TURNING `SWORDS INTO SILICON CHIPS` – The Israeli Homeland
Transcription
TURNING `SWORDS INTO SILICON CHIPS` – The Israeli Homeland
TURNING ‘SWORDS INTO SILICON CHIPS’ – The Israeli Homeland Security Industry and Making of Jewish Nationhood Leila Stockmarr Thesis for the degree of Ph.D Roskilde University, September 2015 Supervisor: Dr. Sune Haugbølle Co-supervisor: Dr. Gorm Rye Olsen TURNING ‘SWORDS INTO S ILICON CHIPS’ – The Israeli Homeland Security Industry and Making of Jewish Nationhood Leila Stockmarr Thesis for the degree of Ph.D Roskilde University, September 2015 Supervisor: Dr. Sune Haugbølle Co-supervisor: Dr. Gorm Rye Olsen TURNING ‘SWORDS INTO SILICON CHIPS’ – The Israeli Homeland Security Industry and Making of Jewish Nationhood Copyright © 2015 Leila Stockmarr Word count 122.801 All rights reserved Printed in Denmark, Roskilde, 2015 Department of Society and Globalisation Universitetsvej 1 4000 Roskilde, denmark Issn 0909-9174 Content Acknowledgements1 Abstract3 Terms and abbreviations 4 INTRODUCTION AND FOCUS OF RESEARCH 9 Preface9 Background12 The project 13 The research questions 15 The argument(s) 16 Contributions17 The case of Israel 19 Sources20 Organisation of material and structure of research 20 CHAPTER ONE LITERATURE REVIEW, CURRENT RESEARCH TRENDS AND METHODS 25 25 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 25 26 30 34 36 38 42 45 45 46 49 51 52 53 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Introduction The broader scope of Zionism and colonialism The political economy of the Israeli security industry Global Palestine The Palestinian experience/racialisation Security studies, policing, and liberal war Militarism and the military-industrial complex Methodology and research questions and practices Background of research Technology, power, and critical realism Research methods and practice Studying of extreme cases (extreme case sampling) Limitations of scope of analysis Data, fieldwork, and interviews Ethical concerns: Research in conflict zones and questions of access and assigning blame Political emotions 56 59 CHAPTER TWO FOUNDATIONS, THEORIES, AND CONCEPTUAL REFLECTIONS 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Technological nationalism, settler colonialism, and security as national innovation Introduction Nation-state incongruence and state-sponsored nationalism Thinking the national Settler colonialism Nation, state and ‘race’ Technological nationalism and national systems of innovation The ‘national dream’ is technological Techno-globalism versus techno-nationalism Structures of innovation Security as national innovation, security as a substitute Critique of security Conclusion CHAPTER THREE 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 4.4 63 63 64 65 68 69 71 74 76 79 81 84 89 91 BACKGROUND I: ZIONISM, NATIONALISED SECURITY, AND ISRAEL’S MOBILISATION FOR NATIONHOOD 91 Introduction 91 Zionism as nationalised settler colonialism 91 Destruction/construction98 Israel as a racial state, ethno-classes, and ethnic capital 101 Frontier violence and settler governmentality 106 Israeli homeland security 108 Conclusion 113 CHAPTER FOUR 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 63 63 BACKGROUND II: A HISTORY OF THE ISRAELI SECURITY INDUSTRY Introduction The Israeli security industry: A short introduction Background: How it all began The ideology of economic independence and ethnic capital Pre-state formations and the nascent security economy Early stages of military production IMI: From clandestine underground factory to security giant Pre-state militias and initial production Settling the land and the dynamics of replacement 117 117 117 117 122 122 124 124 127 130 131 4.5 4.6 4.7 The state revolution State-controlled production The birth of the giants Zionist pioneers, elite networks and defence legends: The case of IAI and Elbit Expansive military production Post-1967: a new impetus and restructuring External reliance: Pax Americana and the role of foreign capital The ‘economic peace’ of the Oslo Accords From third world villainy to Silicon Wadi Conclusion 134 135 137 138 141 142 145 147 152 155 CHAPTER FIVE 159 5.0 5.1 5.2 159 159 159 162 163 166 167 172 175 177 179 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 SECURITISED NATIONALISM, TECHNO-SCIENCE, AND WAR Introduction Science, settler colonialism and Zionism Ein Breira science and avenues of warfare Scientific frontier institutions Policies of science: R&D and security The commercialisation of science and the Chief Scientist’s Office The Negev technopolis Blumberg’s Homeland Security Institute Laboratories of war The juxtaposition of real and fake war: ‘Seeing is striking’ The entrepreneurs of science and security: between pragmatism and ideology The spirit of entrepreneurship An extraordinary mission Chik-chak, bitzu’ism, chutzpah, and rosh gadol Conclusion CHAPTER SIX 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 ALGORITHMS OF CONTROL: DIGITAL ENVELOPES AND THE MANAGING OF THE EMOTIONAL LANDSCAPE Introduction Israel’s cyber and digital security economy Digital enveloping and calculating technologies Surveillance and the digital enveloping of Palestine Controlling the emotional landscape Risk management and digitalised control Predictive software: the case of Athena Algorithms of control: from combat to Waze and Any.do Selling ‘the truth’ and constructing identities 182 182 183 187 190 193 193 193 194 196 196 198 199 199 200 204 6.4 6.5 Coding bodies: Biometrical tracking Biometrical access Conclusion 207 207 210 CHAPTER SEVEN 213 7.0‘SMART CITIES’, ISRAELI URBANISATION, AND URBAN CONTROL 7.1Introduction 7.2 Welcome to the ‘smart city’ 7.3 Zionism and urbanisation 7.4 Policing and ‘cities without violence’ 7.5 Smart wars and frontier settlements From kibbutzim to outpost to smart city The Ariel-Qalqilya binary 7.6 Israeli smart city spaces and projects The Digi-Tel-Jaffa binary Fortress Jerusalem and the case of Mer Magal: From Ramat Ha’sharon to Mombasa Elbit’s Public Security Deployment Scope Compression of time and space 7.7 Conclusion: the smart city revisited 213 213 214 217 220 224 224 225 228 228 230 232 234 238 240 CHAPTER EIGHT BORDER SECURITY PART I: 243 243 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 ‘THE HOMELAND BEGINS AT THE BORDER’ 243 Introduction 243 Borders of national belonging 244 Israel-Palestine’s ‘human’ borders 246 Access248 Denied access 250 The borders of the Oslo Accords 253 The no-contact rule and managing the threat of violence 254 Conclusion 256 CHAPTER NINE 9.0 9.1 9.2 BORDER SECURITY PART II: SEPARATION, SURVEILLANCE, AND TRANSIT Introduction: Walls, barriers, and fences Gaza’s frictionless borders: transfer and ruling from afar Frictionless patrolling: the robot servant 259 259 259 259 262 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 Borders of separation: Hafrada logics Hafrada as an operational concept Imperfect hafrada and indigenous resistance Borders and surveillance The case of Controp Sensors, treasures and pearls Elbit – from Palestine to Mexico Border control: passage and strategies of concentration Limits and liminal transit: Checkpoints and terminals Transfer of illegitimacy and the ‘Palestinianisation’ of the border Conclusion 265 268 270 271 272 274 276 278 278 285 287 CHAPTER TEN 291 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 291 292 296 297 299 301 304 CONCLUSION The Israeli security sector Hyper and radical securitised nationalism Racialisation and ethnic security Science – an ethos and a strategy Techno-conceptual shifts The laboratory of Palestine BIBLIOGRAPHY311 Acknowledgements This thesis would not exist without the support, love, and patience, and not least the intellectual engagement of many people. While writing a Ph.D. is the loneliest process imaginable, it also involves teamwork. I would never have made it without the support of family members, friends, and colleagues. I would like to thank my main supervisor, Dr. Sune Haugbølle. Throughout the bumpy road of writing this thesis, Sune has been a friend, a mentor, and a trustworthy intellectual role model of unquestioned integrity. When I was a little (or a lot) confused and lost in the Ph.D. process, Sune always displayed patient respect for my ideas. Thanks, too, to Dr. Gorm Rye Olsen for his insightful comments and support. In London, I would like to thank Dr. Laleh Khalili at London School of Oriental and African Studies for her amazing mind, input, and support. Thanks to James, Sherri, Siggie, Carlos, and others for lively conversations over coffee. Thanks to Liz and Lynda for being great friends. Thanks to Frederik for letting me crash. A huge thanks to Jo Kelcey and Lina Dencik for our valuable talks and shared experiences. To my friends and informants in Palestine, thank you for your hospitality and willingness to share your stories with me. I am humbled by and deeply admire your steadfastness and integrity. In Israel, I want to thank the people of so many organisations who opened their doors to me and shared their wisdom. People like you make me an optimist. I want to thank my informants for taking the time to let me into their world. Thanks to Jeff Halper for good company among guns and gems. Thanks to Rhys Machold for helping me navigate among Israeli arms dealers. Back in Denmark, a big thanks to my siblings Ivan Emil, Sonja, and Viggo and to my aunt Marianne for being you and being there. Thanks to my amazing friends for their encouragement and endless cheering in the midst of one of my meltdowns. Thanks to Erik Mygind Du Plesses for being a great colleague and friend and for making me laugh. A huge thanks to Patricia Forbert for stepping in to help with layout and graphic design in the last minute. At Roskilde University, thanks to Miriam Younes, Anders Riel Müller, Vera Altmeyer, Thomas Vladimir Brønd, Mie Vestergaard, and Johanna Jansson for sharing and caring. At the Department of Society and Globalisation thanks to Cecilie Thorsted Flo for always helping with practical matters and guidance, and thanks to Head of the ISG Doctoral School Dr. Lisa Richey for support and professionalism. 1 At the Danish Institute for International Studies, thanks to Lars Erslev Andersen, Peter Alexander Albrecht, Christine Nissen, and Rasmus Alenius Boserup for support and friendship. Thanks to Poya, Saer, and Tarek for great times and struggles in the crazy world of politics. Thanks to the Danish Institute in Damascus for funding my fieldwork. I would like to dedicate this thesis to my parents Niels and Lone, in gratitude for their endless support and love. Thank you for being a true source of intellectual and moral inspiration. You have taught me most of what I have needed learn in order to write this thesis. Thank you for standing by your beliefs and teaching me to try to do the same. Last but most important, I would like to thank Peter for his love and support. I know I could not have pulled through the last year without you. I can’t wait to come home. 2 Abstract Even before the founding of the Israeli state in 1948, the Israeli economy has grown steadily to become the epitome of a ‘high-tech nation’ that exports advanced technologies and software and hardware to a global customer clientele. A key pillar of this ‘economic miracle’ has developed and grows from the country’s vast homeland security sector. Israeli homeland security lies at the heart of Zionists nation and state building, and expresses both the discursive and material struggles involved in establishing and securing a Jewish state in the former British Mandatory Palestine. The social history of Israel’s security economy is a tale of techno-conceptual shifts in the techno-national evolution of Zionism. The security industry produces a broad range of technologies and systems of control, which have been developed over time to meet the needs of the Israeli military and the growing settler community. In recent years, the industry has had a large impact well beyond the cartography of Israel-Palestine. Building on original empirical material and interviews with actors of the Israeli security industry and fieldwork conducted in interviews and at defence and security fairs, this thesis provides a social and economic history of the genesis, development, and practices of the companies, institutions, and individuals that comprise Israel’s homeland security sector. Its research focuses on how the volatile mix of security, innovation, war, and racialisation has served to advance a distinct nationhood ideal, but has also produced a variety of messy outcomes flowing from the state’s unfinished character as a homogenised Jewish state. The thesis engages critically with theories of nationalism, race, settler colonialism, security, and technological nationalism. It examines how Zionist visions of ethnic nationhood and settler colonial impulses have led to a production scheme revolving around security innovation, and analyses the deeper meaning and logic of the dominant security narratives, i.e., the larger political content of security. It discusses the ways in which Israeli homeland security is described and practiced by the industry’s actors and entrepreneurs. The thesis is also about Palestine, i.e., how the land of Palestine has been reconfigured, ruptured, minimised, and lockedin and how it has served as a laboratory for the industry and helped to realise settler colonial aspirations. It is an account of what security has meant and still means for those living under Israeli rule, and how the control and managing of Palestine has become an exemplar of security in Israel’s branding and engagement on the global platforms of security trade and knowledge exchanges. 3 Terms and abbreviations Aliyah Immigration of Jews to British Mandate Palestine and Israel-Palestine COGAT woordination of Government Activities in the Territories CR Critical Realism HLS Homeland Security IAF Israeli Air Force IDF Israeli Defense Forces MFA Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Israel) Mossad Israel’s external security service Nakba Arabic for catastrophe NSI National System of Innovation OCS Office of the Chief Scientist Oleh/Olim Newly arrived Jewish immigrant OPT Occupied Palestinian Territory Shin Bet (Shabak) Israel’s internal security service SST Social Shaping of Technology UAS Unmanned Aerial System UAV Aerial Vehicle UN United Nations 4 5 6 Timeline – Key dates 1882–1903: The First Aliyah (wave of Jewish immigration) begins. An estimated 25,000-35,000 Jews immigrate to Ottoman Palestine. 1896: Theodor Herzl publishes Der Judenstaat (The Jewish State) proposing the structure of beliefs of political Zionism. 1904–1914: The Second Aliyah – 20,000 Jews migrate to Ottoman Palestine, most of them from the Russian Empire. Year 1880 1890 1900 1949–1960s: Up to one million refugees and immigrants (many of them from Arab countries) settle in Israel-Palestine. 1967: The Six Day War, (the Naksah) between Israel and Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. Israel gains control of all of the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and Sinai. 1917: The Balfour Declaration – Britain seizes Palestine from the Ottomans and grants support to the establishment of a ‘National Home for the Jewish People’ in Palestine. 1919–1923: The third Aliyah of Jewish migration to British Mandatory Palestine; immigration of approximately 40,000 Jews. 1910 1920 1930 1940 1973: The Yom Kippur War between Israel and Egypt and Syria. 1975: UN General Assembly adopts a resolution describing Zionism as a form of racism (Rescinded in 1991). 1987–1992/93: The First Intifada, Palestinian uprising against the Israeli occupation. 1936–1939: The Arab Revolt in Palestine: a nationalist uprising by Palestinians in Mandatory Palestine against British colonial rule and mass Jewish immigration to Palestine. British government’s ‘White Paper’ seeks to limit Jewish migration to Palestine to 10,000 per year (except in emergencies). 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990: The USSR allows approximately one million Jewish citizens to migrate to Israel. 1993: The signing of Oslo I or the Oslo I Accord (The Declaration of Principles on Interim SelfGovernment Arrangements). Establishment of the Palestinian National Authority. 1940s: The Nazi Holocaust of the Jews in Europe prompts efforts at mass migration to Mandatory Palestine. Jewish armed groups upscale activity to fight British forces. 1947: The United Nations (Resolution 181) recommends partition of Palestine into a separate Jewish and Arab state with international control over Jerusalem. 1990 2000 2010 2000: The Second Intifada/ al-Aqsa Intifada. 2004: International Court of Justice issues advisory opinion that West Bank barrier is illegal. 2005: Israel withdraws all Jewish settlers and military personnel from Gaza, while retaining control over airspace, coastal waters, and border crossings. 1948: Israeli independence, Palestinian Nakba, breakout of first Arab-Israeli war. Armistice agreement leaves Israel with more land (including West Jerusalem) than envisioned under the Partition Plan. Gaza falls under Egyptian rule and Jordan annexes the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Out of their total population of 1,200,000, around 750,000 Palestinians are displaced into the Arab or global diaspora. 2020 2006: Hamas comes to power in Palestinian legislative elections. 2008-9: Operation Cast Lead in Gaza. 2014: Operation Protective Edge in Gaza. 2015: Netanyahu’s Fourth Government. 7 8 INTRODUCTION AND FOCUS OF RESEARCH Preface In 1951, Israel’s first Prime Minister and key founder David Ben-Gurion stated: In our days…war embraces whole nations. It is a total war… what is decisive is not only the strength of the army, but also the collective might of the people as a whole, its economic, financial, technical and vocational, scientific and organisational might, and above all else its spiritual power. – David Ben-Gurion, 1951 With these words the pioneer ideologue set the path for the development of an Israeli national economy that would steadily advance in mutually dependent military and scientific innovation processes. In November 2012, 61 years later, at Israel’s Second International Homeland Security fair in Tel Aviv, Israel’s President Shimon Peres was the keynote speaker. In his speech, Peres, clearly an icon to the huge crowd of Israeli and international security experts, company representatives, military staff, and clients, made an explicit connection between the current status of Israel as a one-stop-shop for security and defence technology and the trajectories and ideological formations behind the success of the Jewish state. He acclaimed the centrality of science and innovation as key to securing the Jewish people. While strong domestic support was deemed essential to excel, in order to have global and domestic economic and industrial success, Peres emphasised the need for cosmopolitanism and a global outlook. With clear emotion in his voice, he declared: When it comes to science there are no borders – every excellence is limited by time – we are just in the beginning of discovering the secrets of the world (Shimon Peres, HLS Israel the Second International Israel Homeland Security Conference, Tel Aviv, November 2012). Peres also outlined the necessary ingredients for security and prosperity, and pointed to Israel as an illustrative case: 9 If armies have arms, companies have ears. You act globally without frontiers. Globality is individuality. You cannot have a global company and be a racist – if you’re racist forget about selling. You have to listen to the people; globality is not attached to the physical dimension of your country. Your country is not defined by the square meter but by the amount of engineers and sciences. A country like Israel must be great in technology or else it would not exist. If economists had established Israel it would not survive (Shimon Peres, HLS Israel, the Second International Israel Homeland Security Conference, Tel Aviv, November 2012). In Peres’s vision of the future there will be no borders, only science, to control and secure selected groups. However, in light of Israel’s position as one of the last ongoing settler colonial projects and its status as an occupying power, Peres’s v ision of the future systematically ignores the other side of the coin of technological advancements: the repressive and exploitive side of Israeli security practices. As part of the same fair mentioned above, we fair participants were transported in buses to the Port of Ashdod in the most southern part of Israel, only a few kilometres from the sealed-off, besieged Gaza Strip. Here we witnessed a demonstration of Israeli arms and security technologies and anti-terror and anti-piracy missions conducted by security and defence experts in cooperation with Israeli military personnel. Surprisingly, this promotional event coincided with the start of Operation Pillar of Defense, an eight-day military offensive against Gaza. As the war was initiated by a series of targeted killings utilising armed drone technology and intelligence data from surveillance drones, public and private sector buyers i.e. the purchasers of Israel’s security technology from places such as the United States, the European Union, Nigeria, China, and Italy sat watching a ‘war showroom’ composed of the very same technologies being used against real people in close vicinity. The signature James Bond theme song was playing in the background, thus promoting familiarity and harmony between Israeli practices of war and the cognitive references of observer-consumers, including potential purchasers. P erhaps what was most peculiar about this scene was the fact that all of this took place in Israel, an occupying power and one of earth’s most guarded and protected states. A highly contradictory and bizarre reality prevailed at this security fair. On the one hand, we witnessed a celebration of security as a public good and a sign of ambitious innovation. It was obvious that cutting-edge and advanced security technologies are being promoted and sold as emancipatory promises of a life free from insecurity, a secure life in a borderless hyper-technological world. On the other hand, just beneath this celebratory covering, a crude military reality of violence, separation, and occupation surfaced leading the technologies back to their context of origin: Israel’s settler colonial practices and more broadly a growing 10 global industry of technologies of control. However, it was no surprise that this surreal scenario was being played out in Israel. At the border, in the airport, and on the sea, state agents and private Israeli security actors are at war – a frontier war. In Peres’s view, Israel lies at the frontier – at the outer edge of the wave, at the meeting point between savagery and civilisation. While fighting and stabilising a nation on this fine line has been an ethos and idea informing Zionist practice since the founding of the nation in the new territory of British Mandate Palestine, this frontier line has been expanding and shifting since its inception. Israel’s permanent state of war and ongoing military occupation provides the country’s vast entrepreneurial security sector1 with a range of comparative advantages to think, make, and deploy security technologies in a given battlespace2. The connection between the free flows of security so obvious at the Homeland Security Fair and the steady advancement of localised practices and techniques of security is a core engine of this dynamic. In this nexus between the production of security and insecurity lies the contradiction of security as both a promise of emancipation for some and at the same time the expression of a repressive ideology and a system of dispossession and subjection for others. This opens up even deeper questions about how security technologies are conceptualised, produced, and deployed as part of local and national war theatres and how technological exchanges are dispersed into global flows of security technology and capital. The political roots of these contradictory forces of security and insecurity, as a nationalised ideology, a system of innovation, and a source of income are the theme of this doctoral thesis. 1 2 By security sector I refer not only to the military (IDF) but also to other law-enforcement agencies such as the police and paramilitary forces, the border guards and coast guard, the intelligence and internal security services, and the military industries. Inspired by Graham (2009), the research presented throughout this thesis deploys the notion of battlespace (as a surrogate for battlefield). This distinction allows us to include practices and events that take place virtually or at least not physically on the soil of Israel-Palestine. 11 Background This research is about the historical and social shaping of technologies of security3 that has taken place as part of Zionist nation making and Israeli state building. Israel’s capacities to govern and control are expressed through the extraordinarily vast and rapidly growing Israeli defence and security industry, where ‘swords are turned into silicon chips’4. Israel’s defence and security industry is a vital and strategically important sector and the country’s largest employer; it is Israel’s single largest economic and industrial sector. It is a major player in the global arms market. Jane’s, the defence analyst magazine, has ranked Israel in sixth place for arms exports; it is widely believed that Israel has become the world largest exporters of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) (Cook 2013). While its arms-related trade is reported to account for somewhere between one-tenth and one-fifth of Israel’s exports, these figures do not include the massive and growing homeland security industry, which according to official figures includes more than 600 Israeli companies (Gordon 2009: 8). This reality has grown from the condition that Israel is engaged in a permanent frontier war that is seemingly without end. Today, the entire skeleton of one of the world’s most volatile conflict sites of Israel-Palestine5 has become securitised and technologised, and divided and enclavised to an unprecedented degree. It is a field shaped by techno-conceptual shifts and the (messy) encounter between technology and lives lived. In the scope of Zionist mobilisation for nationhood, a plethora of practices, strategies, and devices have been developed to shape the Jewish nation. Central to this has been Israel’s consistent striving to attain panoptical control 3 The research deploys the term security or homeland security (HLS) as an umbrella to encompass arms, defence, security, and policing technology, and expertise and know-how. The kinds of security ‘solutions’ that the Israeli security industry promotes (abroad) include material technologies, such as weapons and surveillance equipment and a wide range of security practices and policies for population and spatial control. However, the strategies used to mobilise these security ‘solutions’ do not follow any clear divide between technologies and policies. Many Israeli firms are involved in the promotion of both, often in combination with one another. When discussing Israel’s modes of security or its model of security, the analysis does not focus on any distinction between policy and technology. However this is not to equate or conflate them. 4 This term signifies both the symbolic and material shift in security innovation and technological production in Israel. The phrase and the title of this thesis is inspired by a remark made by Netanyahu just before his re-election in 1997 explaining the positive effect of the military industry on the broader civilian economy in Israel (Netanyahu 1997). 5 I refer here to the territorial space of British Mandate Palestine between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean. For the purposes of clarity, when I use the word Palestine, I refer to the occupied Palestinian territory (OPT), and when I refer to all of Historic Palestine, I use the term British Mandate Palestine. When I use the term Israel-Palestine, I refer to the contemporary space of all of Israel-Palestine (Israel proper and the OPT). 