting independent statehood.
The challenge for the apartheid government was then to persuade
"self-governing" black elites to accept independent statehood in
these territorial fictions and so permanently absolve the white
government of any responsibility for black political rights. Toward
this end, the apartheid regime hand-picked and seeded "leaders"
into the Homelands, where they immediately sprouted into a nice
crop of crony elites (the usual political climbers and
carpet-baggers) that embedded into lucrative niches of financial
privileges and patronage networks that the white government
thoughtfully cultivated (this should sound familiar too).
It didn't matter that the actual territories of the Homelands were
fragmented into myriad pieces and lacked the essential resources to
avoid becoming impoverished labor cesspools. Indeed, the Homelands'
territorial fragmentation, although crippling, was irrelevant to
Grand Apartheid. Once all these "nations" were living securely in
independent states, apartheid ideologists argued to the world,
tensions would relax, trade and development would flower, blacks
would be enfranchised and happy, and white supremacy would thus
become permanent and safe.
The thorn in this plan was to get even thoroughly co-opted black
Homeland elites to declare independent statehood within "national"
territories that transparently lacked any meaningful sovereignty
over borders, natural resources, trade, security, foreign policy,
water -- again, sound familiar? Only four Homeland elites did so,
through combinations of bribery, threats and other "incentives."
Otherwise, black South Africans didn't buy it and the ANC and the
world rejected the plot whole cloth. (The only state to recognize
the Homelands was fellow-traveler Israel.) But the Homelands did
serve one purpose -- they distorted and divided black politics,
created terrible internal divisions, and cost thousands of lives as
the ANC and other factions fought it out. The last fierce battles
of the anti-apartheid struggle were in the Homelands, leaving a
legacy of bitterness to this day.
Hence the supreme irony for Palestinians today is that the most
urgent mission of apartheid South Africa -- getting the indigenous
people to declare statehood in non-sovereign enclaves -- finally
collapsed with mass black revolt and took apartheid down with it,
yet the Palestinian leadership now is not only walking right into
that same trap but actually making a claim on it.
The reasons that the PA-Ramallah leadership and others want to walk
into this trap are fuzzy. Maybe it could help the "peace talks" if
they are redefined as negotiations between two states instead of
preconditions for a state. Declaring statehood could redefine
Israel's occupation as invasion and legitimize resistance as well
as trigger different and more effective United Nations
intervention. Maybe it will give Palestinians greater political
leverage on the world stage -- or at least preserve the PA's
existence for another (miserable) year.
Why these fuzzy visions are not swiftly defeated by short attention
to the South African Bantustan experience may stem partly from two
key differences that confuse the comparison, for Israel has indeed
sidestepped two infamous fatal errors that helped sink South
Africa's Homeland strategy. First, Israel did not make South
Africa's initial mistake of appointing "leaders" to run the
Palestinian "interim self-governing" Homeland. In South Africa,
this founding error made it too obvious that the Homelands were
puppet regimes and exposed the illegitimacy of the black "national"
territories themselves as contrived racial enclaves. Having watched
the South Africans bungle this, and having learned from its own
past failures with the Village Leagues and the like, Israel instead
worked with the United States to design the Oslo process not only
to restore the exiled leadership of the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) and its then Chairman Yasser Arafat to the
territories but also to provide for "elections" (under occupation)
to grant a thrilling gloss of legitimacy to the Palestinian
"interim self-governing authority." It's one of the saddest
tragedies of the present scenario that Israel so deftly turned
Palestinians' noble commitment to democracy against them in this
way -- granting them the illusion of genuinely democratic
self-government in what everyone now realizes was always secretly
intended to be a Homeland.
Only now has Israel found a way to avoid South Africa's second
fatal error, which was to declare black Homelands to be
"independent states" in non-sovereign territory. In South Africa,
this ploy manifested to the world as transparently racist and was
universally disparaged. It must be obvious that, if Israel had
stood up in the international stage and said "as you are, you are
now a state" that Palestinians and everyone else would have
rejected the claim out of hand as a cruel farce. Yet getting the
Palestinians to declare statehood themselves allows Israel
precisely the outcome that eluded the apartheid South African
regime: voluntary native acceptance of "independence" in a
non-sovereign territory with no political capacity to alter its
territorial boundaries or other essential terms of existence -- the
political death capsule that apartheid South Africa could not get
the ANC to swallow.
Responses from Israel have been mixed. The government does seem
jumpy and has broadcast its "alarm," Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman has threatened unilateral retaliation (unspecified) and
government representatives have flown to various capitals securing
international rejection. But Israeli protests could also be
disingenuous. One tactic could be persuading worried Palestinian
patriots that a unilateral declaration of statehood might not be in
Israel's interest in order to allay that very suspicion. Another is
appeasing protest from that part of Likud's purblind right-wing
electorate that finds the term "Palestinian state" ideologically
anathema. A more honest reaction could be the endorsement of Kadima
party elder Shaul Mofaz, a hardliner who can't remotely be imagined
to value a stable and prosperous Palestinian future. Right-wing
Israeli journalists are also pitching in with disparaging but also
comforting essays arguing that unilateral statehood won't matter
because it won't change anything (close to the truth). For example,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has threatened unilaterally to
annex the West Bank settlement blocs if the PA declares statehood,
but Israel was going to do that anyway.
