By Seth Mandel
Wednesday,
February 26, 2025
The Israeli War of Independence has no other name. This
shouldn’t create much of a problem, even for anti-Zionists: they simply oppose
the state that won its independence in that war.
But lately, the trend of discounting Israel’s existence
has picked up steam in the media, which has latched onto the “nakba” narrative.
Now, “nakba” is not a replacement for “Israeli War of Independence.” Nakba is a
descriptive term coined by Arab intellectuals after the war for the combined
Arab armies’ military defeat by Israel. (Later on, it was repurposed to refer
to the flight of Arabs during the war.)
The fact that nakba isn’t a substitute for the war’s name
poses a problem for the Western press: What does one call the war if one
doesn’t want to accurately convey what one is talking about?
It would appear the current answer is: Call it “the war
that created Israel.”
Now, it should be noted that this, too, is purely
descriptive. So it is possible to use this phrase organically and not
necessarily to signal one’s disapproval of the fact of Israel’s existence. But
the context in which it is usually used makes clear that, most of the time, it
is deployed in bad faith.
Sometimes the bad faith is overt and undisguised.
In the New York Times this week, Fatima AbdulKarim
and Erika Solomon published
a highly editorialized “report” about Israel’s current operation in and around
Jenin, where Iran-backed separatists have dug in and threatened the security of
both Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
Israel’s attempt to suppress the terrorist hive required
evacuation of certain neighborhoods. (There is a dispute as to whether 14,000
or 40,000 were temporarily displaced, and a few thousand have already returned
to their homes.) Although Palestinians were already returning home after three
weeks, AbdulKarim and Solomon claim the displacement “evoked painful memories
of the Nakba, the Arabic word that has been used to refer to the mass flight
and expulsion of Palestinians during the 1948 war that created Israel.”
You can see from the text how awkward it would be to call
the war by its name: It would make clear that the nakba has always been about
the failure to destroy the Jewish nation.
The clunky phrase “war that created Israel” isn’t new,
but it has been cropping up all over print media recently. (It is rarely used
even in the written stories of broadcast news agencies like CNN and Fox.) In
October, the Financial Times ran an
absurd piece making the case for UNRWA—the Hamas-adjacent agency whose
employees were involved in the Oct. 7, 2023 slaughter—to win the Nobel Peace
Prize. In it, UNRWA is described as having a “mandate to care for Palestinian
refugees from the 1948 war that created Israel.” The Financial Times had used
that exact same phrasing just months earlier in reporting on UNRWA’s
Hamas-connected employees.
In the wake of the Gazan invasion of Israel and the
subsequent war it sparked, the Washington Post described
the nakba as “the mass expulsion of Palestinians during the months before and
after the 1948 war that created Israel,” misleading readers with every part of
the sentence. It used the phrase again weeks later in a story
explaining why young people were more likely to support Palestinians over
Israel than previous generations. (Perhaps those young people read the Washington
Post.)
The Guardian uses this phrasing too, in a piece
whitewashing early Hamas leaders: “Its founders, such as the late sheikh Ahmed
Yassin, were children of the Nakba, the Palestinian ‘catastrophe’, when about
750,000 people were forced from their homes in 1948 during the war that created
Israel.”
Time magazine, USA Today, and others have
also taken to using the phrase.
The problem, obviously, is not just that it’s a clunky
phrase, though it is. And the problem is not just that it usually tends to
spring from bad faith, thought that’s certainly not a good thing. The primary
objection to it is that the phrase is, quite simply, wrong. It’s not true.
Attempts to annihilate the Jews in their historic
homeland obviously preceded partition. Throughout the 20th century, massacres
of Jews in Palestine found some success in convincing the British to forbid
Jewish immigration and further land ownership, even after the Holocaust. But it
did not prevent partition.
The United Nations partition plan passed in November 1947
and made explicit what would take place the following year: The British mandate
would end and the area would be divided between Jewish and Arab sovereignty.
That is indeed what happened, although Palestinian Arabs rejected a separate
sovereignty of their own and the land outside of Israel was claimed instead by
Egypt and Jordan.
On May 14, 1948, Israel declared its independence, in
accordance with the agreement. In response, the surrounding Arab countries
tried to murder the infant state—a theme that would come, sadly, to define the
ensuing permanent Arab war on Israel.
The war on the State of Israel was launched after the
State of Israel already existed and with the specific intent of defeating the
State of Israel. “The war that created Israel” is a thing that doesn’t exist,
and never has. I understand that it is painful for Western media types to
acknowledge this, and I feel zero sympathy for them. The truth is the truth;
speak it, or find a different industry.
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