12 over the entire space and the people of Israel-Palestine. However, while Israel’s modes of control have often taken on an offensive role, the actors of the industry subsume and reverse war and policing schemes to those of the broader rhetoric of security. This has provided Israel with the role as an actor or the ‘garantor’ of maximum securitisation. In a settler colonial condition where national movement is building a state through settlement, territorial expansion and extraction of resources as expressed by Israel, we are dealing with a permanent war economy. This is driven by a shared narrative of both might, existential threats, impulses of expansion, and the desire for ethnic separation. Indeed, it is no coincidence that Israel has become a world-leading producer and exporter of arms, and defence and security technology and techniques. In both mainstream and official Israeli government discourse, the country’s security machine has reasoned and marketed itself as a shield against barbarism, terrorism, and other menaces. Its self-portrayal as a country that has succeeded in spite of surrounding enemies is core to the security industry’s ethos of attaining battlefield experience and surviving against all odds. Israel’s international impact as a model of a hyper-militarised high-tech s ociety has been developed on a founding structure of a racially based colonial settler state. Consequently, it has been integrated into the family of nations as a modern western regime. Its combined offer of savage struggle and technological advancement stretches beyond the borders of its frontiers in the Levant has taken on global ramifications. Despite the country’s roots in violence, repression, and political injustice, its systems of security technologies are widely celebrated and sold as a ‘public good’. Arguably, the ongoing Palestinian resistance, armed and unarmed struggle, and the place of the colonisers in global hierarchies of power give Israel a prominent position in the global security economy. Indeed, as a global provider of security, Israel offers a paradigm of modernity and stability on the frontline. This paradigm has materialised into a portfolio of technological devices and operative systems that are well described, and made available and accessible to governments, police forces, militaries, and private contractors. In this way Israel’s security practices themselves constitute a blurry line between suppression, racialised governance, and security. The project This research tells the story of how security and technology shape social life, and in turn how the social – the national – is shaped by the production and use of security technology. The analysis unfolds how the Israeli-Zionist state and nation building project has developed through technological innovation and strategies 13 of planning of new settler communities and by controlling and excluding the Palestinian population. Empirically, the thesis contributes new and original knowledge about the security industry’s structural conditions and its inner dynamics, logics, and complexity, including the way in which the industry operates and promotes Israel as the ‘go-to’ nation for defence and homeland security. The study provides a deeper understanding of how the modern creation of order takes place. It illuminates how social, international and racial order, and the order of accumulation are formed through both the micro- and macro-politics of nationalism, war, and policing mediated by technology, technical codes, and colonial aspirations. The project describes how both security narratives and technologies are created through nationalist efforts to unify and settle a population. It does so in order to investigate how a nation state has developed technology to realise its goals of settling and developing a territory that is already inhabited by another national group. Moreover, the thesis engages in a deeper examination of how security practices and innovation work in tandem to realise the Zionist ambition to gather and integrate global Jewry into a territory and state. By investigating the logics of control and their physical manifestations, this thesis unfolds the trajectory of the story of why and how Israel has advanced to become a ‘one-stop-shop’ for security and defence technology, and the ways in which this affects the way governments and private forces think and practice security. Its research unfolds both the constructive and destructive sides of this endeavour, including the effects of the project and its security practices on the Palestinian population scattered across the terrain and the way in which security (technologies) have ordered and designed life for the Jewish population. Consequently, the project unfolds Israeli security as a way of realising Zionism as a state-sponsored ethnic nationalism based on racial imaginations. This is done by exploring how a co-thinking and co-imbrication of ideational and material factors creates certain notions and practices of security, and how it deconstructs the very meaning of security as it is deployed, and practices vis-à-vis the Palestinians. The purpose of telling this story is to understand the ingredients that go into the creation of an ecosystem of security, and how such a system works in the context of settler colonialism. The question of producing both security and insecurity requires a debate about the embedding of the production of objects and practices of security based on theoretical deliberations on the relationship between technological nationalism and settler colonialism. The empirical crust of the project allows the research to identify and examine both the broader lines of development and the messiness of daily life on the ground. 14 The research questions The overall research question of this thesis is: How have Israeli security technology, practices and production developed over time as part of the Zionist project of nation and state building? The underlying questions that define the scope of this thesis centre on how security is produced as a dynamic yet complex and far from linear encounter between securitised nationalism and military-industrial relations. This thesis not only asks what technology is, it asks how technology is made, and the more political question, how it is used? The answers to these questions rest on the more fundamental, academic question: how can technology be studied? To unfold and operationalise this broad and abstract puzzle, the thesis suggests three sub research questions. These will not be examined chronologically but rather through the identification and unfolding of themes to answer the overall research question. The first question relates to the nature of Israel’s technologies, and their capacities and effects. It asks what are the particular conditions for Israel’? It asks how Israeli technologies of control, pacification, and security have been developed both as part of and through the settler colonial practices of the Zionist national movement and Israeli state. It relates this to specific innovation processes linked to institutions of science and military organs. In turn, this question is extended to more empirically founded questions of how the production of security has materialised into particular, often racialised ways of settling and clearing land, and into modes of population control in cities, at the border, and increasingly in cyber-space. In other words, how is security expressed in a variety of platforms that are interconnected and yet retain their own characteristics and capacities? The second research question centres on how the Zionist quest for a Jewish state has materialised. This is done by examining the claim that this materialization has happened through a state-led process of innovation and industrial development with the production of security technologies as a core engine. In other words, I pursue to provide refined answers to how the production of security has assisted the establishment of a national system of innovation. And how in turn this has been intertwined with the state’s policies and strategies for settlement and the differentiated control of people groups within that territory. The third question addresses the more global dimension of the puzzle. It does so by asking: on a global scale, how are Israel’s security narratives and practices exported and translated into more universal experiments and routines of security, 15 war, and policing? And, through which practical and discursive mechanisms does the security industry extend its markets well beyond the cartography of Israel- Palestine? How are dominant security narratives and practices exported and translated into more universal experiments and routines of security, war, and policing in other sites and locations? The argument(s) The core argument of this research is that security technologies are part of and the result of intense processes of national engineering and innovation inscribed deeply into the efforts and contradictions of realising a nation into a state. First, the Israeli security industry has been a significant contributor to Zionist mobilisation for nationhood and an engine in the Israeli state’s management and control of both settler and colonised peoples. This means that in the formation of the Zionist project, order has been fabricated and installed through wide-ranging securitisation and through war and control of people and landscapes. These processes have formed and shaped Israeli security thinking and modes of security production. It is the congregate of a highly militarised political economy, a refined settler colonial rule and intense processes of scientific innovation that gives the Israeli security sector its potency. The role of military-industrial relations and the alliance of these two sectors with state power(s) that is critical to the formation of security. Second, Palestine has become a site for experimentation where tests are carried out intentionally. Technological refinement is achieved through testing that becomes a vector of improvements. Following this, the Israeli defence and security industry is deeply embedded in the political project of settler colonialism; the industry hinges on a correlation between innovating around specific techniques of security, control, and management of populations and territory and the broader aim of achieving economic growth on the state and well as on private/individual levels. This argument rests on the analytical assumption that Israel’s visions of security and its attendant (in)security has been produced and constructed as part of the Zionist project. These goals include escaping past atrocities, seeking national unity, and mobilisation for the settler colonial project. In fact, the dual reality of the security industry and the reality experienced by the colonised make for a resourceful analytical scheme. Third, ‘the Israeli experience’ is exported and emulated through exports of security commodities, technological dissemination, and capital entrenchment. The ‘experience’ reaches those interested in waging war and governing through security the ‘Israeli way’ by transferring people and separating them under a logic 16 that is informed by the ordering principles of different human worth, the politics of differentiation, and class/segregationist policies. Thus, Israel’s success in the market of homeland security, arms, and defence systems can be attributed to the Israeli experience of transforming globalised Jewish insecurity into a state-based condition of security. Because Israel was conceived of, established, and sustained through domination of the Palestinians and newly conquered territory, it is effectively a model of a suppressive regime and its spaces of dominations as conceptual showrooms for others to visit, learn from, and replicate. In the larger sense, we should take this (post)colonial condition seriously in security studies and more broadly in studies of political economies of war and suppression in various locales and contexts. This relies on the argument posed here that new forms of security technology can be traced back to a concrete platform of struggles and political injustice. Thus, there is a clear link between the kind of security and war practiced in colonies across the globe, in conflict zones (of the Middle East), and in cosmopolitan metropoles. Thus, while of a national-local nature, Israeli security practices have developed a set of export dynamics that reflects globalising patterns and technologies of racialisation and power organised around changing ethic, ethnic, national, and class-based fault lines. This leads to the concluding argument that Israeli security actors seek to tap into the needs of those forces struggling to sustain the neoliberal order. The thesis argues for an approach that takes both the role of material artefacts – the role of ‘things’ – and the dynamics of capital seriously, while not neglecting the dimension of mental and discursive theatres of war. This involves the promotion of a research agenda that argues that security technologies are neither an empty receptacle of discourse, nor do they have essential characteristics. Rather, technologies emerge out of material-discursive practices. Contributions It has become increasingly difficult to ignore the impact that security policies and practices have on our daily lives and our political decisions. Thus there is ample need for work that investigates empirically how security is developed as an idea and a material object, as a sociotechnical system to create order and hierarchies, and in turn, as a source of income Overall the thesis supplements existing literature on Israel’s security practices and settler colonial warfare by including two new perspectives 1) milieu insight into the inner logics and dynamics of a national security industry 2) it provides a fragment of Jewish and Palestinian history performed as a genealogy of industrial and military technological development. More over the thesis challenges existing 17 literatures by providing a synthesis of Palestinian and Jewish (Israeli) (in)security in one analysis, and by examining the social reality of the actors of industry and lastly by accentuating the role of the material, of the security artefacts as a force of politics. This thesis addresses a gap in the literature on security, technology and nationalism by providing a study of the making and the use of security as it has developed through the Zionist national project throughout the terrain of Israel-Palestine. The study contributes a colonial genealogy of modernity that can enrich both the field of critical security studies, Israel-Palestine studies, and broader debates on techno-nationalism. It contributes to a growing academic body of critical security studies that goes beyond both the analysis of discourse and material characteristics and the understanding of technology as a neutral factor (Amoore and De Goede 2008; Bellanova and Duez 2012; Guittet and Jeandesboz 2009; Huysmans 2006; Salter 2005). While relating the research to this agenda, it also seeks to take another direction by linking the question of nation and state building to processes of innovation and the development and deployment of security technology. The thesis is not only about the forces involved in a bitter, protracted inter- ethnic conflict; nor is it only about the social embedding of technology. It is about the birth, production, and dissemination of tools with which to conduct modern power and about the ways in which science, technology, power, and national ideas and forces converge. In this way, the thesis provides an innovative model of how to study the making of security as a social artefact, i.e. as a mechanism that goes well beyond Israel-Palestine and speaks to other national and settler colonial contexts. The research provides a unique insights into a world rarely explored from the inside. The interviews and observations from inside the industry contribute to the study of narratives of security and shift the focus from looking at the victims or targets of security to include the producers of security and the logics of the oppressor. The research also contributes to the promotion of a research agenda that is concerned with the ways in which the construction and visions of ethnic nationhood are tightly linked to the ways in which security is practiced. Through an innovative critique and rethinking of existing research, the thesis provides a critical account of the separation between the study of military-industrial relations and more theoretically informed studies on nationalism and settler colonialism. This provides a substantial contribution not only to the academic field of Israel-Palestine studies, but to the multidisciplinary debate on the interplay of nationalism and technology in the formation of control and security practices. 18 The case of Israel Technologies do not merely assist and control everyday lives, they are also power ful forces that reshape human activities and their meaning. This holds true in particular in a settler colonial context like Israel-Palestine, where a high-tech nation merges with a securitised and highly militarised racial state. Seen from this perspective, the Israeli case makes for a particular interesting study. Even before the inception of the state, Israel’s variety of settler colonialism – Zionism – has made the entire space of Israel-Palestine into a security domain that entrenches the political economy of the Zionist national project. In turn, this has been fortified by Israel’s permanent military economy and steadily advancing systems of domination over the Palestinian people, the territory of Israel, and the occupied Palestinian territory (OPT). The case of Zionism and Israel-Palestine is conducive to this sort of analysis because we are dealing with a highly securitised state, a huge military force, and a nation-still-in-the-making with undefined territorial borders. The nature of the Israeli state, i.e. the unfinished character of its state building project, constitutes a fertile ground for understanding how security and innovation are conducted and produced as part of the evolution of the nationalist project and the expansion and consolidation of the state structure. Indeed, this intersection of war, security, and industry has in Israel, as in many other places and spaces, been a cornerstone in nation building and the creation of wealth. While Israel is perhaps unique or special at this point in time, Israel is not unique in history. We need to refrain from thinking of Zionism, let alone J udaism, as exceptional. All national (colonial) projects wish to tell a particular story and promote a particular narrative. Rather than promoting the idea of Israel as a unique case, this analysis suggests that Israel represents a hyper-version of a securitised national project. While this study views Zionism as a nationalist movement and a vector of settler colonialism, it rejects any argument that promotes an essential unique quality that separates Jewish nationalism from other nationalisms. However, it does accept Zionism as an instance of nationalism that follows a particular path of national interventions and realisations ordered through an organising ‘grammar of race’ (Denes 2011a: 32; see also Wolfe 2006: 387–388). In other words, Israel has features and attributes that can be found in other state and non-state systems of dominance where technology and discrimination play a central role. As the empirical chapters examine, Israel carries a range of attributes attesting to its ideological basis, its resources, and its human and geographical history. This provides it with particular, intense, and perhaps unique features of racialised control. In order to analyse the relations or dynamics of settler colonial nationalism and military-industrial relations, this thesis examines the multiple functions of security and industrial advancement in the moulding of the national and settler 19 colonial project of Zionism. It focuses on the ecosystem from the development and roots of the systems of control to its materialisation as a fertile industry to the marketisation of the conflict as it leads to a commoditisation of security. In the wider perspective, the analysis unfolds an instance of the birth, production, and spread of tools with which to conduct modern (state) power. By seeing security as a narrative, a strategy, and an economy central to the process of making a nation – Israel – and the unmaking of another – Palestine – the analysis engages with the universal question of how representations of national, political, and ethnic identities connect and intertwine with security practices and processes of innovation. Sources In order to unify this plethora of forces and sources, the analysis here conducts an active deconstruction of state and industry narratives of security, their practices, and the imaginative geographies of control they invoke. It draws from numerous empirical sources, and builds on interviews with representatives from various parts of the security industry: private companies, state agencies, and academia. It also employs observational data gathered at arms, defence, and security fairs in Israel or with Israeli representation that were collected during 2012–2013, and secondary sources of data, e.g. information gathered from security company material and state agencies’ export and public relations units. Combining industry narratives with critical perspectives on Israel’s settler colonial practices provides a particularly fruitful opportunity to weigh industry logic against settler colonial realities. This empirical evidence helps us understand the forces of power from within, as well as the highly volatile encounter between ‘insider’ and practitioner narratives, experiences, and strategies of self-legitimisation, and the crude nature of the settler colonial practices as described in critical literature and experienced by those subject to dominance and control. Taken together, these ambitions are realised in a fertile mix of conceptual and empirical analyses. Organisation of material and structure of research The chapters of the thesis provide qualified answers to the overall research questions. The text works along three axes of organisation: theme-based, disciplinary, and chronological. In its empirical sections, the thesis works on a continuum between the chronological and the thematic. The chapters lend historical and social contextualisation to each of the themes with which they engage and introduce new theoretical perspectives on an ad hoc basis to refine the analysis. In the empirical part of the thesis unfolds a variety of themes, sites, and histories that help map out the roots, logics, and effects of Israel’s settler colonial practices and the role of the security industry therein. 20 The chapters of the thesis are structured accordingly: Chapter One reviews existing research and literature as well as current research trends and discusses methods and concepts developed in the thesis. It discusses the thesis’ methods, research practices, and ethics and reflects on the researcher’s (my) own role as an interpreter of a specific fragment of ‘reality’. It also addresses the function of the research as politically informed work. Chapter Two unfolds the theoretical framework and argument of the thesis. It presents a framework for bringing nationalism and colonialism into the field of innovation studies and studies of military industrial relations. It also establishes an analytical association between territorial rule, knowledge production, state practice, and the broader nationalist effort to achieve ethnic closure, forces that are conjoined in the national quest for ethnic unity and the pursuit of state-society congruence. Chapter Three is the first of two background chapters. It unfolds a range of conceptual and historical explanations of why the Zionist mobilisation for nationhood is a variation of settler colonialism. It introduces the sub-dynamics of settler colonialism in order to increase our understanding of the inherent logics and structures of power in Zionism. The chapter also proposes ways to understand Zionism as an ideological force, a historical structure, and a racialised practice. The chapter provides a framework for analysing the battlespace as a bio-political zone of calculative strategies entrenched by differentiating ideas, practices of subjection and improvement, and a path-dependent notion of homeland security. In Chapter Four, the analysis unfolds a socio-economic history of the security industry. It presents a short empirical baseline of the industry with emphasis on the link between military and industry, and explores the roots and emergence of the security industry and an array of shifts and critical junctures in Israel’s political economy of defence and security. The chapter moves in a chronological fashion and includes both the internal and external dynamics of the industry as well as public and private alliances in the production of new technologies. Chapter Five examines conceptually and empirically how scientific visions of nationhood have materialised into a comprehensive science-based economy. It asks how the alliance of science and settler colonialism has enabled the formation of a successful Israeli security industry through the development and nurturing of a state-based axiom of war and science. This includes the role of academic/research institutions, the notion of Palestine as a laboratory for the security industry, and the role of academic-military-industrial science parks in ensuring the industry synthesis and prosperity. Chapter Six examines how the steady technification and digitalisation of Israel’s practices in the occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) have affected both 21 I srael’s ruling practices and boosted the security industry’s cyber, digital, and software-based sectors. It also discusses the impact of trends of risk management, predictive software, algorithmic control, and biometrical systems and how these both draw from Israel’s long terms experiences in the OPT and attest to new ways of mapping and controlling populations. This is further related to a broader trend of commercialisation of military and settler colonial logics. Chapter Seven challenges the celebratory accounts of the smart city, a new term or phenomenon used to label highly technologised modes of urban planning and control. It describes how the Israeli version of this concept represents a culmination of Israeli urbanisation and the de-modernisation of Palestine, consisting of the combination of the desire to both facilitate improvement of urban life for some while excluding others through surveillance and control. The chapter addresses smart wars at the frontiers of the OPT and systems of urban control and policing inside Israel. Following a similar structure, Chapter Eight and Nine perform as an intertwined account of Israel’s border making and expertise in border control. Chapter Eight draws from Zionism’s historically and ideologically generated multilevel dynamics of border making, which ranges from the construction of human borders to the demarcation of territorial borders. Chapter Nine traces how these visions and ideas have been formatted into an industry of border control that includes modes of separation, event detection, and control of passage. The thesis concludes in Chapter Ten by reflecting on the content and consequences of analysing the links between national innovation, Zionism, security, and capital accumulation. It proposes that Israel’s capacities and visions fit into broader trends of thinking about and practicing control in the context of much wider processes of technological nationalism, neoliberalisation, and the racialisation of security. 