In the liberal-Zionist camp, Yossi Sarid has warmly endorsed the
plan and Yossi Alpher has cautiously done so. Their writings
suggest the same terminal frustration with the "peace process" but
also recognition that this may be the only way to save the
increasingly fragile dream that a nice liberal democratic Jewish
state can survive as such. It also sounds like something that might
please Palestinians -- at least enough to finally get their
guilt-infusing story of expulsion and statelessness off the
liberal-Zionist conscience. Well-meaning white liberals in
apartheid South Africa -- yes, there were some of those, too --
held the same earnest candle burning for the black Homelands
system.
Some otherwise smart journalists are also pitching in to endorse
unilateral statehood, raising odd ill-drawn comparisons -- Georgia,
Kosovo, Israel itself -- as "evidence" that it's a good idea. But
Georgia, Kosovo and Israel had entirely different profiles in
international politics and entirely different histories from
Palestine and attempts to draw these comparisons are intellectually
lazy. The obvious comparison is elsewhere and the lessons run in
the opposite direction: for a politically weak and isolated people,
who have never had a separate state and lack any powerful
international ally, to declare or accept "independence" in
non-contiguous and non-sovereign enclaves encircled and controlled
by a hostile nuclear power can only seal their fate.
In fact, the briefest consideration should instantly reveal that a
unilateral declaration of statehood will confirm the Palestinians'
presently impossible situation as permanent. As Mofaz predicted, a
unilateral declaration will allow "final status" talks to continue.
What he did not spell out is that those talks will become truly
pointless because Palestinian leverage will be reduced to nothing.
As Middle East historian Juan Cole recently pointed out, the last
card the Palestinians can play -- their real claim on the world's
conscience, the only real threat they can raise to Israel's status
quo of occupation and settlement -- is their statelessness. The
PA-Ramallah leadership has thrown away all the other cards. It has
stifled popular dissent, suppressed armed resistance, handed over
authority over vital matters like water to "joint committees" where
Israel holds veto power, savagely attacked Hamas which insisted on
threatening Israel's prerogatives, and generally done everything it
can to sweeten the occupier's mood, preserve international
patronage (money and protection), and solicit promised benefits
(talks?) that never come. It's increasingly obvious to everyone
watching from outside this scenario -- and many inside it -- that
this was always a farce. For one thing, the Western powers do not
work like the Arab regimes: when you do everything the West
requires of you, you will wait in vain for favors, for the Western
power then loses any benefit from dealing more with you and simply
walks away.
But more importantly, the South African comparison helps illuminate
why the ambitious projects of pacification, "institution building"
and economic development that the Ramallah PA and Prime Minister
Salam Fayyad have whole-heartedly embarked upon are not actually
exercises in "state-building." Rather, they emulate with
frightening closeness and consistency South Africa's policies and
stages in building the Bantustan/Homelands. Indeed, Fayyad's
project to achieve political stability through economic development
is the same process that was openly formalized in the South African
Homeland policy under the slogan "separate development." That under
such vulnerable conditions no government can exercise real power
and "separate development" must equate with permanent extreme
dependency, vulnerability and dysfunctionality was the South
African lesson that has, dangerously, not yet been learned in
Palestine -- although all the signals are there, as Fayyad himself
has occasionally admitted in growing frustration. But declaring
independence will not solve the problem of Palestinian weakness; it
will only concretize it.
Still, when "separate development" flounders in the West Bank, as
it must, Israel will face a Palestinian insurrection. So Israel
needs to anchor one last linchpin to secure Jewish statehood before
that happens: declare a Palestinian "state" and so reduce the
"Palestinian problem" to a bickering border dispute between
putative equals. In the back halls of the Knesset, Kadima political
architects and Zionist liberals alike must now be waiting with
bated breath, when they are not composing the stream of
back-channel messages that is doubtless flowing to Ramallah
encouraging this step and promising friendship, insider talks and
vast benefits. For they all know what's at stake, what every major
media opinion page and academic blog has been saying lately: that
the two-state solution is dead and Israel will imminently face an
anti-apartheid struggle that will inevitably destroy Jewish
statehood. So a unilateral declaration by the PA that creates a
two-state solution despite its obvious Bantustan absurdities is now
the only way to preserve Jewish statehood, because it's the only
way to derail the anti-apartheid movement that spells Israel's
doom.
This is why it is so dangerous that the South African Bantustan
comparison has been neglected until now, treated as a side issue,
even an exotic academic fascination, to those battling to relieve
starvation in Gaza and soften the cruel system of walls and
barricades to get medicine to the dying. The Ramallah PA's suddenly
serious initiative to declare an independent Palestinian state in
non-sovereign territory must surely force fresh collective
realization that this is a terribly pragmatic question. It's time
to bring closer attention to what "Bantustan" actually means. The
Palestinian national movement can only hope someone in its ranks
undertakes that project as seriously as Israel has undertaken it
before it's too late.
Virginia Tilley is a former professor of political science and
international relations and since 2006 has served as Chief Research
Specialist at the Human Sciences Research Council of South Africa.
She is author of The One-State Solution (U of Michigan Press, 2005)
and numerous articles and essays on the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. Based in Cape Town, she writes here in her personal
capacity and can be reached at vtilley A T mweb D O T co D O T
za.
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