What do you do when the usual way of describing Middle East developments isn't advancing your agenda fast enough? Well, if you're J Street or The New York Times, you just revise the English language to suit your political purposes.
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Israel announced last week that it has approved the construction of about 3,000 apartments and houses inside a small number of existing Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria.
"The Israeli government advanced plans on Wednesday to build more than 3,000 new settlement units in the occupied West Bank," Kingsley began his lengthy article on Oct. 27.
"Settlement units" sounds like brand-new settlements. My goodness, Israel is constructing 3,000 new settlements! Horrors! Sound the alarm! Call the United Nations!
"Settlement units" is a rhetorical trick and a rhetorical weapon. It's a way of trying to make Israel look bad when the facts alone won't accomplish that objective. It's also a way of trying to energize Israel's critics so they will immediately launch their own propaganda blasts.
And sure enough, the same day that the Times published Kingsley's huge article about "settlement units," J Street issued a press release denouncing Israel for its "plans to advance thousands of new settlement units throughout the West Bank."
J Street also trotted out an additional rhetorical device, one they've used before: They characterized the Israeli decision as "settlement expansion."
From that deceptive term, one would think that the settlements are spreading out further and further.
But the new apartments and houses will be built on land that already belongs to the State of Israel or to those Jewish communities. No Arabs will be displaced. Nobody's land is being stolen. Acknowledging those facts would make it harder for J Street.
The US State Department, which vehemently opposes Jews living in the heart of the ancestral Jewish homeland, is only too happy to play along with J Street and the Times. State Department spokesman Ned Price announced: "We strongly oppose the expansion of settlements … ." Nobody in the press corps bothered to ask Price how the construction of apartments within an existing community could qualify as the "expansion" of that community.
Down near the end of Patrick Kingsley's very long article about "settlement units," he also offered a deeply distorted version of the history of the settlements. Since 1967, Kingsley wrote, Israel has "permitted the construction of more than 130 Jewish settlements there."
Technically, that's true. But it's so misleading that it borders on an untruth. Between 1967 and 1992, Israeli governments – Labor and Likud alike – built 129 of those 130 settlements. Since 1992, the Israeli government has authorized exactly one new settlement. One. In nearly three decades. And even that one exists only because Israel needed someplace to put the Jews who were expelled en masse from the Gaza region.
Why haven't new settlements been built since 1992? Because that was when Yitzhak Rabin became prime minister and froze them. His successors – Shimon Peres, Benjamin Netanyahu, Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert, Ehud Barak, Netanyahu again, and now, Naftali Bennett – all continued that freeze. The only Jewish construction they have authorized in the territories in the past 29 years has been within the existing communities.
Israel's prime ministers have imposed this unfair, one-sided freeze (notice that the Palestinian Authority never reciprocated by freezing Arab construction) out of the hope that the international community would recognize and appreciate Israel's sacrifices.
No such luck. Not only does the world, including The New York Times and J Street, never appreciate Israel's concessions, it actually pretends that Israel never even made them. Israel freezes settlements; the world says Israel is expanding settlements. Israel unilaterally withdraws from the territory; the world says the territory is still "occupied." The Palestinian Authority refuses to negotiate; the world accuses Israel of refusing to negotiate.
Which is why so many Israelis now believe that Israeli concessions are a waste of time. Because no matter how much Israel gives in, the other side demands more. No matter how many concessions Israel makes, the critics intensify the pressure, scream even louder – and now even change the English language in order to squeeze Israel even more.
Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.
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