For Israel, pundits incessantly proclaim, demography is destiny. There are endless warnings that unless the Jewish state relinquishes control over the West Bank, Muslims soon will outnumber Jews between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean. Israel would then confront equally intolerable choices:
to become either a bi-national, or an apartheid, state. But fateful decisions with permanently deleterious consequences for Israel should not rest upon demographic mythology.To  begin with undisputed data: the total population of the State of Israel  (according to its Central Bureau of Statistics) is 7,695,000. This  includes 5,802,000 Jews (75.4%), 1,573,000 Arabs (20.4%), and 320,000  Israelis (4.2%) who are not identified as either Jewish or Arab. The  number of Jews living in the West Bank (biblical Judea and Samaria) is 327,800. At the end of 2010, 6,129,000 Jews lived between the river and the sea.
It  is Palestinian population numbers that concern Israelis. Yasser Arafat  gleefully predicted that, "the womb of the Palestinian woman will defeat  the Zionists." Back in 2003 Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned  that, "the cloud of demographics will come down on us not in the end of  days, but in just another few years." Two years later Prime Minister  Ariel Sharon declared that a continued Israeli presence in Gaza, home to  1,500,000 Arabs, was, "bad for Israel, and bad for Palestinians." He  ordered the expulsion of 9,000 Jewish settlers and the withdrawal of  Israeli military forces.
With  Gaza no longer under Israeli control, the Palestinian-Israeli  population balance shifted dramatically. But Palestinian demography  remains as malleable as putty. According to the Palestinian Central  Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), 2,514,000 Arabs inhabit the West Bank. But  other Palestinian ministries, rejecting this bloated figure, acknowledge  a considerably lower Arab population: 1.5 million (supplemented by  209,000 Palestinian Arabs in East Jerusalem who are citizens of Israel).
Respected  Israeli demographer Yoram Ettinger wisely warns: "Beware of  Palestinians Bearing Demographic Numbers." His data indicate that the  PCBS has inflated the number of West Bank Arabs from 1.6 million to 2.5  million.
Its estimate includes more than 400,000 overseas residents, the double counting of Jerusalem Arabs, under reporting of Palestinian emigration, and exaggerated birth statistics. But Palestinian distortions are catnip for Zionist "demographers of doom."
Ettinger's  calculations indicate that Jews now comprise 17% of the West Bank  population. Between the Jordan and Mediterranean, 66% of the population  is Jewish. Ever since 1995, Arab birth rates have stabilized while the  annual number of Jewish births has risen significantly. "There is a  demographic problem," Ettinger recognizes, "but there is no demographic  machete at the throat of the Jewish state."
This  suggests that some entrenched assumptions and questionable remedies  require revision. If 17% of the West Bank population (Jews) must return  to pre-1967 Israel, should not an equivalent percentage  or at least an  equivalent number -- of Israeli Arabs be relocated to any new  Palestinian state? It might be interesting to discover how many Israeli Arabs would prefer to live there, or remain citizens of the Jewish state.
The  unresolved question remains: what are the borders of the State of  Israel? "Palestine," created by the League of Nations after World War I,  included present-day Jordan, Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza. Under its  Mandatory authority, Great Britain shrank Palestine to become the land  west, not east, of the Jordan River. There, Jews were guaranteed the  right of "close settlement." That right has never been abrogated, nor  has any international boundary nullified it. Indeed, Israel has no  international boundary  because most Arab states (Egypt and Jordan  excepted) have never recognized a Jewish state within any borders.
The  Palestinian Authority has unequivocally declared that no Jews can live  within any Palestinian state. Respectful of Palestinian wishes, and  faithful to Jewish history, Israel should respond by absorbing all  existing Jewish settlements within its borders. Then Palestine (like  Jordan, Iran, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and other Muslim  nations) can savor being Judenrein. And Jewish settlers will live within Israel, their historic homeland. 
But  it is not Palestinian population statistics that propel Israeli  demographic Cassandras. Concentrated on the secular left they loathe  religious Zionists, whose geographical power base is in the settlements.  The demographic "problem," in the end, is a surrogate for the concerted  secular Zionist effort to weaken religious Zionism in the Jewish state.
Jerold S. Auerbach is professor emeritus of history at Wellesley College. His new book, a history of the Altalena tragedy, will be published in the Spring.
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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