22 23 24 CHAPTER ONE LITERATURE REVIEW, CURRENT RESEARCH TRENDS AND METHODS 1.0 Introduction The research represented here is inspired by and relies on various fields of research and disciplines. It situates itself in a growing body of critical work on Global Palestine that assesses the global implications of Israel-Palestine and the embedding of this conflict in larger geopolitical power structures. At the same time, the thesis seeks to address more fundamental questions of the link between science, technology, and nationalism in the production of (in)security6 and systems of dominance. Consequently, in order to situate the thesis in relation to relevant literature, it is vital to visit a number of sub-disciplines and themes that bridge different literatures and integrate methodological insights from related research areas in order to articulate gaps in knowledge and highlight the shortcomings and merits of previous methods. What is of particular interest in relation to the existing literature is to conceptually and empirically examine the bridge that connects nationalism (Jewish nationalism in particular) with technology and security. The ambition of the thesis is to provide the field of critical security studies with a historical and empirical backbone that can help clarify and nuance the social process of materialising security. In relation to the multifaceted field of critical Israel-Palestine studies, it is the ambition of the thesis to unfold a less exposed political reality of security production, not as a counter narrative to existing literatures examining the effects of settler colonialism, war and occupation from a variety of angles but as a complimentary unique view into the dark side of planning and production. This newness lies in the ambition to combine the examination of industrial and military structures with an analysis of the discursive ontologies of security involved. Moreover along more theoretical avenues the thesis contributes to both the field of technological nationalism, the field of critical security studies and militarism both through the research’ interconnection of these disciplines and scholarly fields and by inserting the theoretical debates into a thoroughly examined empirical perspective. The following review of existing and relevant literature is theme-based; it is divided into sections representing the categories or subjects of the topics of the research. I present a range of relevant academic work and from this derive the core 6 Inspired by Hyusman’s analysis of the ‘politics of insecurity’ (Huysman 2006). 25 tenets of the analytical rationale of the thesis. First, I seek to situate the research in relation to the broader literature and historiography of Zionism and in the broader strands and trends of colonialism. The review then unfolds a growing and multidimensional body of literature. It engages with the global dimensions and implications of Israel-Palestine that range from ideas on violence to political economy, which is subsequently related to broader scholarly trends in the field of surveillance studies and critical security studies, the field of (Israeli) militarism, and work on the Israeli tech-economy. Throughout the review I relate this to the present research. 1.1 The broader scope of Zionism and colonialism The present research speaks to a rich and complex body of work on Zionism, colonialism, and colonial warfare. What is key in relation to this research is both to situate the thesis approach to Zionism in relation to existing academic debates but also to demonstrate the ample need for research that investigates the interplay between actors, artefacts and territory and capital in sustaining and refining these structures. Zionism has been analysed in the academic literature as both an ideology and a set of social, political, and economic practices. A recurring question in the critical literature on the nature and genesis of Zionism has been categorised as either particular (ideologically and historically exceptional) or universal (Israel and Palestine as a node in nationalism, imperialism, colonialism, and capitalism). The world famous scholar Edward Said has highlighted the idea that Israel does not belong to the world of ‘normal politics’. While he stresses predominantly American debates on Zionism (Said 1985: 38–39), more pro-Zionist academics have committed themselves to the idea of Jewish apartness, which Denes notes has contributed to a sense of mystification (Denes 2011a: 12). However, as Anthony Smith’s theories of nations and nationalisms prescribe, national claims often derive their ideals from continuities of thoughts and practices (Smith 1995), which places Zionism as one among many nationalisms that have been cultivated to promote nation making and nurture state power. In this sense, this study approaches Zionism as an ‘extreme case of the normal’. In inter-Israeli debates, Zionism has been approached both from the perspective of nationalism, nationhood, identity politics, and colonialism. While academic research on Zionism cannot be reduced to an intra-Israeli scholarly debate, Uri Ram’s cataloguing of scholarly engagement with Israeli nationalism presents a typology, or a division between distinct Israeli schools categorising and coming to terms with Zionism as a concept and an evolving historical experience (Ram 2011). 26 As a member of the first studies of Zionism camp, Ram lists the Sociological School of Elite Studies based at Tel Aviv University and concentrated around the work of Shapiro (1991). This scholarship builds on works of American sociologists such as Wright Mills’s power elite (also inspiring more Marxist/historical-material approaches) (Wright Mills 1956). By extension, and as Ram argues, the perhaps more explicit, second camp, the Marxist School coming out of Haifa University, emphasises different class aspects of Israeli society and is also categorised as one of many approaches to the study of Israeli nationalism. Inquiries into Israeli nationalism, however, are often disconnected from the question of the Palestinians and issues relating to territorial division. They are instead concerned with the failures or structural flaws of labour Zionism and inter-ethnic division. The third camp is represented by the so-called Jerusalem School, which focuses on the question of cultural identity and inter-relations between Jewish subgroups in Israel (Ram 2011; Meyers 2009). The final school in Ram’s typology is the Colonisation School, which combines the historical and ideological specificities of the Zionist nation and state making with broader ideas on colonialism and violence. Over the course of the last 20 years, this colonisation perspective on the genesis and effects of Zionism has often – in the Israeli context – been represented by the so-called New Historians or Revisionists. Beginning in the late 1980s, Israeli social sciences went through a process of transformation that opened up the discipline to new perspectives on Israeli society. The colonial perspective of the New Historians questioned whether the Palestinians had fled (as the master narrative claimed), or whether they had been purposely transferred and expelled by Israeli forces (Flapan 1988; Morris 1987; Shlaim 1988). In this endeavour, new knowledge has emerged from the historical archives that has dramatically changed Israeli historiography while bringing forth its own, new challenges (Selby 2005). More generally, the colonisation perspective is the most critical contributor to the founding myths of Israeli society (Sternhell 1998) and to the litany of injustices committed by Israel against the Palestinians in order to secure Jewish statehood (Khalidi 1961, 1992; Morris 1987; Pappé 2006). Early on, key Palestinian scholars and historians, such as Khalidi (1961), had already documented the events of the Nakba (Arabic for catastrophe) from the 1950–1960’s. Zionism has been examined and debated intensively vis-à-vis theories and comparative cases of colonialism: French Marxist historian Maxime Rodinson’s seminal work (1973) has historicised and conceptualised Zionism as both a nationalist and a settler colonial movement. Indeed, throughout modern history colonialism has exhibited different forms and 27 structures in various locales and territory such as New Zealand, Palestine, Algeria, Australia, South Africa, and the Americas. This has invited a comparative view of the Israeli collectivity with respect to other immigrant settler societies and colonial projects (Wolfe 2006, 2012) and to more fundamental theoretical deliberations. Marx largely conceived colonialism as part of the general conditions for the expanded reproduction of commercial and manufactured capitalism towards the formation of industrial capitalism. In Marxist accounts, Zionism has often been critiqued and analysed as an extension of western (British and later American) imperialist interests in Palestine (Cohen, 2011; Golan 2001). Anti-imperialistic critiques of Zionism largely address the investment of foreign interests in the national project but do not capture the nature and effect of the actual process of colonisation (Kayyali 1977; Said 1978). This means that some Marxist critiques tend to view Israel as an extension of imperialistic (western) interests in the Middle East. Martinique-born Frenchman Franz Fanon offered a different perspective by dealing with colonialism as mutually constitutive violence (Fanon (1968, 2008). In his view, politics is domination that merges with violence. Based on his own experiences of French colonialism in Martinique and Algeria, Fanon sees colonialism as a single formation and stresses the relational and mutually constitutive aspects of political violence where violence is inherent in political structures of power. In Fanon’s work, the settler is a key initiator of violence, where, ‘the settler makes history and is conscious of making it’ (Fanon 1968). Foucault’s work can also be related to colonialist tropes through the conceptualisation of colonialism as a sort of racialised governmentality. In this conception, we must take note of the relationship between knowledge and power as a way for the sovereign to practice and reproduce power (Foucault 2009). By extension, and drawing from Foucauldian readings of representation, Edward Said’s thesis on Orientalism revived the cultural critique of the colonial, and expanded on the ways in which discursive portrayal of the inferior (dominated or colonised) ‘other’ helps to sustain strategies of exploitation (Said 1978). Thus, while Marxist scholars stress the issue of exploitation and Fanon-inspired scholars focus on the relational aspects colonisation, Foucauldian approaches are more interested in the form of governance involved in the enterprise. Virilio’s (2006) recent hypermodern analysis of the concept of acceleration as a key motor of appropriation of land, resources, and people’s ability to resist has enriched the settler colonial perspective by tying together the dynamic of violence and spatial expansion. This includes an understanding of colonialism as a contrac- 28 tion of speed and power that is deemed key to realising specific strategies of (dis) possession and territorial appropriation (Virilio 2006). In the research on Israel as a colonial state, several scholars skilfully demonstrate how Zionism has evolved in a relational process against the encounter with the native ‘other’. A key figure in this debate has been Shafir, who argues that Israeli society is best understood in terms of the broader Israeli-Palestinian relationship and the struggles over land and labour (not inward-looking interpretations) (Shafir 1996). This analytical approach, Shafir argues, would benefit from the deployment of models of European colonisation. Another scholar, Eyal (2006), offers an account of Zionism as a hybrid of multifaceted sentiments towards the natives, and Piterberg (2008) successfully analyses Zionism through three hegemonic settler narratives that lead to the conclusion that the relationship with the indigenous population was the single most significant factor shaping Zionist practice. However, while the Israeli revisionist accounts have received much attention, the critical perspective on the conditions and events enabling Israeli statehood has been present across earlier Israeli, Palestinian, and international scholarly work. For example, in the 1970s Uri Davis explained how the specific forms of the destruction of Palestinian society by the Zionist colonial effort should be traced in the context of the consolidation of the pre- and post-1948 formations of the state of Israel (Davis 1977). Likewise, in Beit-Hallahmi’s view, one has to depart from Z ionism’s ‘original sins’ and provide instead ‘an insight into the origins of the Zionist endeavour as an attempted solution to the Jewish problem’ (Beit-Hallahmi 1993a). As a reaction to the revisionist wave, it has been suggested that Israeli scholarly representation of Palestinian dispossession opened up avenues for Israeli representation of the victimised, which despite its self-examination and critical approach claimed to represent the narrative of the oppressed. Masalha, for instance, argues that the mainstream core of Israeli New Historians conceives of Zionism, despite the injustices perpetuated in its realisation, as a national liberation movement of the Jewish people. According to Masalha, a more fundamental understanding of Zionism is required, one that needs to be understood against the backdrop of both broader debates on colonialism and efforts to deconstruct the established myths of Zionism as a national liberation movement. Masalha argues that the emergence of this new segment of Israeli history helped bring to light the deep asymmetrical power relationships between Israel and the Palestinians (Masalha 1992, 2007). The opening up of archives and the proliferation of examinations of the conditions of Israeli state formation in turn facilitated Palestinian scholarship 29 and a growing production of scholarly work on the previously neglected narrative of Palestinian accounts of the Nakba and the nature of the Zionist project vis-à-vis the Palestinians. Thus what is important in relation to this research is the need for a critical security study project to develop analytical capacities to take the above structural considerations of Zionism into account not only as a baseline but as the core mechanisms of domination and subjugation, from which patterns, movement and change must be analysed. 1.2 The political economy of the Israeli security industry In recent years, a raft of research projects focusing on various aspects of Israel’s security and control practices have emerged, including examinations of Israel’s relationship to other colonial, urban, or war-prone sites and a growing interest in the role of private capital in expanding and sustaining these conditions (Azoulay 2009; Graham 2010b; Khalili 2013; Zureik, Lyon, and Abu-Laban 2011). A variety of scholars with different disciplinary backgrounds have critically shown how Israel’s techniques of control developed through the occupation of Palestine. A sample of these scholars’ contributions include the specifics of identity management (Tawil-Souri 2012) to incarceration (Hajjar 2005, 2006; Khalili 2013), and lethal warfare systems (Denes 2011a; Graham 2010b; Weizman 2008). Moreover, Havkin has exposed the outsourcing of security tasks of the Israeli post-Oslo occupation regime to private companies as part of a broader trend of redeploying state power through outsourcing while retaining tight state control (Havkin 2011). Others have provided excellent accounts of the micro-practices of surveillance and classification of people at the border (Handel 2009, 2011; Lyon 2011; Tawil-Souri 2011a, 2012). In addition, a range of core theorisations has been developed to conceptualise the actions and strategies of the Israeli state vis-à-vis Palestine. Among these are Yiftachel’s concept of ethnocracy (2006), Kimmerling’s idea of politicide (2003), Ophir and Azoulay’s analogy of the camp (2005); Hanafi’s spaciocide (2006, 2009), Goldberg (2009) and Abu-Haj (2010) on racial Palestinianisation, and Mbembe on the calculus of Israel’s necropolitical regime (2003). Others have written on the nature and role of Palestinian resistance and counter-surveillance such as Allen’s (2008) work on sumud (Arabic for steadfastness) as an act of resistance and Peteet’s analysis of resistance as ‘ritual performance’ (1994). More generally, while some work includes the entire terrain of Israel-Palestine, other accounts focus on the more limited scope of the post-1967 Israeli occupation. This has created a schism between a 1948 paradigm operating with the 30 social realities and the events taking place at each side of the green line (the 1949 armistice line) as one reality and the 1967 paradigm operating with Israel’s policies in the OPT and Israel proper as separate units of analysis (Shenhav 2012). This research analyses the Zionist project as a colonial project, but precludes teleological explanations of the colonisation/occupation and suspends ready-made grand narratives. In this way, the research opposes a strict post-1967 perspective and argues for a crosscutting research strategy that seeks to dissolve this schism by examining terrains of dominance marked by changing and overlapping ruling strategies. While these concepts establish both a conceptualisation and a political critique of Israeli state policies, they do not address the role of industrial and specific technological forces in realising this array of state policies. In other words, they do not as this research tries to, explain how modes of production are intrinsically linked to and co-developed with Israel’s colonisation/occupation practices. Moreover, despite its growing size, relatively little critical academic work addresses the security sector itself. Indeed, until recently only a few critical examinations of Israel’s engagement in arms production and trade had been published. The most seminal work on the question of Israel’s arms trade is Beit-Hallahmi’s The Israeli Connection, a mapping and analysis Israel’s arms exports to predominantly third world regimes Beit-Hallahmi 1987). The key accomplishment of this study is the identification of a rationale or a strategy behind Israel’s foreign engagement in arms sales and thus a qualification of the argument that Israel – due to an overlap in its own colonial techniques and colonial and repressive realities abroad – exports a logic of control that appeals to the third world repression of anti-colonial and anti-authoritarian movements. Beit-Hallahmi concludes that what Israel exports is the ‘logic of the oppressor… a feeling that the third world can be controlled and dominated, that radical movements in the third world can be stopped, that modern crusaders still have a future’ (Beit-Hallahmi 1987: 248). Importantly the changes in political alliances, global power structures, Israel’s security practices and the very production of security call for a re-examination of Hallahmi’s endeavours. Thanks to a growing body of work and of course the growth of the country’s security sector, Israel’s status as a leader in homeland security (HLS) and counterterrorism has become widely acknowledged (Byman 2011; Gordon 2009; 2011). Of particular importance to the emerging accounts are the roots and effects of Israel’s comparative advantages, i.e. Israel’s alleged capacity to test its products in real-world environments (Graham 2010b; Li 2006; Weizman 2011). In 2007, Naomi Klein stressed the global appeal of Israel’s intense level of security and its 31 global branding as a ‘fortress state’ by describing the Israeli security setup as one ‘usually reserved for airports’ (Klein 2007). In the most empirically detailed study of Israel’s homeland security economy to date, Gordon (2009) situates Israel’s rise as a centre of homeland security, or as the ‘homeland security capital’ through a focus on a range of historical, technological, and symbolic factors that give Israel’s HLS products and services important advantages in a global marketplace. Gordon unfolds the thesis of doctrinal emulation and experience, which supports his argument of Palestine as a security laboratory for the Israeli security industry. In Gordon’s view, the dynamics of the security economy demonstrate the fertility of the link between Israel’s neoliberal economy, its democratic features, and its strong high-tech sector. Concurrently, albeit with a more intense focus on the nature of the techniques of control, Graham, Li, Denes, and Weizman critically examine the security laboratory thesis and link it to Israel’s military thinking and its dissemination of battlefield experience, expertise of control, and warfare to other sites and contexts. These scholars share a focus on issues of doctrinal emulation, i.e. the ideational and conceptual export of practices such as urban war, drone war, and surveillance systems informed by tenets of settler colonial violence. Li (2006) has shown how Israel’s particular ruling-from-afar-strategy in Gaza – as part of its mantra of ‘maximum land, minimum Arabs’ – serves as a particularly fertile laboratory for testing and optimising technologies. Weizman has spoken of the spatial dimension of Israel’s techniques of control in the OPT as ‘laboratories of the extreme’ (Weizman 2007: 9), not as the end point but as a phase in the Zionist project of colonisation. By extension, Weizman has argued that Gaza – a hermetically sealed zone – has worked as a laboratory for the testing of control of new technologies, munitions, legal and humanitarian tools, and warfare techniques according to a threshold philosophy of ‘how much can be done to people in the name of the “war on terror”’ (Weizman 2011: 1). From a different perspective, as part of his larger analysis of Israeli biopolitics and racialising practices, Denes inserts the logics and modes of operation of the Israeli security industry into the broader background of racialised violence and biopolitical organisation inherent to Zionism’s permanent wartime order (Denes 2011a). He does so by asking how the specificities of Israel’s permanent war laboratories are being translated into more universal experiments in violence exercised against increasingly uncertain ‘combatants’ (Denes 2011a: 171). He extends his analysis of Israel’s export of UAVs by demonstrating how Israeli technologies of war help compose a new militarised cartography into a field where western and 32 modern regime forms of security and expansion are deemed legitimate (Denes 2011b: 173). Graham’s work on new geographies of war takes a more intense look at the military logics and practices of Israel’s warfare as part of a global shift in war and the exercise of power. He unfolds the concept of ‘military urbanism’ and explores the broader appeal of Israel’s methods of the urbicide of Palestinian cities. Graham also points to the circles of imitation, partnerships, trade, and bi-partisan rhetoric linking and integrating Israeli policies and discourses into the US-led global War on Terror. According to Graham, this is a process through which Israel is touted as ‘the ultimate security state’ (Graham 2010). This literature speaks to the broader tendency to talk of diffusion of NorthSouth governance (e.g. Bowling and Sheptycki 2012). Here the entanglements that buttress the ‘export-import’ industry of global policing can be described as actual laboratories of security governance. An important body of literature has developed recently that focuses more specifically on arms and security technology production in Israel. As a response to this stream of laboratory analyses, Machold (2015) recently unfolded a critique of existing literatures that challenges uncritical acceptance of Israel’s ‘claim to universality’ and demonstrates the complexity of Israel’s security mobility by adding the perspective of performativity to the debate on the mobility of Israeli HLS. Machold does so to accentuate how technology and policy are re-invented when exported across geographical locales and as a way to define Israeli HLS dominance as a dynamic and still emergent process of ‘becoming’. Consequently, in contrast to industry claims and literature focusing on the ‘Israeli brand’ as drawing on a singular experience or vision, this research approaches the sector as complex and non-teleological movements and alliances of interests among industry, military, and state strategies created by shifts which emerge through vernacular shifts between grander ideas and politics of intent and ad hoc events and routines of daily practices. Naturally, the perspectives presented heavily influence the contexts in which security production and practice are analysed. Historical geopolitical shifts, changing modes of production, technological breakthroughs, and new discursive framings and staging of threats and risks have a huge impact on how security rationales are identified and defined. While Beit-Hallahmi’s analysis took place in the context of cold war geopolitics constructed around a bifurcation of east and west (as oppressive and emancipatory), the more recent literature on Israel’s security capital and global reach is situated in the context of a new (imagined) and all-permeating security geography marked by the global War on Terror. 33 Gregory argues that it was through the consolidation of these imaginative geo graphies linking the Israel/Palestine conflict with the US-led War on Terror that Israeli security know-how has increasingly come to be conceived of as ‘applicable’ beyond Israel/Palestine (Gregory 2004). In this post-9/11 era, the notion of the experience of Palestine has been globalised in new ways and a limited set of more recent case studies on the logics guiding Israel’s relationship with the outside world has been published. For example, Jones’s (2012) account of border and wall construction exposes Israel’s engagement along the Mexico and the India-Kashmir border, while Kilibarda (2008) looks into the Israel-Canada relationship and the growing interdependence of both countries, particularly in the construction of the War on Terror and the role of market-oriented policies in achieving this. A huge amount of academic studies and newspaper and magazine articles have exposed a wide variety of empirical realities mapping Israel’s global engagement. These include Israel’s assistance to policing missions, border construction, military training, and arms sales, post- 9/11 security and surveillance measures, police assistance after terror events such as the Boston marathon bombing in 2013, and in several cases in policing missions of urban riot control and rescue missions after natural disasters and catastrophes. Rather than accepting one political frame in relation to which Israeli security is analysed, it makes sense to expand the analysis and go beyond a phase-based security trend to analyse Israel’s engagement as a flexible force adaptable to a variety of contexts and narratives, such as global anti-riot campaigns, opposition repression, neoliberal urban planning, surveillance and the refortification of racial state governance, the militarisation of policing, and proliferation of security as a broader vector of liberal order making. (Please note, this list is illustrative – there are many more instances of the globalisation of Israel’s security systems and technologies.) Rather than describing the context in which Israel invokes its security, it makes sense to focus on the mechanisms of adaptation rather than essentialising the context. The lack of critical insights into the security milieu and to the inner logics and social realities of the Israeli security sector has led this researcher to further develop the security laboratory thesis by extending it to industrial and ideological formations and developments from the perspective of the industry. 