Is
Israeli invasion of Lebanon stemming from the dream of Greater Israel?
Israel’s
ongoing military offensive in Gaza and its recent incursions into Lebanon have
reignited a contentious debate over the concept of “Greater Israel.”
https://viimes.org/news/is-israeli-invasion-of-lebanon-stemming-from-the-dream-of-greater-israel/
Source:
TRT, Murat Sofuoglu
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Israeli
army launched another invasion in Lebanon, which Tel Aviv’s forces previously
occupied, raising concerns across the Middle East on the future of the region.
Recent
military escalations—from Gaza to southern Lebanon—and statements from key
Israeli officials and ministers have prompted speculation that the idea of
“Greater Israel,” regarded as fringe, seems to have found an echo in the
rhetoric of Israel’s hard-right political factions.
The idea
of Greater Israel, which envisions an Israel stretching from the Nile to the
Euphrates, encompassing parts of Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, and beyond, has been
dismissed as a conspiracy theory by proponents of the Israeli state.
Historically, it has been cast as a tool of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic
rhetoric, designed to delegitimise Israel’s presence in the Middle East.
Ecaterina
Matoi, a scholar at the Middle East Political and Economic Institute (MEPEI),
argues that Israel’s current offensives, particularly its ground incursion in
Lebanon, could be seen as part of a broader strategy aligned with the “Greater
Israel” concept.
“Given
what has been going on in the West Asia region since the beginning of the 20th
century, the ongoing invasion of Lebanon may be interpreted as part of the
implementation of the Greater Israel plan,” Matoi tells TRT World.
While the
Netanyahu government has not explicitly endorsed such an agenda, Matoi suggests
that the increasing involvement in neighbouring territories reflects an
expansionist undercurrent.
Expansionist
Assertions
Israeli
rhetoric towards Lebanon, a sovereign state, has intensified.
“Lebanon,
even though it has a flag and even though it has political institutions does
not meet the definition of a country,” wrote Amichai Chikli, Israel’s Minister
of Diaspora Affairs, on X last month. He even went further suggesting that
Israel needs “to recalculate a course regarding the border line with the entity
that calls itself a state Lebanon.”
Chikli’s
remarks, along with references to Syria and Iraq as “entities” rather than
states, hint at a potential shift in how Israel views its borders—and the
borders of its neighbours.
Without
receiving much condemnation from the Western bloc, Chikli expressed that Israel
can take over parts of Lebanon.
“In a
broader view, both Syria and Iraq do not currently meet the definitions of a
state,” he added, suggesting that current post-WWI Middle Eastern borders drawn
by a British-French consortium called Sykes-Picot are not relevant anymore.
The idea
of “Greater Israel” looms large in debates. Religious Zionists, some of whom
believe that Biblical texts grant Israel a divine claim to vast swathes of the
Middle East, continue to exert influence within Israeli politics.
The
Netanyahu government’s actions and the rhetoric from its ministers suggest that
expansionist tendencies, once dismissed as the stuff of conspiracy, may not be
entirely absent from Israeli strategic thinking.
Israel’s
far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, center, flanked by his
security detail, approaches the entrance to Jerusalem’s most sensitive Muslim
holy site, Al Aqsa Mosque compound in the Old City, Aug. 13, 2024. Photo:Ohad
Zwigenberg
With
ongoing conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon, the notion of “Greater Israel” seems to
be reemerging from the ideological periphery, raising uncomfortable questions
about the future of the region’s borders.
This
week, the Jerusalem Post, published an article titled:“Is Lebanon part of
Israel’s promised territory?” The article has since been deleted.
What is
‘Greater Israel’ vision?
The idea
of “Greater Israel” is rooted in ancient texts, but its modern political
significance emerged with the rise of Zionism.
Theodor
Herzl, the founder of the Zionist movement, envisioned a Jewish state in the
Middle East, an idea that gained traction with Britain’s Balfour Declaration of
1917. The declaration, issued under pressure from Zionist leaders, promised a
Jewish homeland in Palestine. Herzl himself once referenced a Biblical vision,
calling for Israel’s borders to stretch from the “Brook of Egypt to the
Euphrates”—a vast area encompassing parts of modern-day Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan,
Syria, and Iraq.
Others
Three
decades after the Balfour, following the Holocaust, the UN offered a partition
plan between Arab and Jewish populations of Palestine, which laid the ground
for Zionist leaders to declare the emergence of Israel as a state in 1948.
Since
then, Israel has occupied additional territories such as the West Bank, Gaza,
East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights, feeding into arguments that modern
Israel continues to expand beyond its original borders.
“There
are very few arguments that can be brought up to support the idea of a
non-expansionist Israel,” Matoi tells TRT World, adding that “Israel actually
appears to pursue a complex expansionist process.”
Last
week, Israel’s longest serving Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu showed a map
bereft of Palestinian territories in his UN speech in which he condemned the
international organisation as “a contemptuous farce”. The speech contained
strong criticism of the UN; the very institution that helped establish the
Israeli state.
In
tandem, Israel’s military actions, including the announcement of “limited,
localised and targeted” raids in southern Lebanon, have stirred debate over
whether the country’s expansionist aspirations align with the idea of “Greater
Israel.”
The
announcement signaled an intent to get more Arab territories under the Israeli
control as Tel Aviv’s armed forces have already occupied much of Gaza after
October 7.
“I
believe that both the importance of southern Lebanon to Israel as part of
Greater Israel, and the weakening of Iran in the region to remove the
government in Tehran from power, are behind this invasion of (southern)
Lebanon,” Matoi says.
Israeli
attacks have continued to destroy Lebanese territories as the West looks away
on Tel Aviv’s escalations across the Middle East.
The
growing presence of far-right, religious Zionists in Israeli politics has led
to renewed scrutiny of the idea that Israel’s territorial ambitions may extend
far beyond the borders established in 1948.
“It’s an
incredibly grim picture,” says Antony Loewenstein, an independent journalist
and author of the book: The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the
Technology of Occupation Around the World.
“Palestinians
are bearing the brunt of the Israeli onslaught as a far-right Israeli
government takes the opportunity of expanding the country’s borders into
Lebanon, Syria and beyond,” Loewenstein tells TRT World.
In June,
Peace Now, a watchdog, released a taped recording outlining Finance Minister
Bezalel Smotrich’s speech at a conference for his Religious Zionism party of
moves that the campaign group warned would irreversibly change the way West
Bank was governed and lead to “de facto annexation”. The watchdog also noted
that Israel has approved the largest West Bank seizure in decades.
Last
year, during a speech in Paris, Smotrich, the leader of Religious Zionist
Party, displayed a map, showing the occupied West Bank and Jordan part of
Israel, which sparked a strong condemnation from Amman.
In June,
again, an Israeli soldier with a Greater Israel badge on the uniform provoked
outrage in Arab countries.
Jewish
settler leaders such as Daniella Weiss, a leading Zionist extremist figure,
have long advocated for the expansion of settlements in the occupied West Bank,
aligning with the broader “Greater Israel” vision. “The only people of Israel
can settle the Gaza Strip and rule the Gaza Strip,” Weiss said in her speech
quoted in a documentary by TRT World.
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