He describes the relationship of Israel with it's settlements as a fading romance:
Like many a divorce, the end of this relationship is slower than the infatuation at the start. New homes are still going up in Israeli communities in occupied territory. Settler ideologues still insist that the West Bank mountains are the real biblical homeland and describe Tel Aviv as the land of the Philistines. The practical difficulties of disentangling from the West Bank are huge. But for the Israeli mainstream, disenchantment has set in.
...From the start, dry, dissenting voices challenged the infatuation. At a Cabinet meeting in June 1967, one minister warned that keeping the West Bank and its Arab population would create a binational state. Nearly all the territory must be relinquished, he said, or "we're done with the Zionist enterprise" of building a Jewish state.
The next winter, when Prime Minister Levi Eshkol was toying with letting Jews settle in Hebron, the editor of his party's newspaper admonished him that "our boys will have to serve an extra three months" to guard the settlers. Settlement would be a military burden, not an asset.
Soon after, when settlers moved into the town without government permission, dissidents warned that letting them stay would undermine democracy. That warning was also ignored.
I so hope that as the article suggests, there truly are an increasing number of Israelis, both in and out of the government, who want to make the hard choices regarding
all the settlements (Gorenberg did mention that even for many who recognize that the settlements must be dismantled, the larger ones, such as Maale Adumim (population: 32,000) or Ariel (population: 18,000) are considered too large to dismantle. What I wonder is if the infrastructure of those settlements could be considered as part of a deal with the Palestinians, as part of reparations. Of course, maybe that makes no sense; as the land they are built on belongs to the Palestinians in the first place, I suppose that technically that makes the infrastructure Palestinian property as well.
Gorenberg's conclusion is this:
Ideologically, Israel is tired of the West Bank. The love is gone. Practically, getting out is difficult. Once settlement was a national goal. Now it is the national dilemma.I'd like to recommend Gorenberg's books to anyone new to the I/P forum who would like to find out more about what's going on there. He's an Israeli journalist, not an academician, and as such his work is quite accessible for the average reader, and pretty non-ideological. He writes beautifully.
On edit: Thanks for finding and posting this, Englander.