1.3 Global Palestine While scholarly work on the global implications of (Israel) Palestine is not a new phenomenon, studies on Global Palestine specifically have proliferated recently. While this category operates from a variety of perspectives, what the two literatures share is a concern with the question of Palestine’s (and Israel’s) global implica- 34 tions, i.e. how Palestine is impacted by global events, trends, and flows of capital, and how the question of Palestine is ingrained into larger power structures. The contributions insist on redirecting the debate on Palestine away from its historical specificities and supposed uniqueness and inscribe its settler violent colonial structures into global patterns of state and non-state violence. Rather than seeing Zionism as an outcome of imperial relations, these studies locate Israel-Palestine as a nodal point and key learning path in the constant reproduction and reconfiguration of violent structures. Taken together, critical research on Global Palestine promotes a research agenda where the polarisation between the particular and the universal is dissolved or redirected to a more innovative take on historico-political intersections of local and global dynamics, or a dialectic of local and global factors. Another key point under the umbrella of Global Palestine studies is the question of Palestine as a nodal point for circuits of violence and (counter)insurgency strategies. In her work on the location of Palestine in global counter-insurgencies, Khalili develops a model for how techniques of violence travel not just between colonies and metropolises but also between different colonies of the same colonial power (Khalili 2010). She unfolds the notion of horizontal global circuits through which colonial policing and security practices have been transmitted from one location to another. This work demonstrates Palestine’s geostrategic significance in global hierarchies of power and the more general question of the embedding of counter-insurgency techniques in state structures historically and institutionally. Khalili’s view is similar to Collins’s innovative account of a Global Palestine dynamic that is concerned with the techno-logic acceleration of social life and the role of Palestine therein (Collins 2011). This is also similar to Ron’s work comparing Israeli state violence with the Serbian state’s ghetto violence in the 1990s that shows how ‘frontier violence’ in the context of Israel’s occupation became highly explicit (Ron 2003). In Collins’s analysis, Palestine is both a space and a concept of confinement with far-reaching global consequences. His notion of Global Palestine involves a process of ‘dromo-colonisation’, or acceleration, which globalises certain practises while also creating new enclosures in which to confine certain groups of people. In this way, Palestine becomes an object of securitisation and a model of repression that functions as a learning model and an inspirational source for a broader (technological) colonisation of social life that gives speed and acceleration (borrowing from Virilio) a particularly central role. Consequently, how does the thesis contribute to this growing field? It does so by going behind the scenes of the production machine of security, and interrogates the very material structures enabling the development and spread of techniques and technologies - the politics of the artefacts involved in war and domination. 35 The Palestinian experience/racialisation The notion of a Palestinian experience and its global spread is one core theme of the Global Palestine perspective. The experiences of colonisation, occupation, and control have been vividly described in the literature. Khalidi has shown how the quintessential Palestinian condition takes place in all places and spaces where identities are checked and verified (Khalidi 1997: 1). The notion of an experience has been developed further by, for example, Abu el-Haj’s notion of the ‘racial Palestinianzation’ (2010) and Abu Laban’s (2011) notion of the ‘Palestinianization of the racial contract’. Others have spoken of the Palestinianisation of minorities in a variety of locations marked by both formal and informal exclusion mechanisms. Indeed, broader treatment of racialisation has become central analyses of security as a mode of social sorting which in turn rests on this proposed shift from geopolitics to bio politics (Dillon and Reid 2009). As a mix between a Foulcauldian-inspired view of security as a mode of social sorting and an interface of ‘race’ and nationalism (e.g. Balibar and Wallerstein 1991; Gilroy 2000), literature with a special focus on racialisation and racialising practices has proliferated, providing security with an ontological feature of control. Amar (2009) provides an important view of how new forms of authority are shaped by and give shape to racial missions of policing. He examines how the dynamics of industries of security equate high degrees of social difference with dangerous levels of risk. Amar (2009) also argues that new forms of authority deployed by the neoliberal state entail a racialisation of the governance state (in the context of globalisation), while Phillips (2007) shows how city spaces have become zones of surveillance and racialised fear. In support of Amar’s work the racialisation perspective of this research can help dissolve the north-south binary in global security studies. It can also contribute to the promotion of a research agenda that links forms of ethnic reification and racial formation in conflict zones in the Middle East and other security poles to broader globalising patterns of technologies of racialising and ethnicising state power. In the context of Palestine, various scholars have examined Israel’s racialised practices of control. Peteet (2009) has written on the racialisation of space, Jamal (2008) has written on differential treatment as ‘racialized time’ and Abu-Laban and Bakan have shown how surveillance in Israel-Palestine is marked by its racialised context (and asymmetric power relations) (2011). While these studies emphasise the racialising effects on the Palestinians, they are less concerned with the dimension of the Israeli state structure as a ‘racial state’ (Goldberg 2006) and ‘ethnocratic regime’ (Yiftachel 2006). The research seeks to include both perspectives by underlining the racialising effects of Israeli state and military practice and the mobility of these practices. 36 The Global Palestine category also takes on a political economy perspective. In their seminal Marxian account of Israel’s global economy, Nitzan and Bichler warn against conducting studies based on the fallacy that Israel’s integration into the global economy is new. Rather, they argue, Israel was born politically and financially out of imperial interests and through the benefit gained from global capital flows (mainly those coming from the global Jewish diaspora and initially, German war reparations). In their analysis, this globality is a persistent feature of the colonial project and has been attained through Israel’s permanent war economy (Nitzan and Bichler 2002). Marxian political economists argue that the collapse of the old political consensus of Zionism has given way to a new economic consensus on free markets based on the premise that ‘laissez faire’ is good, and state intervention is bad. In Nitzan’s and Bichles’s view, Israel’s integration into the global economy is basically eroding the collectivist ethos of Zionism on behalf of liberalisation and the pursuit of accumulation as an ideology in its own right. Other political economy perspectives stress how Israel’s geopolitics are depending on mainly Israel’s alliances with western European states and the US. For example, Shalev has shown how the immigration of resourceful individuals to the state and capital inflow such as foreign gifts and assets of immigrants have driven the economy’s major episodes of boom and bust (Shalev 1998: 31). Unlike Nitzan and Bichler, Shalev detects and gives importance to what he sees as a tension between Zionist ideology and economic and civil liberalism. Most recently, scholars have approached the development of the Israeli economy from the perspective of the effects of the so-called liberal peace paradigm and its deployment in the context of the Oslo Accords. These scholars analyse Israel’s economy through the prism of ‘peace business’, where so-called peace agreements produce lucrative spin-offs for the economic elites involved (Franks 2009; Bouillon 2004; Hanieh 2008). These are but a few examples, but they serve to highlight the broad scope of research on the global perspective. In very broad terms, the literature on G lobal Palestine has worked as inspirational background for this thesis’ approach to examining the link between national narratives, territorial practices, and global shifts in modes of control. The plethora of global perspectives on Palestine shares the recognition of the role of state power and the commercialisation of security as part of Israel-Palestine’s global impact and the impact of outside factors. The research represented in this thesis inscribes itself into this line of work on Global Palestine but as the same time speaks to a broader body of critical security studies. 37 1.4 Security studies, policing, and liberal war Because the research for this thesis deals with the formation of security practices, the Global Palestine perspective needs to be situated within the field of critical security studies. The last decades the Copenhagen School of critical security studies (e.g. Buzan et al. 1998; Huysman 2011; Wæver 2011) have provided a research agenda that explores the processes and logics of securitisation, including the construction of (in)securities so key to the formation of dominant security practices and discourses. Concurrently, the perspective of commercialisation and fetishising of security has developed as a focal point for political economy and critical security scholars (Neocleous 2008; Bigo 2001, 2014; Salter 2005). In recent years, international relations and security studies scholars have increasingly emphasised the importance of the technological aspects of security practices. These technological aspects include, among others, the use of advanced biometrics, databases, and risk models or, for the purpose of border protection, migration control, identification of individuals, crowd control, and other concerns regarding population management or social control (Andreas 2000; Andreas and Snyder 2000; Amoore and De Goede 2008; Marx 2001; Salter and Zureik 2005). However, few of these studies incorporate larger scripts of state and nation building (let alone settler colonialism) into their analytical scope. Because security innovation has often been initiated as a way to conduct colonisation as a modernising mission, so too has academic research dealt critically with the sources of security innovation, e.g. counterterrorism by British police forces in Northern Ireland (Sinclair 2011) and the American mission of policing in the Philipines (McCoy 2009). These studies demonstrate that colonial territories and imperial encounters were actual ‘laboratories of modernity’ (Stoler and Cooper 1997). Recently, more work has appeared that is critical of seeing policing and war as separate projects. Critical accounts of the notion of asymmetric warfare now see it as a form of invasion where war serves the useful purpose of inscribing military might to a vulnerability and has pushed for the diminution of the distinctions between civilian and military life that are integral to a culture of suspicion and a generalised mood of fear and paranoia (Kundnani 2004). Khalili views asymmetric warfare and insurgency as a form of ‘armed social work’ (Khalili 2013). While Andreas and Nadelmann (2006) examine the internationalisation of crime control and argue for its insertion into the field of international relations, Neocleous argues that the disciplinary boundaries between warfare and policing should be dissolved because they constitute part of the same project of liberal order making (2014). Instead, he promotes a research agenda that suggests we look 38 beyond the institutions of policing and security to the relationship between power and peace. This idea is not new, but has gained more ground in the wake of the War on Terror and the spread of new forms of communications and technologies. The violence of liberal peace (Neocleous 2014: 8) and Dillon’s and Reid’s critique of ‘the liberal way of war’ both set the agenda for rethinking of established distinctions between civil and military. They argue for a Foucauldian approach to security that includes both biopolitics and geopolitics, and suggest a reading of population control as a disciplinary mechanism. Fundamentally, Foucault has grounded a critical perspective of security as a disciplinary mechanism that functions as orders of social control and war as a matrix for techniques of domination. His work on disciplinary power adds surveillance as a core element of disciplinary power. In his work Security, Population, Territory, Foucault addresses how the general economy of power in society is becoming a domain of security and by extension what is involved in the emergence of technologies of security (Foucault 2009) This perspective can add to the research of how Israel’s techniques help establish modes and technologies of ordering in the broader context of liberal governance through which hierarchies are built and order is produced and legitimised. This addition would also address the too narrow conception of war articulated in international relations (IR) as a taken-for-granted category. The question of the link between police power and war power also arises in Foucault’s work, where population is approached as a correlate of power and an object of knowledge (Foucault 1977: 79). By extension, his notions of biopower and disciplinary power lay the groundwork for contemporary surveillance studies, particularly in cases involving new forms of social sorting (Gandy 1993; Lyon 2003), which originates in biopower’s quest for adequate knowledge to manage populations. The practices by which this correlate plays out resonates in the interrelationship of colonial practices and techniques of control. In addition, the Foucauldian approach and its interest in how the territorial becomes the architect of disciplined space have also spurred Edward Said’s critique of the relationship between knowledge production and power/control in the Middle East (Said 1978). The still advancing field of surveillance studies has also begun to penetrate the field of Palestine studies. Recent researchers, such as Weizman, Lyon, Zuriek, and Abu-Laban, stress the colonial and surveillance practices from the perspective of a Foucauldian panopticonism of contemporary surveillance, which includes the notion of self-disciplining inspired by Bentham’s panopticon of the prison. The linking of surveillance and colonial studies calls for an analysis of the prevailing relationship between power and knowledge co-imbricated with new technologies of control. For example, Lyon integrates surveillance (2011) with Israel’s internal colonisation of Palestinians and shows how the Zionist project has gradually evolved to differentiate it from other forms of classical colonialism. Handel (2011) 39 unfolds the notion of exclusionary surveillance and the production of insecurity in the context of Israel-Palestine. Security production hinges on the notion of science as a societal issue and a force operating in alliance with those in power. The relationship between technology, imperialism, and nationalism has often been used to promote a logic of progressiveness linked to national aspirations. From the ‘age of empire’ (Hobsbawm 1983) to our ‘colonial present’ (Gregory 2004), studies demonstrate that past colonial techniques are often reaffirmed and reactivated in the present. In addition, proponents of the Copenhagen School of critical security studies have called for a sociological approach to study the links between science and securitisation. For example, they point to the interface between science and securitisation and categorising scientific facts as units that can be mobilised in securitisation claims (Villumsen Berling 2011). Rather than focusing on the process of securitisation as a speech act as a form of communicative action, what is of concern to current researchers is an accentuation of the innovation process, i.e. the way in which security is envisioned, produced, and deployed as both a political and technical artefact. A range of work highlights Israel’s path of rapid development in order to explain the country’s sophisticated tech-economy. Most recently, Israeli entrepreneurs and businessmen (Senor and Singer 2011), in their non-academic, celebratory accounts of Israeli innovation and high-tech production, spread the message of the ‘miracle story of Israel’s economic successes’ to a global audience of business entrepreneurs and help promote Israeli innovation as a positive side effect of Israel’s particular story, huge military sector, and rapid modernisation. While the celebratory accounts provide key facts and background and reflect a crucial branding trend that can optimise exports, they are fundamentally political documents. One of the more serious academic accounts of the roots of the success of Israel’s growth, authored by Gambardella and Arora (2006), highlights the link between rapid growth and high-tech and compares Israel’s rapid growth to the rise of the economies of Brazil, Israel, China, Ireland, and India. In the same vein, Breznitz, in his widely quoted work that compares Israel and Taiwan, deploys Gershenkrohn’s modernisation theory of economic backwardness (1962) to explain Israel’s rapid growth and modernisation, i.e. why late developing countries develop more rapidly (Breznitz 2007). More fundamentally, the question of the connection between the tech sector’s rapid growth and the Israeli military has also been addressed in Breznitz’s analysis of the role of the Israeli software innovation systems. This work demonstrates how the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) works as a collaborative ‘public space’ created by the military that facilitates the sharing of ideas and 40 collective learning oriented towards the invention and improvement of security products and services. This use of the IDF corresponds to both Gordon’s (2009) analysis of the security industry as a collaborative space, Porter’s concept of (hightech) clusters (2000), and Breschi’s and Malerba’s work on mobility and transmission of new knowledge between actors that is eased by cultural and geographical proximity (Breschi and Malerba 2005). These works add a spatial dimension to existing theories that emphasise the importance of social networking and the role of both formal and informal institutions. Taken together, much of the research on Israeli innovation systems speaks to a broader engagement with what Freeman has called national or regional innovation systems (Freeman 1987; Lundvall 1992) as a domain of economy following the cases of Germany, USSR, and Japan. Concurrently, in a raft of more sociological work, a range of scholars has pointed to a set of unique relationships between the Israeli armed forces and the local high-tech industry as explanatory background for the Israeli high-tech boom of the 1990s. Examples of this work include the notion of social capital in the linkages between high-tech companies and military defence systems (Honig, Lerner and Raban 2006). In addition, management and innovation studies often analyse Israel as a special or extreme case of state building among other state development projects. However, this work fails to address the deeper origins and structure of the state’s political economy and the colonial reality of Israel’s military engagement and takes little critical account of the ideology behind the ventures and the steady growth of the neo-liberal economy. Other work stresses the relationship between military dispositions and the broader economy. Reppy’s analysis of defence visions notes how older symbols of military hegemony have become less relevant to security systems that have become rooted in the civilian rather than the military economy (Reppy 2000: 5). In the same vein, Dvir and Tischler examine the changing role of the defence industry in Israel’s industrial and technological development to demonstrate how Israel has been successful in transforming the country’s civilian industry and military sectors into a successful high-tech sector (Dvir and Tishler 2000). Such an analysis requires looking at the effect of the defence industry on the economy through a set of dependent variables such as technological development and defence needs of the country. Such considerations reach into the broader debate and literature on (Israeli) militarism and military-industrial relations. 41 1.5 Militarism and the military-industrial complex In recent years, militarism has generated renewed interest in international relations (IR) scholarship. However, few accounts investigate the corporate aspects of security and the ways in which the actual security production cycle connects to broader questions of state power and ideology. Studies of Israeli militarism as a societal phenomenon and as a military-industrial complex have been conducted largely by Israeli scholars and have tended to focus more on elites, the institutional level, and the boundaries between civil and military rather than on industrial-military relations, let alone commercialisation. In the context of the debate on militarism the thesis seeks to break the boundaries of the study of civil-military relations and instead develop the network thesis of how security practices, production and actors co-constitute and negotiate a given system of domination. In this way the research alludes to the spree of critical militarism scholars who approach the Israeli military-industrial complex as an interlinked network. Academic work in Israel on militarism has developed through a series of waves of trends and traditions. The first wave focused on national security decisions dominated by a functional-structural approach, which assumes a separation between military and civil society (Janowitz 1964; Luckham 1971). The second wave challenged this assumption by examining the broader effects of civil-military relationships (Lissak 1984). The third wave focused on how the IDF affects society in the broadest sense (Ben-Eliezer 1998). For example, Lomsky and Ben-Ari investigate the place of the military in the relationship between state and civil society and on war as an integral dynamic of society. While Yuval-Davis (1985) and Kimmerling (2001) successfully link militarism and military service to patterns of gender, power, and inequality, others have traced the evolution from ‘obligatory militarism’ to ‘contractual militarism’ (Levy, Lomsky-Feder and Harel 2007). In the same vein, Cohen examines the IDF’s path of development from a ‘people’s’ army’ to a ‘professional military’ (Cohen 2008), while Levy’s ‘materialistic militarism’ focuses on the social rewards of military engagement (2007). Other scholarship has dealt more specifically with the elite level of the military, in the context of the relationship between political and military institutions (Maoz 2006; Peri 2005). More recently, Ben-Eliezer (1998) discusses the ‘special’ Israeli military mentality, and argues for a sociological approach that focuses on subjective interpretations offered by representatives of the military. Perlmutter (1968) stresses the importance of social organisation, politics, and culture in order to create a more comprehensive understanding of war (Perlmutter 1968). In a similar manner, Kimmerling writes about war as a distinct social phenomenon in Israel, a view that reaches beyond the confines of the more conventional institutional approach and views war as integral to Israeli society. He does so by addressing two ‘deep 42 cultural codes’ – militarism and Jewishness – (Kimmerling 2001) and highlights the persistence of the state as a key player in the relationship between the cultural sphere and the might and myth of the military. As a refinement of critical military studies, a (social) network approach to studying military elites has also come to the fore. Whereas earlier accounts of Israeli militarism stressed Israel as a ‘nation in arms’ (Ben-Eliezer 1995), social network scholars suggest that thinking of militarism in terms of policy networks better highlights informal dynamics, i.e. the existence of a highly variegated and changing security network whose members are involved in all aspects of public life in Israel. This social network approach includes a range of Marxist critiques of the military industrial complex in the 1950s as part of a broader literature on permanent war economies (Melman 1974; Cliff 1957; Milward 1979). (For works on Israel’s permanent war economy, see Nitzan and Bichler 2002). Published in 1956, Wright Mills’s The Power Elite analyses the military-industrial complex not just as an economic force (of military, political, and corporate actors) but as an inner circle, a social class, and a social and psychological entity and structure that is detrimental to effective decision making (Wright Mills 1965). The Power Elite perspective gained ground and readership in the context of the Vietnam War and the growing clusters corporate-military actors, companies, and institutions. Inspired by Mills, Uri Davis’s Utopia Incorporated, published in 1977, examines the links between class, kin, state, and corporate power as an engine in the nascent Zionist project of colonisation (Davis 1977), including military and security production and involvement. More recently, the network approach has been revived by De Graff and Apeldoorn (2010), among others, who use Social Network Analysis (SNA) to examine the embedding of agency in US military-industrial structures in the decision making process conducted among neoconservatives before the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Work has also been published about triple-helix systems. For example, Etzkowitz and Leydesdorff (2005) provide key insights into the nature of university-industry-government relations. This work connects research systems to social context, where the interactions between the helices convey the deeper logics of knowledge infrastructures of society (1996), and the changing role and nature of governments in relation to broader processes of innovation and laissez faire capitalist economies (1995). More recently, the developmental processes of science in their interactions with their social context have emerged in Science and Technology (STS) literature (Gummet and Reppy 1988). In addition, scholarship in the same field deals with the impact of new weapons systems on national and international security (e.g. Gleditsch and Njolstad 1990). For example, Ellis’s social history of the machine gun demonstrates the integral role of social, political, and cultural factors 43 in weapons innovation (Ellis 1987). In fact, there is a range of studies on specific weapons systems and empirical studies on the structure of defence industries (Ball and Leitenberg 1983). And more recently in their new critical approach to Israeli militarism, Sheffer and Barak (2006, 2010) argue for analyses that address the political culture of militarism that is the foundation of social exchanges between military, civilian, and political actors of the Israeli security network. All of these studies provide insights into their various subjects. However, even when taken together, they do not give us a clear road map for how to study arms and security innovation processes. The need still exists for a more dynamic approach to the relationship between the sciences, technology, and military-security through the study of the sociotechnical network that characterises the heterogeneous character of technological development. While these critical accounts provide an excellent critique of civil-military relations, we need more research that provides deeper insights into the corporate arm of this network. Looking at the military sector from the viewpoint of the security industry can help shed light on how the security network shapes and is shaped by corporate interests. In this way while taking on the network approach the research further addresses the question of the relationship between the individuals and institutions intent and the way in which security is produced and deployed as an artefact. All together at its core the thesis seeks to contribute to the academic body of work that questions and examines the way in which security is produced with a strong emphasis on the materiality of that process. The research provides an original contribution by bringing in new knowledge as to how ideas of security are materialised into both modernizing and de-modernizing practices of nation and state building. Too often this perspective has been neglected in both critical security and area studies. In part the research rectifies this neglect by expanding the existing analytical frame of Israeli (state) violence and it does so by showing the breadth and depth of the venture in one unified account. Consequently this thesis inscribes and positions itself in relation to a growing body of critical work on Global Palestine. Its research seeks to add the dimension, materiality, and technology to studies of Zionism and techno-nationalism, and more broadly introduce these ideas to the agendas of critical security studies. The research provides a critique of one-dimensional (in)security narratives and challenges accounts of security production that are either too abstract and theoretical or too focused on narrow military capacities. The research relies on a growing body of critical security studies in relation to Israel-Palestine more broadly, while it seeks to incorporate the perspective of both technological nationalism and racialisation into the frame. This perspective injects important information from the practical field of security and the disciplines of critical political economy and science and technology studies. In addition the research focuses on the 44 fertile space between structures and individuals, which can help ease the tension between cultural studies and political economy perspectives. This is a research agenda that takes the nature and capacities of technology seriously without lapsing into celebratory analyses of their roots. Based on this review, the following section outlines the methodology and the philosophy of science on which this thesis has been developed. To obtain a clearer view of socio-technical processes, we must de-compartmentalise the social sciences and draw the natural sphere closer to the social one, and technology closer to politics. 