Thursday, April 23, 2009

Palestinians: pretending to want a state

Palestinian in military training provided by the United States.
Will their guns turn on Israel again?

Do the Palestinians Really Want a State? -Robert D. Kaplan

[T]here is a deeper structural and philosophical reason why the Palestinians remain stateless, as explained by associate Johns Hopkins professor Jakub Grygiel in "The Power of Statelessness."

Statehood is no longer a goal, he writes. Many stateless groups "do not aspire to have a state," for they are more capable of achieving their objectives without one. Instead of actively seeking statehood to address their weakness, as Zionist Jews did in an earlier phase of history, groups like the Palestinians now embrace their statelessness as a source of power. A state entails responsibilities that limit a people's freedom of action. A group like Hizbullah in Lebanon could probably take over the Lebanese state today, but why would it want to?

Statelessness offers a level of "impunity" from retaliation. The most tempting aspect of statelessness is that it permits a people to savor the pleasures of religious zeal, extremist ideologies, and moral absolutes, without having to make the kinds of messy, mundane compromises that accompany the work of looking after a geographical space.
(Atlantic Monthly)
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