1.6 Methodology and research questions and practices This chapter is an account of the thesis’ methodological foundations, research design, field practices, and the technical processes that contributed to the design of this study. I conclude this chapter by reflecting on questions about the ethics of research and the role of political emotions. 1.7 Background of research My academic and political interest in Zionism and the social and political history of Palestine predates this research. Throughout my academic studies in the field of development, international relations (IR), and political economy, I have consistently been engaged in scholarly work and debates on the Israel-Palestine impasse and its global implications. On and off over the course of the last seven years, I lived in and visited Jerusalem, Ramallah, and Tel Aviv, working in the field of diplomacy and more recently conducting fieldwork for this thesis and other research projects. It was in the course of habitual travel between Ramallah in the West Bank and the high-tech bubble of Tel Aviv that I began to think about the link – not just between a prosperous and highly industrialised Israel and a de-modernised impoverished Palestine – but between the overwhelming security installations in place in the OPT and the increasing celebration of Israel as a high-tech nation. However, when consulting the literature on Israel-Palestine and Zionism, I found that the strong tendency of social studies of Zionism has been to focus on historical debates and narratives that have limited explanatory power and insights into this conundrum of security technology and settler colonialism. Overall, I unfold this research as a kind of genealogy of the Israeli security industry and its practices. As I analyse these in the context of a national project of settler colonialism deeply inscribed into a project of modernisation and de-modernisation, I term the conjunction or research process a colonial genealogy of modernity. While this thesis does not perform a particularly rigid genealogical 45 analysis, it addresses genealogy in the sense that it seeks to examine ‘the history of the present’ (Foucault 1977; Garland 2014: 377). It demonstrates ‘how the history of the present deploys genealogical inquiry and the uncovering of hidden conflicts and contexts as a means of re-valuing the value of contemporary phenomena’ (Garland 2014: 365). This can be done by examining the concrete and abstract institutions in which certain objects become objects of knowledge and domination (Foucault 1993: 203). According to Foucault, genealogy is not the examination of a timeless condition, but rather an examination of ‘the constitution of the subject across history which has led us up to the modern concept of the self’ (Foucault 1993: 202). This means that we are looking to history not as a single unified history, but as complex processes to be dealt with in their specificity and locality. A central element in this genealogy or history of the present is the effort to analyse the (power-laden) dynamic, or the co-constitution of subjects (people) and objects (material artefact). In its concern with the relationship between discourse, political economy, and power, this project has its roots in the broad tradition of critical social science, drawing more specifically from the tradition of critical realism (CR). This is accomplished in conjunction with key themes concerning the operations of power in the work of Foucault. By drawing on critical realism’s philosophy of science and the methodology of retroduction, I suggest here that it is possible to outline a critical framework that exhibits an intricate understanding of the relationship between discursive and material forces and their power relations. 1.8 Technology, power, and critical realism Although philosophical ideas remain largely hidden in research (Slife and Williams 1995), they still influence the research process. In the social sciences, human agency is in part determined by beliefs, desires, motives, and goals (Fay 1994). In line with the critiques of one-dimensional celebratory approaches to studying the relationship between technology and nationalism, this thesis is guided by an overall concern with the re-articulation of the relations between ideational and material forces. While utopian techno-enthusiasm and ‘paralyzing anti-technology’ (Avgerou and Walsham 2000) are predicated on law-like relationships between technology and social outcomes (Smith 2006: 194), causality and scientific laws (as a constant conjunction of events) do not capture underlying unobservable entities (Maxwell 1998) and possible causal processes (Cartwright 1983). This is especially true when taking into account the flow, tampering, and improvisation that shapes technology in the interaction between daily practices of social actors and the larger national, scientific power structures in which they are embedded. This research views the process of science and scientific knowledge as historically 46 emergent, political, and incomplete (Smith 2006: 200). This means that development and use of technology does not follow a straightforward causal relationship. In my approach to case studies, I ask about underlying mechanisms instead of asking what and how many questions; I also ask how and why questions as posed by a case study research strategy (Yin 2003). A case study is a strategy of inquiry in which the researcher explores a program, event, or activity process. It is bound by time and activity and is based on the collection of data over a sustained period of time (Stake 1995). This is done in order to open up the black box of linking empirical conjunction (Hedström and Swedberg 1998), or to convey the means through which causal relationships appear (Shadish, Cook and Cambell 2002). From a political economy perspective, this thesis operates in a tense field between post-structural ideas stressing the notion of discursive representation and the more material tenets of historical materialism. This tension produces a question: is it the actors or the techno-national settler colonial project that plays the starring role in the (interrelated) stories of this thesis? To alleviate the tension between material, rational, and constructivist representative approaches, I argue for a post-modernist approach where technologies need to be examined in relation to power/knowledge discourses (Schech 2002). This implies focusing on diverse cultures, socioeconomic conditions, and the experiences and conceptions of the actors involved (Avgerou and Walsham 2000: 2-7), rather than arriving at new knowledge through an objective scientific framework of hypothesis testing. This involves an interpretive method that focuses on human constructs as drivers of change (Smith 2006: 196). In science, the building of a theory is ‘seeking to account for the state(s) of some thing or (things)’ (Weber 2003: vi). Indeed, theories need to refer to something or else they lose their meaning (Archer 2000: 154–155). In this light, a strong constructivist approach – ‘there is no correct and incorrect theories but there are interesting and less interesting ways of viewing the world’ (Walsham 1993: 6) – carries the risk of rejecting any rational basis which might fall into a hazardous, ‘anything goes’ attitude. Thus, while this study accepts the constructivist premise that meaning is constructed by human beings as they engage in the world they are interpreting, and subjective meanings are negotiated socially and historically, it also points to the existence of a material reality that shapes our lives. The philosophy of science approach ingrained in critical realism is a useful bridge between these disciplinary tensions. 47 Critical realism seeks to transcend some of the classical dualisms in social sciences such as positivism versus constructivism and structure versus agency (Bhaskar 2002: 19-22). In short, ontologically critical realism focuses on what produces events (or in this case, experiences) rather than a causal link between events per se. Central to critical realism is that the explanation of social phenomena is achieved by revealing the mechanisms that produce them (Archer 1995). When applied to the research of the production system of security, critical realism rearticulates the importance of understanding context and underlying social m echanisms in conjunction with tendencies among actors and companies. In this way, CR is anchored in the critique of positivist approaches to the social attainment of knowledge. In other words, a realist approach to research does not presume to be able to identify defining or determinate causes for all social outcomes. Instead, it appreciates that explanations and causation will always be contingent on the mechanisms or the context in question. With critical realism as an overarching framework, the process of technological production can be conceptualised as an open system in which multiple contingent causal mechanisms, both extraneous and internal, exist. This means that manifest experiences are not the primary object of knowledge, but rather that the method should focus on uncovering generative mechanisms which may or may not mani fest themselves as experiences. Knowledge is conjectural and antifoundational (Phillips and Burbules 2000). Thus, when seeking to understand the experiences and behaviours of humans, uncovering the mechanisms that underlie such experiences and behaviours is required. Foucault’s concern with power and, more importantly, his understanding of power relations are entirely consistent with CR (see Selby 2007). Power, according to Foucault, is manifested in the instruments, techniques, and procedures that are brought to bear on the actions of others. It is exercised in the ‘modalities’ of what he refers to as ‘domination’ and ‘governmentality’ (Foucault 1980; Hindess 1996). Both of these ideas shift the study of power away from a centralised, dominant subject/object of power, such as the sovereign or as here, the coloniser towards the mutual relationship between ruler and ruled: Power must be analyzed as something which circulates, or rather as something which only functions in the form of a chain. It is never localized here or there, never in anybody’s hands, never appropriated as a commodity or piece of wealth. Power is employed and exercised through a net-like organization. And not only do individuals circulate between its threads; they are always in the position of simultaneously undergoing and exercising 48 this power. They are not only its inert or consenting targets; they are always also the elements of its articulation. In other words, individuals are the vehicles of power, not its points of application (Foucault 1976 in Dirks, Eley and Ortner 1993: 214). The idea of disciplinary power understands the phenomenon as exercised in the mechanisms, technologies, and practices of society; it is not restricted to specific actions of one group or actor over another. Power is therefore exercised in the conducting of the (govern)mentality of and between individuals and as operative in the relations between our material and discursive constellations. A Foucauldian framework is also useful in cases where the tasks of the interpreter is to ‘write a detective history’ by ‘putting together the various pieces of the puzzle so we can see the sufficient conditions for the emergence of the problem or issue under investigation’ (Kendall and Wickham 2008). As such, power should not be understood as merely laws or regulations of the state. Rather, it should be understood in terms of the technologies and the norms in ‘a society of normalisation’ (Foucault 2003) that operates in a variety of state and non-state contexts, in the names and concepts, and indeed in the objects – including people and practices – to which they refer. Critical social science, on the other hand, maintains that the purpose of research should be guided by a commitment to alleviate unnecessary and unwanted human suffering – latent and manifest – by exposing and explaining power structures and relationships (Fay 1994). However research cannot be reduced to questions of truth and falsity, but amounts to a ‘critical judgment on the truth or falsity of their beliefs’ (Sayer 2000: 49). As such, in a Foucauldian spirit, power goes beyond the study of ideology, why the idea of power does fit with the concern with ideology in critical social science. Here focus is on the ways in which meaning establishes relations of domination. 1.9 Research methods and practice A critical realism approach does not entail a specific method for social science. Indeed, it criticises any intention to develop a specific method for scientific work as such. It does, however, as Danermark et al. (2002) point out, offer some guidelines as how to approach social science research through the framework outlined above. This thesis is based on an interdisciplinary framework. Its research engages with a story of networks and binaries conjoined as relations of domination. It investigates a history of shifts and leaps and seeks to describe a social history that 49 abolishes borders between micro and macro and between economy and politics. Edlund and Nilstun have attempted to pin down such interdisciplinary research: ‘The most characteristic idea of interdisciplinary research today is (to) approach a whole range of complicated problems, (...) and (attempt) some kind of integration of data’ (Edlund and Nilstun 1986: 37). The combinations of knowledge implicit in interdisciplinary research might even lead to new knowledge. In pursuing critical methodological pluralism in this study – the production of security in a settler colonial context – this thesis attempts to achieve a comprehensive and critical appreciation of the relationship between systems, structures, institutions, agents, and discourse. Therefore, it makes use of mixed methodological tools that analyse stratified understandings of social reality, not those that reduce phenomena to just the level of the individual or to just the level of social entity, but rather to discern different levels of strata which entail emergent powers (Danermark et al. 2002). This mixed method approach involves the use of both qualitative and quantitative methods so that the overall strength of the study is greater than only one methodological tool (Creswell and Plano Clark 2007). To do this, it may be necessary to eliminate the long-standing distinction between quantitative and qualitative research methods. Indeed, one should complement the other in what is usually referred to as methodological triangulation (Deacon, Bryman and Fenton 1998: 47). Moreover, the thesis adopts retroduction as its research strategy. Retroduction is a method of conceptualising that requires the researcher to identify the circumstances without which something (the concept) cannot exist. The method differs from deduction in that it is not logical. Both abduction and retroduction are analytical tools used in critical realism. As argued by Danermark et al., critical realism understands causal analysis to be based on modes of inference that include not just induction and deduction but, crucially, abduction and retroduction as central modes (Danermark et al. 2002). The method of retroduction enables the explanation of something about the world not by drawing linear causal links and describing law-like relations between observable events, but through the use of conceptual abstraction (Danermark et al. 2002). In this way the research comes to (re)interprets and (re)describes structures and relations in new contexts of ideas and aims in order to find the prerequisites or the basic conditions for the existence of the phenomena studied. In this study of the production of security technology, what is being highlighted as part of this broader social theoretical argument are the central mechanisms for understanding not the entire system as a whole but more specifically the key features of the system that connect settler colonial practices and nationalist impulses to technological innovation in the current constellation within the framework of the ideas under investigation. 50 In the analysis of research, retroductive inference will not move a researcher from a basic premise or hypothesis to a conclusion (Danermark et al. 1997). It takes some unexplained phenomenon and proposes hypothetical mechanisms that if they existed would generate or cause that which is to be explained. Used in conjunction, these forms of inference can lead to the formation of a new conceptual framework or theory (Danermark et al. 1997). As Mingers argues, through retroductive interferences ‘we move from experiences in the empirical domain to possible structures in the real domain’ (Mingers 2004: 86-88). Moreover, unlike the case of abductive inference, employing retroductive inference calls for bringing assumptions to the research. It is the a priori knowledge that allows the researcher to question and clarify the basic prerequisites or conditions for a priori assumptions or theoretical frameworks. Danermark et al. (1997) suggest that the use of the term ‘conditions’ refers to the circumstance without which something cannot exist. Employing retroductive inference in the process of analysis makes it possible to explain events and the social process that causes events. This includes describing and conceptualising the properties and mechanisms that make an event or incident happen, and then describing how different mechanisms are apparent under different conditions (Danermark et al. 2002: 74). In this thesis, I move beyond theories of security towards a more comprehensive understanding of the actual and real conditions under which security technology is innovated, incepted, produced, deployed, and sold. There are significant strengths in each different method used here. Essentially, however, these methods should be regarded as one methodology. Indeed, the historical and institutional context, semi-structured interviews, and textual analysis have all informed one another throughout the research process, all in ways that pertain to different theoretical concerns. As such, the development of background issues and the identification of basic areas of research interest inform all these strategies of research, which in turn inform each other. Studying of extreme cases (extreme case sampling) Studying the case of Israel as an ‘extreme case’ entails studying the conditions for the production of security technology that are are more obvious and intense. The term ‘extreme cases’ refers to the study of specific cases where the mechanisms under investigation exist in a ‘purer’ form than usual (Danermark et al. 1997). Studying extreme cases allows the researcher to learn about the conditions for the ‘normal’ area under investigation by researching the extreme or manipulated (the abnormal), i.e. the study of Israeli security as a highly intense and securitised state 51 marked by an overly and explicit ethnic nationalism. This allows us to study and understand what characterises security (potentially in a purer form). I work to show how the extreme case of the Israeli security practices and the industry can teach us about the relationship between security and nationalism more generally. Halliday argues that area studies is a complex phenomenon, where lapses into ‘regional narcissism and over-specialization’ (Halliday 2005: 10) are common features. By introducing a broader theoretical framework and arguing for the present case to be a variant rather than an exception, the study seeks to minimise this risk. Limitations of scope of analysis Israeli state making and security concerns and practices constitute an historical event that needs to be analysed in the broader regional context of Middle East state formation. Both these processes are intertwined and share important similarities. This chapter does not prioritise its comparative, intertwined account of how Israeli state resembles and relates to state formation in Arab states and the pervasive role of European colonial powers herein (Owen 1992; Ayubi 1995; Halliday 2005). What is more, and perhaps more critical, is the lack of attention given here to Israel’s broader regional security concerns in relation to Arab states and hostile groups. Nor does this analysis include regional security concerns, threats from cross-border opponents, and organised activity against Israel targets. Even though this analysis is interested in the internal ‘other’ and its relationship with the sovereign, clearly this is a huge challenge that opens up the critical question of whether the thesis paints an accurate and sufficiently comprehensive picture of Israeli security. However, in defence of this decision, I have focused in the empirical portions of the analysis on how Israel’s security companies refer to the OPT and the internal ‘others’ as well as on those technologies in play vis-à-vis Palestinians and in relation to intra-Israeli relations. The comparative regional perspective missing here is clearly a shortcoming for which I bear the responsibility. Moreover, I do not include and analyse the question of Israel’s nuclear arsenal and weapons (and the broader regional debate and race attached to this), which is certainly critical to the state’s security narrative and sector. However, this is a matter of priority and a conscious decision I have made because of the wish to access the field. Needless to say, the Israeli nuclear sector is completely off limit for outsiders, which would have inhibited my aim to understand the sector through my own field work efforts. What is more, clearly the Israeli security industry and (security) tech sectors are in general highly gendered fields often dominated by masculine, even patriarchal values and structures of domination. In addition, the aspects of gendering are critical as much research also points to the profoundly gendered effects of security 52 practices (Enloe 1990; Cockburn 1998; al-Ali 2007), let alone the role of gender relations in war (Goldstein 2003) and settler colonial domination (Mogensen 2012; Smith 2010). Due to space constraints this research has not engaged with this critical aspect of security and reproduction of power relations in the perspective of gender and gendering despite my own position as a female researcher in this particularly male dominated field. Data, fieldwork, and interviews This thesis brings together empirical data and insights based on fieldwork. I weave together data from sites in Israel, Palestine, and extraterritorial sites such as arms fairs, and draw from a numerous sources such as secondary literature, statistics, promotional material, and government publications. While the analysis moves between territorial sites, it does not present a complete account of a particular site or place; rather, it demonstrates the variety and extent of control across territorial scales. The empirical body of the research provides a unique view into the heart of Israeli security industry as viewed, framed, and lived by its actors. Over three visits to Israel over the course of 11 months (July–September 2012, November 2012, and June 2013), I conducted 24 semi-structured qualitative interviews with company representatives, analysts, academic staff, state agency officials, and NGO members working across the broad spectrum of security, defence, science, and trade. The second portion of my empirical data and observatory studies originated with my visits to four defence and security fairs and one high-tech fair – four in Israel and one in France. The fairs visited were: –– –– –– –– –– HLS 2012, the 2nd Israel International Homeland Security Conference in Tel Aviv, Israel, 11–14 November 2012; ISDEF, the 5th International Defense and HLS Expo, Tel Aviv, Israel, 4–6 June 2013; Eurosatory, Land and Air and Defense and Security International Exhibition, 11–15 June 2012; Unmanned Vehicles Exhibition and Conference (UVID), Airport City, Israel, 8 November 2012; and International High-tech Conference (HTIA), Technion’s Centennial Anniversary, Jerusalem, 11 September, 2012. In addition to the interviews and fair visits in the fall of 2012, I was ‘embedded’ in the Israeli security company International Security and Defense Systems 53 (ISDS)7 for a three-day study-inspiration trip for ISDS customers. ISDS operates under the patronage of Israeli-Argentinian security veteran Leo Gleser. Deemed a ‘showcase’ trip for Gleser’s global clientele, the promotion tour was titled ‘Top Technology and Transfer of Knowledge, Grand Event in Israel’. The event’s programme was organised to coincide with the major security fair ‘HLS Israel 2012’ organised in Tel Aviv by the (MFA) Affairs and the Israel Export Institute, where Gleser brought his customers and participated himself in panel presentations8. The idea of insight into such milieu is inspired by Gusterson’s (1998) ethnographic work on scientific communities (in this case, nuclear scientists). First, this work demonstrates the existence of socio-political pockets containing particular logics and worldviews that are inherent to all kinds of societies. Second, Gusterson’s use of methods of elite studies demonstrates that discourses of science are not something outside culture; rather, that the scientists’ rationales are part of a politico-scientific logic of an internationalised culture (Gusterson 1998: x–xi). As Gusterson argues: in order to understand national and international power dynamics, it is key to understand local contestations of power (Gusterson 1998: 5–6). The goal of this research is in line with Gusterson: to remedy the general absence of this sort of milieu knowledge of Israeli security by including the agents involved in the production of science, i.e. a cultural perspective on the production of science which takes into account interrogation of power institutions, their individual agents, and their broader ideological agendas and power structures The choice of semi-structured interviews and textual analysis supported by articipant observation and historical analysis provides the holistic multi-dimenp sional methodology which critical social science requires. Interviews generally involve a data elicitation approach beginning with ‘the experiences as expressed in lived and told stories of individuals’, but culminate in texts subjected to inter7 8 54 International Security and Defense Systems (ISDS) is ‘a worldwide influential, sophisticated security consultancy and integrator in homeland security, defence, maritime, and aviation security, infrastructure, multi-national enterprises and the security of mega-events’ (ISDS, 2012). Among places where ISDS has provided its integrated systems is the US embassy in Rome; in addition, various celebrities such as Elton John and Madonna have had their security provided by ISDS. On the company’s customer list appear numerous airports, private industries, and national police units across the globe. ISDS headquarters is located south of Tel Aviv in Nir Zvi, but it conducts most of its trainings from its Brazilian office at the outskirts of a favela. The programme was split between socialising and testing security technology with Gleser and his international clients at his ranch in Nir Zvi south of Tel Aviv, and participation in a range of promotional tours around Israel. (Glaser himself was once a high-ranking security expert for the Israeli airlines company El-Al in Spain and Scandinavia. As a young man, he was a leading force in the Argentinian Zionist youth movement Ashomer Hatzair (The Young Guards) in Buenos Aires before he relocated to Israel to make Aliyah and developed his booming business.) pretive analysis whereby researchers attempt to ‘situate individual stories within participants’ ‘personal experiences’ and ‘their historical contexts’ (Creswell 2009: 54–55). In this sense, interviews are very useful. Berger outlines four kinds of interviews: informal, unstructured, semi-structured, and structured. Informal and unstructured interviews provide little control in the conduct of interviews, whereas structured interviews rely on a specific set of instructions that guide the interviewers. (Berger 2000). Semi-structured interviews, which are used in the context of this thesis, generally seek to promote an active, open-ended dialogue. They rely on certain areas of questions to ask respondents, but are generally not concerned with standardisation and control. (Deacon et al. 1999: 65). What semi-structured interviews bring to the methodological approach of this thesis is a comprehensive framework within which to understand the textual analysis, while the textual analysis in turn illuminates the data gathered from the interviews. All interviews were conducted in English; only very few participants allowed recording during the course of the interviewing. Therefore, quotes and field notes rely on the exhaustive notes I took during the interviews. Throughout the field research process, the interviews were subjected to pre liminary topical coding. Instead of performing a thick ethnography, the individual actors interviewed and quoted play across the political and economic enterprises analysed in this research. Such an approach understands social phenomena to be constituted in the practices of agents situated in the social world, rather than being able to extract analysis based on purely instrumental understandings of agents or simply by native representations of experience (Bourdieu 1990). In this way, the use of semi-structured interviews contributes to the concerns with the practices that operate within and through the material and discursive production of security technology. This interviewing method places any study of macro-level structural and historical analysis, as well as the actual text, in the context of the central actors who engage in the practices of security production. Structural constraints are in turn only adequately understood through the practices of the agents they envelop and the discourses that are produced. As such, observation provides a context which often helps to explain what people do, but it is limited in understanding why they do things, what motivates them, and what anxieties they have (Berger 2000). 55 Ethical concerns: Research in conflict zones and questions of access and assigning blame The ethical issues relating to the research are multi-leveled. They relate to the overlying question of how to conduct politically informed research without assigning absolute blame, to field access, and to the issue of the role of political emotions in research. Field research in conflict zones and racialised warfare is challenging for both methodological and ethical reasons. I conducted my fieldwork in a clearly compromised and compromising terrain fraught with racism and structural violence, and also of two competing and often contradicting narratives of (past) suffering and security. As Wood argues, in conflict zones, the usual imperatives of empirical research (to gather and analyse accurate data to address a relevant theoretical question) are: …intensified by the absence of unbiased data from sources such as news papers, the partisan nature of much data compiled by organizations operating in the conflict zone, the difficulty of establishing what a representative sample would be and carrying out a study of that sample, and the obvious logistical challenges (Wood 2006: 373). However, most of the actual fieldwork and interviews I conducted did not take place in active combat zones, but in stable locales in industrial zones and protected security fairs. While this provided a sense of normality, at the same time traveling between the occupied Palestinian territories, experiencing life under occupation, and in a few hours arriving back to my Tel Aviv apartment, provided a particularly stressful and contradictory setting in which to work. The specific focus of the research took these conditions to the extreme: in a settler colonial context, the ethical world of arms production is fraught with radical politics, racism, and a naturalisation of violence. However, it is important that the researcher avoid lapsing into unethical research practices such as playing the ‘blame game’ at the expense of presenting new knowledge and perspectives. Rather than seeking to assign political blame to specific parties, this research is informed by an anti-racist ethics and a view that allowed me to work both with (or within) and against racial imaginaries under an empowered system of subjugation as a social and political phenomenon. A critique can be made that the focus on the side of the Israeli security sector and logics fails to take into account the entire picture of the Israel-Palestine impasse. I accept this critique and acknowledge that a stronger focus on the reciprocity of violence and the effects and influence on the broader Middle East geopolitical complex would have taken the analysis in a different direction and perhaps presented a different view of the Israeli security industry. 56 That being said, the thesis has consciously focused on settler colonial technologies as an object of inquiry because also as this is what is (re)branded and sold abroad. A key challenge of the research process was to gain access to desired informants from the Israeli security industry. Clearly, the nature of the field of security production meant that the question of access became both a challenge and a key ethical concern. As Undheim reflects: ‘Where access is problematic, there is always an ethical issue involved’ (Undheim 2006: 18), and as Kvale argues: ‘interviewing in qualitative research is a moral inquiry’ (Kvale 2007). These issues were at play in the research process, especially when, as Creswell argues, ‘an ethical issue arises when there is not reciprocity between the researcher and the participant’ (Creswell 2009: 91). Clearly, interviewing actors involved in developing and using technologies used for repressive measures inhibited this reciprocity. In retrospect, I am aware that I made mistakes during my field research that relate to my practices of fieldwork and interviewing. For field research to be ethical, research subjects must consent to their participation with the full understanding of the potential risks and benefits (Wood 2006). In the context of my field research, this norm of informed consent became a complex matter because deciding what were the risks and benefits of participation was difficult in this particular context. How could I explain the purpose of my task without excluding myself from access? Considering the nature of the field and the positions of the desired informants throughout the research process, setting up interviews was not an easy task. Out of many emails and countless phone calls only few accepted (there were few refusals but many requests drew no response). When I contacted companies by email, I attached the background of my research and included a letter from my home university. When establishing contact by phone, I provided a short introduction of myself and the name of my affiliated institution. Most company representatives were uneasy and seemed hesitant to participate, I assume because of the political sensitivity around their enterprise and their fear of industrial espionage, (several of them referred explicitly to this during some of our subsequent conversations.) In some cases – possibly after the potential informant had conducted an online background check (viewing my previous work on Palestine), the interview was cancelled, in most cases without a stated reason. Early on in my fieldwork, I made the conscious decision to focus on the vocabularies and framing of my informants rather than confronting them with my analytical perspective. While I at no point provided false information about my identity or the purpose of requesting an interview, I framed my interest in a given company’s capacities and expertise. When engaging in conversations and observing at fairs, I always made sure to wear my badge with my full name, title (researcher) and institution (university), and distributed business cards. However, while I never directly misrepresented myself, I did not actively correct all misunderstandings of who I was and why I was there. 57 Presenting the premises of my work posed an ethical challenge for me. When I realised that many of my informants had perspectives that were irreconcilable with mine, I took a more neutral stance than what the framework of settler colonialism might imply. I began to refrain from using words, such as ‘occupation’ and ‘Palestinians’ that industry representatives might consider biased, political, and even anti-Israeli. While this restrained me from targeting the interviews according to my planned themes, the problem also became an opportunity to become familiar with the industry’s own internal logics and worldviews. And it became the only way to obtain access. One dilemma in conducting fieldwork is deciding whether or not to challenge lies told by informants (Wood 2006: 386). In the course of my interviewing, this was both a practical and ethical issue. Manoeuvring in this milieu of war apologists, the idea of trying to challenge the dominant narratives of civilisational clashes, Palestinians as potential terrorists, and the general perception of security as a common good seemed like climbing a very steep and dangerous mountain. If I confronted the liar, it might result in hostility toward the project and cut off the flow of the conversation. On the other hand, silently consenting to the rationale of perpetrators of violence tore at me. I resolved not to challenge the lies told to me but to invite elaboration in a bland and naive way, which incidentally often led to extremely useful material that reflected the speaker’s ideology, values, analysis of events, and so on (Wood 2006: 386). To counter this during the course of interviewing, I asked the informants how they perceived of their own role and responsibilities, which provided an opening into the moral and more private universes of the actors. What is more, as the fieldwork progressed, displaying too much familiarity with the indigenous jargon could also put pressure on the conversation, as informants typically preferred unfolding their monologues uninterrupted. A gender aspect arose from these experiences. All of the interviewed were male; clearly, the role of gender relations affected the interviews and established an obvious asymmetry and distribution of clearly demarcated roles. In some sense, this created an awkward situation, as the masculine, knowledgeable expert in detail saw it as his task to enlighten me, a young female researcher, about the wonders of a given product. On the other hand, on several occasions I was both directly and indirectly excluded from conversations about a new piece of technology or big business. My position as a female in a ‘man’s world’ clearly gendered my experiences in the field. What is more, an ethical challenge often mentioned in research on conflict zones is the ensuring of security of the data gathered (particularly sensitive data that might have political implications if in the wrong hands) (Wood 2006). In this case, my concern was somehow different: while I feared questions from airport security and state officials about my endeavours, at no point did I fear for my own security. However, the nature of the research and the particularities of 58 working intensively with representatives of weapons and repression put a great deal of emotional stress on me throughout the process. Political emotions This research was not unaffected by political emotions. Unquestionably, there is always an affective dimension to fieldwork in the social sciences. An important part of the description stage of the study is to acknowledge the role of the researcher in describing, and consequently, designing the research and interpreting the findings (Danermark et al. 1997). In line with constructivism (Crotty 1998), the description stage involves acknowledging the assumptions that the researchers bring to the research. I considered my emotions in the field throughout my research. Emotions are often structured by, and arise from the field encounters themselves. As the field of Israel-Palestine is both a traumatised and a politically fraught site, field emotions clearly affect collected data, the framing of that data, and the interpretation process. The pressing question then is how my political emotions as a researcher and an inherently political person affected the research process? Hage speaks of an emotional self, which is the space of self-constitution, the actual set of emotions (Hage 2009: 66). In the study of political realities, the researcher is guided by his/her own political emotions. Based on his own experiences doing fieldwork on Israel (Palestine), Hage warns of the risks of reducing Israel or Zionism into an abstract as an ‘evil person’, which only allows the researcher to think in categories like Israel or Zionism as a strategic abstraction. These are challenged in the field, where the researcher moves between the analytical and the participatory (Hage 2009: 59–79). Participant observation in politically fraught contexts asks us to negotiate between not two, but three modes of participation in reality: the emotional, the analytical, and the political. This creates an ambivalence which Hage refers to as ‘ethnographic vacillation’, or a friction between the three (Hage 2009). This vacillation was an ongoing condition in my research. While personal and political experiences, identification with and identification through are critical sources of research, Bourdieu’s point that there is a difference between the logics of politics and the logics of intellectual inquiry (a friend-enemy logic in which intellectual inquiry cannot operate) is worth remembering (Bourdieu in Hage 2010). Emotions can also be a resource. They are ripe with knowledge, and as Hage emphasises, there is a (academic) value to considering political emotions in the field as being characteristic of the field itself. While academic inquiry into the case of Israel-Palestine is an intellectual minefield, Davies argues that the role of political emotions is not negative per se, and that emotions in the field are not mere gratuitous interference but an entré into knowledge. The emotional can assist the analytical because emotions are ripe with knowledge and engagement. Indeed, 59 they argue that the ideal of complete emotional detachment from the field, the idea that the there is no such as thing pure investigation simply does not exist. Instead, we should ask: …how far methods mould subjectivity, not into patterns that efface all emotions (for this kind is indeed impossible) but into patterns that produce emotions of a different order, and also into attitudes too often prone to privilege only cognitive learning and cognitive driven procedures of social research (Davies 2010: 13). Thus, instead of viewing emotions as something that should be controlled and restrained, emotions should be reported and unconcealed. As Davies and Spencer argue, emotions should be lifted out of the margins in methodology and provide an opposition to the idea that subjectivity has only a corrosive effect upon the process of research (Davies and Spencer 2010: 2). Rather, the researcher’s emotional experience should be seen as an opportunity to understand and develop a re-humanised methodology that exposes the real research process, including hidden facets and resources. While I aspired to assure and sustain the logics of intellectual inquiry throughout the analyses, as a researcher, I am inevitably caught in this process of vacillation between the emotional, the analytical, and the political. In this sense, I consider this thesis to be a piece of politically informed and engaged work fused with an advocacy and participatory worldview (Heron and Reason 1997). The intellectual scope of the thesis departs from anti-racism and tenets recurring in work that searching for counter-hegemonic epistemologies. This is done by considering the voice of the dominant from the vantage point of the beneficiaries and architects of a system of domination. In Hage’s analysis, emotions proliferate in encounters with the informants and the researcher adopts the emotions of the actors in the field. During my fieldwork I was differently challenged by the a priori distance I felt from my research field and informants because they belonged so completely to an alienated world of arms and profit maximisation that I associated with militarised Zionism and the pursuit of profit at the expense of others. Seeking conversation and even socialising with apologists for Israeli warfare, who in some cases even bragged about the success and experience in the field, was an ambivalent endeavour for me. In encounters with representatives of this ethos, my emotions were definitely affected by negative prejudices. At the same time, in some instances these negative presumptions were challenged when I conducted interviews. In meetings with the concrete ‘other’, the abstract ‘evil industry’ representative was personified. Instead of being the abstract ‘evil person’, a given informant became human and often unfolded his personal story and trajectory as part of the interview. As I was allowed into the 60 informants’ personal perspectives, stories of anti-Semitic persecution in the past and more everyday life perspectives of fighting and suffering under the auspices of the neo-liberal Israeli state painted a more nuanced picture of individual perspectives than the simplistic view of actors as merely servants of the state. I also kept in mind how political, social, and educational institutions in Israel (as in other colonial contexts) shape the political mind. In turn, this created an emotional friction between my structural perception of settler colonialism and the emotional effect of humanising this abstract image. However, at times I was sadly astonished by the harshness of claims and descriptions of the Palestinians as innately inferior, which again distorted the clarity of my analysis. What is more, the crudeness of arms and security technology also invoked some distinctive reactions on my part. Hastrup (2010) has argued that in fieldwork we should consider the inter-subjective meeting (between people) but also as a concept playing out in the encounter between subject and the material environment. The raw emotional reaction when confronted with technologies of death, destruction, and oppression deeply affected the lens through which I studied their relationship to the social world. Whereas the very landscape, the physical terrain of Israel-Palestine, the disruption of land, settlements, and enclosures when moving from site to site in the field deepened my emotional affiliation with the side of the colonised. Last, in the course of writing this thesis, Israel has conducted two military offensives in Gaza. Witnessing these spectacular outbreaks of violence and Zionism’s ‘habits of destruction’ (Khalili 2014), I tried not to forget how the use of the very technologies I was researching deeply affected my perspective and emotional state. This journey of my research has confirmed my role as an outsider to life in Israel-Palestine. As an outsider looking in, and flying in and out of this traumatised piece of land, I will never be able to understand the experience and feelings of each national group, and I have no intention to pretend otherwise. The next section of the thesis continues to develop the intellectual and theoretical scope of the thesis. 61 62 CHAPTER TWO FOUNDATIONS, THEORIES, AND CONCEPTUAL REFLECTIONS 2.0 Technological nationalism, settler colonialism, and security as national innovation 2.1 Introduction Corroborating qualified theoretically informed answers to the research questions of this thesis requires a comprehensive analysis informed by critical ideas on nationalism, settler colonialism, science and technology, and security, which together can push forward a research agenda. A theory is a set of interrelated constructs (variables), definitions, and propositions (Kerlinger 1979: 64) based on a theoretical rationale defined by questioning how and why the variables and statements are interrelated (Labovitz and Hagedorn 1971: 17). This chapter introduces an outline of the theoretical architecture, thematic foci, and vocabularies of the thesis. Overall, the chapter answers the question: how can we conceive of security as a modality of technological-nationalism, and in turn how is settler colonialism dependent on technology and security to ensure its vision or dream of establishing state-nation congruence between a Jewish state and nation? This chapter investigates nationalism as a motor of technological innovation, and offers a framework for analysing how nationalised security is a core source of and platform for innovation in a settler colonial context. It explores a range of concepts that shape and form a conceptual frame that seeks to merge ideas on the links between settler colonialism, nationalism, innovation, and security. It investigates how nationalism, settler colonialism, and the notion of technological nationalism are entangled in the genealogy of the Israeli security industry and practices. The chapter also offers some perspectives on how to merge or co-think the military industrial complex with innovation processes, ideas on nationalism, sovereignty, and techno-nationalism. This provides the advanced tools necessary to analyse how security technologies are developed and deployed in the broader context of a national colonial project and a process of rapid industrialisation. The framework is composed so as to understand both the material and ideational forces (and their internal dynamics) that shape and form security and provide it with meaning. This is why the research examines Zionism’s security rites as an instance of technological nationalism. 63 The chapter is organised into three subsections. While this format is not meant to suggest a decoupling of theoretical concepts, it allows room for discussion at different levels of abstraction. First, the chapter outlines the intertwining dynamics and processes of settler colonialism and connects it to the broader ideas of racialised nation making and state building that lie at the heart of the study. By suggesting a range of relationships between racialisation, colonialism, statehood, and war, I indicate an analytic approach toward Zionism as an instance of nationalist calculation and practice that rests on particular historical experiences and the socialisation of an imagined community into a racialised state structure. The second part of the chapter moves on to instill the conundrum of nation-state relations into the perspective of technological nationalism and national systems of innovation (NSI). It does so by arguing for a constructivist approach to the making and shaping of technology. Finally, I suggest an alternative approach to studying the military-industrial complex by providing some ideas as to how security should be understood as a mode of governance and a source and platform of innovation that is not only contingent on national structures but is part of the structures’ substance. In its analytical matrix, the thesis sits between the more abstract and general and the very concrete and specific (Lund 2014). To stress the link between universality and historical particularities, this chapter seeks to move between general perspectives on state power and its origins and effects and more specific localised and historically situated perspectives on how this has prevailed in the case of Zionist mobilisation for nationhood. The key contention that underpins the combined theoretical assemblage is that the articulation of cultural hegemony through the political and economic forces at play happens across different levels operating simultaneously (Worth 2009). 2.2 Nation-state incongruence and state-sponsored nationalism In more conventional avenues of international security research, especially the neorealist school, it is assumed that that nationalism can be approached as a ‘force amplifier’ or simply a ‘technology’ that allows states to extract its resources as well as manpower, which enables preparations for war (see, for example, Clausewitz and Ropoport 1982; Mearsheimer 2011). However, in order to grasp the roots of this force as a source of social and economic power, this reductive interpretation seems too simplistic and lacks an understanding of how the nation is formed and shaped. Moreover, there is insufficient explanatory power in instrumentalist views that economic changes make it both expedient and necessary for states to promote the creation of homogeneous populations. Claims such as Gellner’s – that the emergence of nationalism followed the particular demands that changes in 64 weaponry, doctrines, and tactics placed on states throughout the course of the eighteenth century – suggests that military requirements paved the way for nationalism (Gellner 1983). However, this argument does not account for the ways in which nations develop. This nationalism-as-technology interpretation is also problematic because it deduces the process from the outcome without looking deeper and confuses the relationship between nationalism and technology. Such confusion then leads to an overly functionalist explanation about the rise of nationalism and its relationship to science, innovation, technology, and security. Rather than reducing and instrumentalising the origins and rise of nationalism to an innovation, it is highly pertinent to reverse this analytical prism by asking how nationalism and when in the context of a state project its associated state-sponsored nationalism are sources of innovation (of security technology) and how in turn innovation has provided time-space specific conditions for realising nationalist goals. This calls for a better definition of the national, and of nationalism and its relation to state power. The analysis of this thesis is informed by an understanding of how the concept of nation – as a social entity – and the formation of state-sponsored nationalism are central to innovative processes. By drawing from modernist and post-structuralist perspectives on nationalism and state-society relations, I argue here for a conceptualisation of nationalism as a force that comes into shape through the formation of its inner and outer boundaries and through the constantly negotiated incongruence between nation and state. In short, I wish to substantiate how the construction of the nation is a performance of ideological power combined with lucid economic tactics contained by a nationalising force. I do not present a comprehensive debate on nationalism here, but rather define and operationalise some key ideas as to what constitutes the national in order to relate it to settler colonialism and the study of technologies and security that appears in the later sections. Thinking the national Nations in general are not primordial givens (Denes 2011). They are the outcome of exercises in social engineering, including the fabrication of kinship patterns (Denes 2011b; Hobsbawm 1983). Haas refers to the nation as a ‘socially mobilized body of individuals, believing [or imagining] themselves to be united by some set of characteristics that differentiate them from outsiders, striving to create or maintain their own state’ (Hass 1986, 726). Nations have been advanced as direct outcomes of the conscious efforts of actors (Hechter 2000) whose exercises in social engineering (Hobsbawm 1983) invoke kinship patterns intentionally contrived by the scholarly efforts of intellectuals and more broadly by social and political engineers of a nascent political, national movement (Denes 2011a). 65 This thesis’ research draws on this constructivist approach, which suggests that the study of nationalism ask about the ways and techniques with which the national communities are imagined and produced. As Anderson (1983) proposes, that ‘if nations are imagined to involve a deep horizontal comradeship’, an analysis must trace knowledge to determine the ‘peculiar style in which they are imagined’ (Anderson 1983: 15-16). Anderson grants importance to the specific knowledge involved in a given articulation of a national idea. In this light, nations and nationalism in general should be understood by asking which epistemic and material configurations made it possible initially to engage in the articulation of the nation as an imagined political community that is both inherently limited and sovereign. And, by extension, how does nationalism succeed in creating a sociological landscape with a presumed fixity? Clearly an inquiry into state-society relations motivates a nuanced view of state power. While state and nation should not be conflated, neither should state power be seen as a unitary, homogenous force. In general, state-formation is more commonly attended to by processes of ‘institutionalised coercion’ (Mann 2005). In his seminal work, Tilly defines state-building as consisting of measures that ‘produce territorial consolidation, centralisation, differentiation of the instruments of government, and monopolization of the means of coercion’ (Tilly 1975: 42). Hansen and Stepputat (2001), inspired by Foucault, describe the state as the effect of a wider range of dispersed forms of power, while Dean, from the perspective of governance or governmentality, has shown that unitary and condensed images of the state can be an obstacle to identifying politics as the ways in which social life is made governable (Dean 1999: 25). This leads to a problematisation of the state as a (material) object of study, both in concrete and abstract terms, while continuing to take the idea of the state seriously. In Foucault’s work, the transition from political control (sovereignty) over territory to the art of government is captured in the notion of governmentality. In order to understand the ideological frame of a national project, one needs to look at the conditions enabling its realisation, including state policies (of technological innovation). Nationalisms rarely materialise as stable institutional units. Rather, they fracture when they encounter an unfinihed or incomplete state to contain their identity and emancipatory ideas. The lack of congruence between national community and state format marks the starting point for new struggles and forms of dissent. Therefore, the conceptual separation between the state and society is an important analytical tool to convey the mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion in the dynamics of those domains. While the ideals of nationalist movements’ aspirations are almost never realised, a central part of state formation should be understood as the sovereign’s, i.e. the state’s attempts to install population design through the development of an organised body of coercive measures. As Gellner 66 notes, there is a nationalist principle based on European experiences that the political and national unit should be congruent. Like other ideological/national visions, the ideal of harmony rests on reaching the point when ‘population’ folds into nation’, as Thacker asserts in his account of biopolitics (Thacker 2005: 36). Moreover, the design of the state relies on the technologies in place to limit the scope of nationhood and the development of administrative capacities of coercion. Incongruence rests on a vision of congruence, which in practice can cast off social (violent) struggles, where the remedial ends of achieving state-nation congruence becomes a form of political practice. The conditions of unachieved congruence between nation and state, discussed in Brubaker’s seminal work on the notion of ´nationalising nationalism’ (Brubaker 1996), is critical to the formation of national practices. In Brubaker’s view, incongruence stems from a refusal to negotiate the incongruence between nation and state, i.e. the inability of the state or the sovereign to align its practices with national community practices due to the presence and/or interference of those external to the national community. Throughout history, struggles to establish congruence have been far from smooth. As Wimmer highlights in the European cases of nation building and state formation, the processes and struggles have been intrinsically linked to the vocabularies and practice of ethnic cleansing and ethnocide (Wimmer 2002: 3). In fact, nationalism in Wimmer’s inquiry is evaluated as an appeal for a state-mediated creation of order and stability that is not confined to specific geographical locales. This means that if the ensuing incongruence is not remedied and the human and territorial terrains are not unified in a homogenous national-state complex, measures of ethnocidal state building can be invoked. Thus, rather than modifying the ideal correspondence between a national construct and a state structure, the dominant version of (military, economic, or demographic) nationalism rests on a vision of exclusionary kinship structures (Denes 2011a: 20). Disrupted nation state ideals provide the impetus for state repression and exclusion in order to secure the vision kinship closure that represents the (utopian) merge of nation and state9. To summarise: the formation of nationhood is a reciprocal process between internal and external forces involving irredentist struggles and incongruence between national visions and the conduct of state power. This struggle is charged with meaning, especially when considering the relationship between the national and the tenets of the enterprise of settler colonialism. 9 On a side note, while the ever-imprecise condition of nationhood is a common feature of nation making, in the case of Zionism it has remained a central concern for the national engineers, a mobilising tool and a source of constant renegotiation over the meaning of the national. 67 Settler colonialism Studies of nationalism also involve looking at the relational ‘other’ and the binary dynamic of conflicting national narratives. Given the evolutionary character of a nation, its power and legitimacy can be limited by the existence of other surrounding nationalisms. In settler-colonial projects, the struggles of national claims to land are key. While settler colonialism and its associated nationalism definitely hinge on and grow from an idea or an imagined community, there are fundamental differences. In both instances, dominant groups subjugate social imaginaries of less powerful groups in society. However, they differ in the geopolitical or territorial dimension. Because vernacular nationalism (as in the case of Arab nationalism) can in fact have much in common with metropolitan representations, in the settler colonial context of Israel-Palestine two conflicting national imaginaries mirror the conflict over land. The variations of colonialism have impacted the way we understand and study their effects. The minimum distinction is the difference between orchestrated subjugation of native resources to imperial economies and the systematic erasure of native life to make way for successor societies. The latter, according to Fredrickson, is pure settler colonialism (Denes 2011a; Fredrickson 1988). The ‘pure, non-mixed colony’ (a colony based on the settlers’ own labour power) stands in contrast to the plantation colony model. The former involves settling land permanently, while settler colonialism is considered pure colonialism. In the latter, the employed labour consists of local or indentured labour; in the case of a ‘mixed- colonies’ model, both settlers and indigenous populations are involved in the labour market (Shafir 1996, 2005). Wolfe refers to settler colonialism as a structure of elimination (Wolfe 2006, 2012) when he addresses the forms of settler colonial pursuits that are central to the more specific variety of pure settler colonialism (Shafir 1996). Turner describes the emancipatory nature of this endeavour in his seminal account of American settler colonialism: ‘The spaces of frontier labour represented a new field of opportunity, a gate of escape from the bondage of the past’ (Turner 1921: 38). Wolfe’s (2006) perspective presents settler colonialism as both entailing a positive and a negative side. It attempts to dissolve native societies, while simultaneously erecting a new colonial society on the expropriated land base. It is exactly the binary between the act of dispossession and improvement of life and expansion of space for the settler that underlines the settler colonial features of Zionism. Settler-colonialism is a both a complex social formation and a continuous reworking of what nationalism (in this case Zionism) means as it evolves over time (Wolfe 2006: 390). It allows the settler population to expand at the expense of the land and livelihood of the natives. As Denes describes it, the generation of 68 nationhood takes place through a relational opposition or in a ‘dyad’ between what was before and what came after, i.e. between settler and native (Denes 2011a). The peculiar forces of pure settler colonialism lie in this dyad of destruction and construction. Being a settler colonial state means in the most fundamental terms that a structure based on a rule of the (racial) difference between groups of people exists (namely natives/indigenous, settlers/colonisers, and occupier/occupied). These binaries are governed by a politics of different human worth. Butler (2003) evaluates the moral political economy of human worth. She describes this as a process of ‘differential allocation of grievability’, whereby decisions are made on a discursive basis or ‘the cultural frames for thinking the human’ and shaping the rules that determine who falls outside ‘the category of human’ (Butler 2003: xv). It is through this process that the decision is made that ‘some lives are grievable, and others are not’ (Butler 2003: xv). In turn, this dominant discourse ‘operates to produce and maintain certain exclusionary conceptions of who is normatively human’ or a part of ‘the nation’ (Butler 2003: xiv-xv). Butler’s meta-perspective can inspire an analysis of the ways in which state institutions, including security and military apparatus, have governed through exclusion of minorities or natives (its relational ‘other’) and sought to consolidate itself as a nation through a politics of difference. What is important about national (imagined) communities is not only that they are constructed, but also how and with what tools that construction occurs. Moreover, as nationalism is connected to a settler colonial project, we must consider how conflicting narratives (and power relations) are woven into the struggle over land or rather, in the systematic replacement process. In the context of Zionism (and other national movements), the construction of the community based on a racialised reading of the nation is key to the settler colonial process. Consequently, understanding the mechanisms of the racial state is crucial. Nation, state and ‘race’ The question of state-sponsored national representation touches upon the fundamental question of the racial state (Goldberg and Solomos, 2002; Goldberg, 2006). The relationship between race, racism, and nationalism is a complex one (Barkan 1992; Gilroy 2000). Several scholars have dealt with various aspects of the relationship between race as a fictive device and its relation to power. Foucault’s accounts of biopower (1977) demonstrate how the co-constitution of states and populations depart from ‘anterior logics of nationalist purification’ (Denes, 2011a: 20). Fundamentally, the racial state is not static in the institutional sense, but a political force that fashions and is fashioned by economic, legal, and cultural forces. Racial configurations facilitate the fabrication of order based on myths and memory and are 69 an impetus for both the discursive production and the ideological rationalisation of modern state power. Racial states manage economically by determining both ideological and practical access and closure (Goldberg 2002). Notions of kinship and race are aligned in racial states. As Alonso argues, kinship is a strong tool for order making: ‘Kinship tropes substantialize hierarchical social relations and imbue them with sentiment and morality’ (Alonso 1994: 384). Joseph and Nugent term this historical co-definition of race and the state, which in their modern manifestations rests on state articulation of racially configured and racist commitments (Joseph and Nugent 1994). And as Tilly tells us, the apparatuses and technologies employed by modern states have ‘served variously to fashion, modify, and reify the terms of racial expressions, racist expression and subjugation’ (Tilly in Goldberg 2002: 235; Tilly 1994). The notion of race is not to be understood as a category of analysis, but, as Brubaker demonstrates, as an analytical strategy to understand social and political practices constructing notions of race (Brubaker and Cooper 2000: 5). Rather than accepting any myth of otherness or apartness, the analysis incorporates the notion of race as a staging of distinctiveness – what Brubaker and Cooper refer to as the ‘political fiction’ of the racialised nation (Brubaker and Cooper 2000: 5). This means that the reproduction of a political myth (of raciality) remains an analytical point about how difference is constructed (in the case of this thesis, through security). In Goldberg’s view, the racial state is not merely or reductively because of the racial composition of its personnel or the racial implications of its policies. Rather: States are racial more deeply because of the structural position they occupy in producing and reproducing, constituting and effecting racially shaped spaces and places, groups.... They are racial, in short, in virtue of their modes of population definition, determination and structuration (Goldberg 2002: 104). This means that states have acquired part of their modernity through racial assumptions. This resonates particularly with the logics of colonial regimes, as the historical trajectory of the colonial state developed in relation to European discovery, pacification, commerce, and rational administration of non-Europeans. In this light, it makes sense to wonder about the implications of state-based r acialisation of governance. What we can conclude from this iteration of scholarly input is that the racialisation of national practices takes place through the vector of the racial state. 70 However, in a settler colonial context, the incongruence between national and state is an inherent feature and a permanent source of struggle and instability. What remains is a theorisation of the role that innovation and technologies (of security) play in remedying these conflicts. The next chapter conceptualises how state and nationhood come to match, correlate, and even clash, but perhaps more critically, how nationalism and technology intertwine in the creation of nation and statehood. 2.3 Technological nationalism and national systems of innovation In 1934, Mumford called for a better understanding of the dominant role of technology in modern civilisation, which he saw as linked to the ideological and social preparation for modernisation. As he saw it, ‘the machine has become a substitute for God or of an orderly society’ (Mumford 1934: 4). Approaching science as either non-political or determinant cannot adequately describe the role and scientific practice and technology of society. Indeed, decades of research of sociological and constructivist approaches to the study of science and technology have rendered this implausible. More common today is the suggestion that science is political, or more succinctly, that science is inevitably, intrinsically, or essentially political (Blume 1974: 1; see also Frickel and Moore 2006). Here science is understood as the body of knowledge widely accepted by the scientific community, and concurrently as technology that encompasses both hardware and knowledge of the industrial arts (Layton 1974). In a more Foucauldian mode, science is a mechanism and tool codified in human practice for managing or manipulating a (social) object: The techniques that permit one to determine the conduct of individuals, to impose certain end or objectives. That is to say, techniques of production, techniques of signification or communication, and techniques of domination (Foucault 1993: 203). Consequently, in constructivist technology studies, technology is not only about productivity and mechanics, it is also about innovation and changes. As a dynamic, change through innovation can radically change the process of production and come to redefine the relationship between humans and technology. Certainly, science and technology are connected to normative choices and political engagement (Bijker 2009). While a long lineage of work insists that ‘the biggest and the best’ are guarantees of democracy and freedom (Winner 1980), key scholars in the critical 71 sociological camps of science and technology have worked to emancipate science from society, to democratise science (Bijker 1992), or to show the ‘dark side’ of science and technology (which is part of the rationale for this study). In the larger, general sense, constructivist approaches to science and technology have worked under the concept of the social shaping of technology (SST) or the social construction of technology (SCOT) (see for example Pinch and Bijker 1984) or the sociology of scientific knowledge (SSK), which often has a strong political economy focus. Constructivist studies of science and technology come in a wide variety, from mild to the more radical (Sismondo 1993). The mild or moderate versions merely stress the importance of including the social context when describing the development of science and technology (e.g. Douglas 1987; Kranakis 1997). Although rarely explicitly discussed, it is fair to say that these authors assume a realist ontology of technology. The more radical or critical versions of constructivism, which this research reflects, argue that the content of science and technology is socially constructed. Radical constructivist studies of science and technology share the same background, have similar aims, and are even being conducted by some of the same authors (Barnes and Bloor 1982; Collins 1985, 2001). Here, the truth of scientific statements and the technical working of machines are not derived from nature; they are constituted in social processes and are contingent on power relations that are embedded into the making of technology. This thinking is unfolded later in this thesis in the context of settler colonialism (and warfare), which carries both constructive and destructive features (Wolfe 2006), power relations and the drive to install order through social hierarchies are the source of innovation. While it is risky to say that things do not matter at all, Edge and Williams usefully identify three core analytical handles to grasp in order to analyse not only the form of technology but also its social implications: –– –– –– The direction and the rate of innovation; The form of technology, including the content of the artefacts and practices; and The outcomes of technological change for different groups in society (Williams and Edge 2006). Thus, the challenge is to elaborate a model for analysing the social process of technological change. The methodological relativism offered by the Social Shaping of Technology model (SST) allows us to address technologies as many ‘things’ that normally are not considered as technologies, for example cities (Aibar and Bijker 1997; Hommels 2005), economic markets (Pinch and Swedberg 2008), 72 and even family units and relations (Thompson 2005). In the context of the present research, it makes sense to speak of security as both a system of technologies and a form of applied science expressed through socio-technological artefacts and systems. In the larger sense, this way of approaching science and technology belongs to the scholarly camp of SST, which explores which patterns and instances of social shaping the design of technology follows. Approaching technology from a constructivist perspective, i.e. assuming that technology is socially (and politically) constructed, offers a conceptual framework for politicising technological cultures and to better understand how society (including politics) is technically built. Technological culture consists of sociotechnical ensembles that prove there are choices behind the design of artefacts and that the trajectory of innovation systems reflects the ‘general characteristics of a society’s technological ensemble’ (Williams and Russell 1988: 11). In fact, we should not think of technology in terms of singular artefacts, but more as holistic systems and interconnected units. This approach suggests both an implicit critique of technological determinism, i.e. that technology determines social and economic life, and a warning not to take technology for granted in the social sciences. While social scientists take technology for granted far too often, neither should a (political) analysis accept any dominant rhetoric of technology. This research rejects the economist approach, which is often based on the neo-classical assumption that technologies will emerge readily in response to market demands (Coombs et al. 1987). However, it also warns of analyses that reduce the material to social interplay and relations only. I suggest approaching technology (and technological change) as a socio-technical ensemble or a technological system (Hughes 2004) that includes both social and technological elements. The latter notion of ensemble is less restrictive because it motivates questions about the impact of technology on society and activates the metaphor of a seamless web of technology and science deployed in Hughes’s technological systems approach. Perhaps the broadest concept is the notion of a technological culture that invites inclusion of constructivist arguments and questions about society and cultural specificities writ large. I argue that we need to take artefacts seriously and pay attention to the characteristics of technological objects. Such a study can be conducted by looking at how artefacts contain political properties, and consequently study both the mechanics and effects of the technologies (Bijker 1995). As Winner’s asks, ‘do artefacts have politics?’ (Winner 1980). The short answer to that question is yes, they do. However, the real question is, what are these politics? (Bijker 2006). 73 The research for this thesis also highlights the politics of technology (Winner 1980) in order to sustain the argument that ‘technology is politics pursued through other means’ (Latour 1988), which is an analysis that entails a social explanation of a piece of science or of an artefact (Latour 2000: 107). Across the spectrum of (critical) science and technology studies, scholars have sought to classify different kinds of politics within science. Shapin and Schaffer distinguish three ways that science is conceived as political: first, the scientific community is a political community; second, science plays a role in politics outside the laboratory; and third, there is a conditional relationship between the polity of scientists and the wider polity (Shapin, Schaffer and Hobbes in Brown 2014). Similarly, Bijker (2006) suggests even more ways in which technology is political. They show different ways that science is political, but as Brown’s critique notes, the research rarely explains fully what it means for science to be political (Brown 2014). Through this analysis, I seek to remedy Brown’s critique by analysing both the genesis and effect of political science (and technology). I analyse nationalist aspirations, state-sponsored nationalism, and racialised colonial visions as key sources of innovation and of the shaping of technology. To summarise: the production of technology is a site of politics as well as a site of innovation. Science and technology mediate the struggles between national forces, and as such become a core pillar in the evolution of both nationalist ideas and practice and pave the way for their insertion into state institutions. The next chapter examines the connection between the technology and nationalist impulses and structures, how they form national socio-technical systems as part of ideational and material nation building. The ‘national dream’ is technological A dominant stream in high-modernity and post-colonial developmentalist nationalisms has established the belief that technology is a key tool to realise the nation and a vector for measuring the success of the nation and state (as described by Mitchell 2002). This corresponds with Anderson’s (1983) exhortation to consider the conditions needed to ‘think’ the nation and the way in which this is articulated not only by intellectuals but as performed convictions fused by both material practice and discursive ideas and between elite ideas and popular practices. (See Hroch’s argument in his ideal-type description of the (uneven) path from elite ideal to popular consensus, Hroch 2004: 81). However, scholars have spent less time analysing how settler colonial national projects have used technological production and innovation to construct their nation, conduct differentiated state policies, and mediate the relationship between nation and state by excluding innovation and deployment of security practices. 74 Adria argues that ‘technology limns the identity of the modern nation state. Under the surface of technology’s metallic sheen, political and cultural conflicts are accommodated, resolved or set aside’ (Adria 2010: 45). To go beneath this surface, I argue that technological nationalism in a settler colonial context hinges on security innovation and that innovation depends on the social bias of the nation-state complex. In 1986, Charland cogently wrote that the national dream is ‘an instance of technological discourse’ (Charland 1986: 196), and is often closely tied to technological progress and breakthroughs. In Charland’s view, technological discourse rearticulates a rhetoric that gives rise to the materialisation of nationalism. He refers to this as ‘technological nationalism’, which refers to the rhetorical use of technology for the purpose of developing a nationalist project (Charland 1986: 197). This concept combines the idea of technological progress with the sentiments and goals of nationalism, where the state seeks legitimacy for its actions by ‘rhetorically creating a nation that mirrors its own objectives’ (Adria, 2010: 46). In fact, Charland argues that technological nationalism is the state’s raison d’etre, whereby the very story of a nation depends on technology. While the concept accentuates ideologies rather than technological policies (although the two often conflated), techno-nationalism is often used to underscore the role that the authorities of the nation-states play as policy makers in the field of science and technology, and, implicitly, of the national geographical spaces where the relative measures turn out to be effective (Nelson and Rosenberg 1993). In this way, technological nationalism examines the rhetorical devices and techniques within nationalist projects relative to their adoption of technology as both medium and subject. The literature on techno-nationalism diverges on the question of whether technology is a cause or an outcome of nationalism. This divergence relies on a differentiation between viewing technology as a social process or as a system (that hinges on social processes). Anderson (1983) describes cultural narratives and commitment as a precursor and mobiliser of technology, i.e. national sentiments and structures as a condition for technological advancement. By contrast, the technology as effect approach assumes pre-existing national sentiments that thrive and spread through the exploitation of technology and the fostering of technological advances (Amir 2004, 2007). In this perspective, nationalism is seen as an impetus for technological advancement. 75 Amir describes the ways in which nationalist rhetoric influences the symbolic and physical construction of technical artefacts. In his analysis of technological nationalism and the Indonesian aircraft industry, he lists three functions of technological nationalism. First, it functions as a medium of national integration of social and cultural forces in national sentiments through ‘the sublime of technological systems and artefacts’ (Amir 2007: 284). Second, technologies are not merely physical objects but are constituted by collective symbolism, experiences, myths, and languages and histories blended together, and third, technological nationalism serves to mediate political and cultural interpretations of nationalist spirits. Amir’s approach is well developed in studies of Asian nationalist movements where rhetoric about progress has been deployed to install legitimacy. To reconcile the cause-effect debate, Poster argues for what he calls a ‘profound bond with machines’ (Poster 1999: 236) in order to dissolve the cause-and-effect approach, which means that technology is both a cause and an effect of nationalism. This reflects a move from a social constructivist approach to technology to a view of technology and society as co-constituting. Drawing on Poster’s dialectical approach, this research approaches technology and nationalism as existing in a dialectical relationship that recognises the ideological basis of social action. Nationalism’s progress can be traced by the social trajectory of certain technologies, which means that the evolution of a certain community influences the emergence of innovation patterns that might reveal path-dependent (Page 2006) or even locked-in (Arthur 1989) modes of production and innovation. In more concrete terms, the community influence can shape the perception of different innovative priorities (e.g. civil rather than military) and the implementation of specific innovative structures, e.g. research and development (R&D) departments. In more critical accounts, technological-nationalism is viewed as a rhetorical strategy to gain political power, as ‘technology promotes a cultural experience in the service of national interests’ (Charland, 1986). Rather than choosing either perspective, it makes sense to present a taxonomy of the relationship between security production and technological nationalism as mutually constitutive forces, particularly in the context of settler colonialism, where the national systems of innovation and expansion of territory and its exploitation are intertwined. Techno-globalism versus techno-nationalism Techno-globalism and techno-nationalism have become two core issues in the economics of technological change; both have important theoretical and empirical implications (for a useful discussion see Edgerton 2007). In the literature on the relationship between nationalism and technology, two camps have developed that display a divergence in how the roots of innovation are viewed. Stressing how 76 global trends and structures have penetrated spheres of innovation and production since the 1960s, a range of critics has challenged the emphasis of the nation in the study of technology. The so-called globalists claim that national and, in general, regional boundaries have become increasingly irrelevant for both state-owned and private security companies, which already act and move in virtual globalised spaces (see, for example, de la Mothe and Paquet 1996), and often assume that technology turns the world into a ‘global village’, thereby eliminating the national level as the level of analysis. By contrast, the nationalist or localist camp (see, for example, Becattini and Rullani 1996) emphasises that material and immaterial resources (such as intellectual capital) are crucial platforms for systems of innovation to be globally competitive. Innovation-centric, techno-nationalist understandings are central to national histories of technologies. The nationalist perspective assumes that the key unit of analysis for the study of technology is the nation, and that innovative state units have R&D budgets and cultures that diffuse and use technologies. As far as the theory is concerned, the solution to this techno-globalism/techno-nationalism dilemma depends on the choice of the relevant unit of analysis for studying technological change. This point has been clearly recognised by the literature on the national systems of innovation, which has recently become a more eclectic and geographically neutral innovation approach (Edquist 1997). The dilemma is even more crucial from an empirical point of view because different economic policy actors and different science and technology policy measures turn out to be effective depending on which scenario is deemed the most relevant. While the systemic approach of national innovation favours the ‘localist’ perspective, it makes sense to determine how the relationship between techno-globalisation and national innovation systems operates. As Edgerton argues, the claim of nations and states to techno-nationalism can be risky. Indeed, it is important to think not only of nation-technology but also of technology-state relations (Edgerton 2007), including the relationship between state and the position of technology at the global level. From a political economy perspective, the insistence on the national relates to the role designated to the state in the global economy. Both Marxist and globalist perspectives place the state as a ‘political nodes in the global flow of capital’, where the state actually becomes a form of class relations that constitutes global capitalist relations (Burnham 2002). This approach, as presented by Nitzan and Bichler, gives the state as well as other national actors a limited regulatory role reproducing global hegemony (Nitzan and Bichler 2002). As Bonefeld argues: 77 The state itself cannot resolve the global crisis of capital. It can however, enhance its position in the hierarchy of the price system by increasing its efficiency of capitalist exploitation operating within its boundaries (Bonefeld et al. 1995). However, not giving credence to state-society practices runs the risk of under estimating the power and impact of more specific social practices, which also gives political projects their constitutive force in the material world. Therefore the already described social base of the state structures the system of innovation, which cannot be reduced to global capitalist relations. Thus, in order to avoid capital-centric analyses, I argue that the mediation of nation-state relations and the proliferation of a specific techno-nationality and boundedness to territory are key factors in technological innovation. This is the case in particular in a settler colonial context where the nation-state incongruence is an intrinsic feature of the drive to innovate. Thus the central question is, how technology has national roots or character? Montresor’s (2001) work on technological systems (TS) addresses a variety of components of this system that can support an understanding of how innovation platforms connect to state practice. These components include 1) the notion of techno-territoriality, where technological innovation is tied to specific land and its resources, 2) the notion of techno-sovereignty, which is defined by the institutional setup, and 3) the notion of techno-nationality. Or, as Patel and Pavitt (1991) suggest, techno-localism is a conceptualisation of innovation with linkages to specific contexts. In Montresor’s view, techno-nationality (2001) involves the cohesion of innovative agents, i.e. a community with shared knowledge, culture, and ideology. In terms of ideology, the celebration of the ‘inventive citizen’ has been an important part of modern nationalism everywhere. As a result of this emphasis on national inventiveness, the relationships of nations and technology are particularly prone discussion in terms of invention and innovation. In this way, the concept of techno-citizenship or techno-nationality speaks to the notion of the SST camp. Here ‘relevant social groups of potential users’ (Pinch and Bijker 1984: 414) shape and drive the choice of a certain technological configuration. In a settler colonial setting this notion of producer and user is particularly pertinent as the innovation process in itself is biased towards a ruling strategy based on racial imaginations and ethnocratic features. 78 Techno-nationalism is not to be seen as solely instrumental, but as governed by dominant, fluid self-understandings and collective narratives rather than self- interest per se. This perspective incorporates the relevant social-economic context, which is not driven by masked strategic devices. While the new knowledge produced through techno-national mechanisms relies on the institutional set-up and the production structure, there is ample space to take into account power relations and the historically formed context of innovation. At the same time, the social shaping of technology provides a more general connection with techno-nationality recalling the notion of a ‘society’s technology ensemble’ (Russel and Williams 1988: 11). While the techno-nationality component embraces the importance of the national, the penetration of global forces of capital and borderless innovation has spurred a debate on the fallacies of speaking of innovation within the framework of the national. Taking these arguments into consideration, this research holds that techno- national systems of innovation still matter. In a settler colonial perspective, this assumption is even stronger because the desire to settle territory and make it appropritate to intervention is indisputably dependent on innovation and industrial development. The distinction between state and nation in evaluating the effects of globalisation on technology is crucial, especially in the case of settler colonial regimes where the settler community (in this case the Jewish community) deploys state policies as tools to exclude non-members of the envisioned nation. I contend that colonial national movements relying on a certain communality of language and (historically) formed institutional settings which works as an enabler of innovation is particularly pertinent in the context of an evolving process of state and nation making such as Zionism. Moreover, the techno-globalist perspective is critical when exploring the export dynamics of outputs of the innovation. The following section demonstrates how the idea of a national structure of innovation (NSI) is an integral part of the field of techno-nationalism. Structures of innovation So far, I have proposed that when analysing technological production, the unit of analysis of system should be the system, the ensemble, and the culture. When seeking to unfold the genesis and effects of a national system of innovation, it is crucial to refrain from deriving explanatory value from singular technologies. Techno-nationalism is implicit not only in any number of national histories of technology, but also in many policy studies of national systems of innovation. This chapter argues that ideas of globalised innovation or techno-globalism cannot fully capture the innovation process, and discusses why it is pertinent to add the 79 dimension of nationalism (as practice and ideology) to the study of innovation (of security and warfare technology). Since it first proliferated in the 1930s, the literature on innovation has moved progressively from the level of the individual towards larger organisations. While Schmookler (1966) focuses on demand and market determinants, Freeman looks at the role of R&D institutions within large firms and came to emphasise the role of social and political institutions that accompany technical innovations (Freeman 1987). While Von Hippel (1988) focuses on the impact of inter-firm interaction on processes of innovation, Nelson (1992) focuses on the link between the state and innovation where the state is seen as the key supplier of scientific and technical knowledge to the (security) industry. Over time, the literature broke with past claims and began to focus on collaboration, and in the 1990s the idea of a structurally determined innovation process proliferated. This development opened up a broader debate on the link between the national and innovation processes, which today provides significant theoretical battleground for a growing school of innovation studies. Freeman points to how the choices between alternative technical solutions are strongly rooted in the specific history of the nation-states (Freeman 1987). Based on List’s (1909 (1841)) concept of national system of production, Lundvall was the first to coin the idea of a national system of innovation (NSI) (Lundvall 2010; Godin 2009; Komninos 2006). The idea of an NSI is key to understanding the social and political bias of industrial production and more broadly, the mediation between nation and state, which is based on the key argument that domestic interaction can explain the national system of innovation. Today the systemic nature of the innovative process (Edquist 1997) seems almost indisputable. Within the NSI school, the study of innovation structures engages both the social and economic embedding of modes of production that is closely linked to the basic tenets of technological nationalism. The core of the NSI concept is to approach innovation as a network of public-private institutions for initiating, producing, and diffusing new technologies (Freeman 1987), which is an institutional setting that affects both production and marketing processes (Edquist 2000). Proponents of the NSI approach claim that national systems of innovation are ‘the network of institutions in the public and private sectors whose activities and interactions initiate, import, modify, and diffuse new technologies’ (Edquist 1997: 8). In both Freeman and Edquist’s analyses, learning through networking and by interacting is seen as the crucial force in organising clusters and the essential ingredient for the ongoing success of an innovative cluster. Clusters are the result of complex interactions between different kinds of agents (such as firms, universities, and public and private research institutes) within specific geographical and historical contexts. 80 Nelson explains the NSI as a structure that is part of a deliberate government policy that includes both state regulation and informal coordination that results in a public stock of knowledge that would develop homogeneity and linkages among national agents of innovation (Nelson 1992). While techno-nationality is formed through the NSI, clearly it is not only states that nurture systems of innovation. Knowledge generation can also take place on sub- and supra- (global, regional) levels. This critique follows Porter’s work on clusters and comparative advantages, where, for instance, geographical proximity and regional bonds are the basis of collaborative innovation (Porter 2000) and not necessarily a pure product of state policy. Within the NSI school, the study of innovation structures engages with both the social and economic embedding of modes of production closely linked to the basic tenets of technological nationalism. Indeed, innovation also relates to how breakthroughs have been inscribed into broader social and economic histories. Thematically and empirically, the intersection of innovation and nationalism has often been studied in relation to a range of historical breakthroughs such as broadcasting (Charland 1986), communication (Deutch 1953), and printing (Anderson 1983). As Winner notes: ‘scarcely a new invention comes along that someone does not proclaim it the salvation of a free society’ (Winner 1980: 122). Some studies emphasise the particularly fertile role of the military in innovation, for example, the close ties between radio technology and the military. However, in general there has been less focus on the ‘dark side’ of these progressive breakthroughs. While MacKenzie and Spinardi’s (1995) work on nuclear weapon system technology as embedded in a political selection milieu touches upon the socio-technic process of arms production, the wider notion of security as a techno-national system of innovation has yet to be explored fully. In a settler colonial context, the articulation of new technologies relates to the realisation of settler colonial ambitions. Where some techno-national innovations depend on physical domination (such as rail transport or the radio) that is bounded to and annihilates space, a settler colonial perspective takes on both dimensions. In order to connect the central of role of security with the broader question of the link between NSI and settler colonialism, the chapter asks how security can be conceptualised as a nationalised concept and a node of innovation for settler colonial efforts. 2.4 Security as national innovation, security as a substitute It makes better sense in this research to speak of security power, technology, and ontology rather than of military power, technology, and ontology, particularly because in a settler colonial context the drive for security (and its attendant inse- 81 curity) goes beyond outbreaks of violence and warfare. (See Part Three for a more detailed explanation). Security is an innovation-centric technology; it is a source of innovation and requires refined technological innovation. In short, security is a techno-national concept. In the context of analysing a national security economy, the importance assigned to innovation as a process and a national structure is clearly related to the concept of the military industrial complex or the triple-helix system (see Peri 1983, 2005; Etzkowitz and Leydesdorff 2005). Conventional theories of military-industrial relations in particular distinguish between civilian and military sectors in their functionalist approach to civil-military relations (Janowitz 1964; Luckham 1971). Ideas on the military-industrial complex focus on the relationship between the military and manufacturing (the role of military spending on the overall economy) and military competition among nations. Articulation of the concept of the military-industrial complex originated in the 1930s and accelerated in the context of US studies of capitalism in the 1960s and centred on the relationship between government and the defence industry, which led many to warn about the industry’s influence on political decisions (Guéring 1936; Rundquist 1978; Eisenhower 1987). This body of work includes corporate and military power in its analyses of political decision-making, and largely assumes that military bureaucrats, together with businessmen and leaders of the defence sector, have a huge influence on military spending decisions. Yet while military-industrial relations have been studied and theorised largely within the context of the Cold War’s arms race and military spending, Rosen argues that the perspective barely made it into the repertoire of international relations theory (Rosen 1973). While conventional approaches to these complexes critically examine the hidden power dynamics and networks behind military echelons, they fail to incorporate broader schemes of industrialisation and technological innovation into the study of military/security innovation and production. In more critical work, the military industrial complex is most often seen as a coalition of powerful groups and bodies that shares an economic, institutional, and political interest in increasing defence expenditure (Mills 1956), and security and defence companies are seen as highly influential in shaping government definitions of security needs (Kaldor and Schmeder 1997). Consequently, defence industries not only shape industrial production and the interchanges between civilian and military technology sectors, but are also contributory and proactive in the shaping of military engagements in and of themselves (Woodward 2004). According to Woodward, military-industrial and state relations are not merely organisationally close, but form a socio-economic system. 82 Chomsky’s critique of the military-industrial complex as a limited analytical prism is instructive. He argues that the analysis of military production should include not only military/security production but also industries in general (Chomsky in Baraka 2003). This proposal corresponds well with Melman’s seminal work on permanent war economies based on the ideological view of war as a source of economic growth that has produced an economy spawned by military systems as a military form of state capitalism (Melman 1974: 12). The integration of civilian and military economies (including measures to convert technologies) provides civilian strategy with ‘strategic meaning’ (Smit 1994: 600). I argue that the civilian-military divide is further dissolved in a settler colonial context of state and nation building, where security innovation is a key pillar of both ideational and material development10. From a political economy perspective, this research asserts that in a settler colonial system, there is little or no difference between the production of military and civilian technology. As Gummet argues, the military-civilian divide is an institutional rather than an intrinsic distinction: ‘there are no “civilian” and “military” technologies, only military and civilian markers’ (Gummet 1991: 27). This claim is not made to take technology out of its context; it is intended to propose that the labelling of technology as either civilian or military is a reflection of the nature of the institutional setting in which it functions or is being developed without the technology itself showing military or civilian characteristics. In the case of Israel, innovation has been closely tied to a national (or national colonial) project and the state’s war economy. In addition, when speaking of war economy, security makes for a far more sweeping conceptualisation than the military because of the ever-expanding boundaries of security and because all spheres can be connected to it. Both cultural and material militarism, which is central to the social experience of both nation and state building, also shape a national system of innovation. In any military-economic dynamic there is unification of security, order, and accumulation, which is not just formative to war itself but to the ways in which liberal society operates. This force is shaped according to the state’s institutional setup and in order to fit the conditions of disorder or disobedience against the sovereign that can threaten a state and nation building projects and the economic interests herein. Collins refers to the concept of ‘endocolonisation’, which is defined 10 Studies like MacKenzie’s (1990) history of guided missiles, Hecht’s (1998) history of nuclear power in France, and Vaughan’s (1996) account of the US Challenger disaster demonstrate that techno-nationalism can be productive for the analysis of classical political research questions, too. 83 as the socio-economic logic of an era ‘in which war is increasingly indistinguishable from the endless preparation for war’ (Collins 2011: 27). Thus, rather than speaking of military or state of emergency, national settler colonialism is bound into a much more fundamental social construction of national, or homeland security. Reppy argues that a country’s vision of defence can be located in the national system of innovation when the older symbols of military hegemony become less relevant to security systems (Reppy 2000). Here, I suggest that a country’s security vision carries the same potential through the close relationship between the establishments of what security means and the national vision in which the formation of security is embedded. Then how do we approach security as an idea, a techno-national concept, and as a practice? Critique of security Conducting critical work in the security science field has become a ‘dangerous’ endeavour. Using the word security may bring about what one is trying to avoid, as Huysmans (2006) has argued. In other words, the positive connotations attached to the word create an image of security as a public good and a guarantee of security rather than a political project associated with a problematic, heavily loaded term. A wealth of critical security studies has consistently challenged the discourse of maximum security as a managerial discourse whose political roots are masked by an obsession with refining and improving techniques and efficiency (Bigo 2001; Dillon 1996; Neocleous 2008). Rather than just accepting perceptions of security (threats) as the cursor of Israel’s security vision, it is pertinent to embark on what Neocleous has termed a ‘critique of security’ (Neocleous 2008), which asks about the background, narratives, and the meaning of security in a given context. This is done to challenge conventional ways of thinking about security that focus on threat perception or a view on security that Booth famously termed ‘the absence of threats’ (Booth 1991). To push for a more critical view does not mean that there are not real and tangible security threats and needs ‘out there’ that should be managed. Instead, it means that in order to understand how security and order making happens and coalesces, it is necessary to understand security as part of a cohesion-based state making – as part of a political project. 84 In his 1949 novel ‘War is Peace’, George Orwell described the intrinsic relationship between war and peace and how they are mutually dependent and work within the same space of political power (Orwell, 1949). According to Massad, Zionist thinkers reflected on this well before Orwell and implanted it into their colonial strategy: ‘Peace’ will always be the public name of a colonial war, and ‘war’, once it became necessary and public in the form of invasions, would be articulated as the principal means to achieve the sought after ‘peace’ (Massad 2013). Massad further argues that war and peace each hide behind the other as one and the same strategy, thereby blurring the lines between offensive and defensive security provisions. Police work and warfare, therefore, become part of the same enterprise of order making (Neocleous 2014). The obsession and oversaturation of security in our societies play into this confusion. Security extends into broader aims of social control as part of what Khalili, inspired by Kilcullen, captures in the notion of ‘armed social work’ (Khalili 2013). Here, social order is installed through subtle/redirected violence, whereby government and governance tactics incorporate violence into their routines. Certainly policing is often presented as a service to the public, and is seen as encompassing a set of institutions, practices, technologies, and forms of knowledge which aim to establish a ‘regulatory power to take coercive measures to ensure the safety and welfare of the “community”’(Dubber and Valverde 2006: 2). However, from a more critical perspective, policing and warfare are part of the same disciplining project (Neocleous 2014) and, as Amar contends, represent a ruling logic where a high degrees of social difference is equated with dangerous levels of risk (Amar 2009) whereby policing becomes a tool for selective pacification in times of ‘peace’. Moreover, the elision of the use of these techniques of control in counterinsurgency and those deployed in missions of internal policing reflect a blurring of the categories of combatant and civilians (Khalili 2010). Thus, rather than seek to unfold a refined distinction between peace and war, it makes sense to examine how the interconnection between pacification, policing, management, destruction, and warfare are not contradictory forces but make up the settler colonial nexus of power and order making. Neocleous (2014) argues that the liberal orders’ key tactic is pacification. This form of domination entails both war and policing. In his view, security related to military spending, homeland security, policing, imprisonment, and associated industries represents a major economic enterprise with a self-serving rationale of its own (Neocleous 2008). In Neocleous’s view, the 85 ideological separation between war and policing has imposed a banal dichotomy of models on accounts of security, such as the ‘criminological model’ versus the ‘military model’, the ‘militarisation of the police’ and the ‘politicization of the military’, or the coming together of ‘high intensity policing’ with ‘low-intensity warfare’ (Neocleous 2013: 8–9). He also argues that such models ‘obscure the unity of state power…. ‘ (Neocleous 2013: 9). More fundamentally, in order to accept the notion of security as a national system of innovation, we need to comprehend security as an epistemological system that is given meaning by being inscribed into a nationalist project to be realised through a national system of innovation. Security as technology is both an empirical and conceptual artefact in which the idea of a thing and an idea elide. It makes sense to think of security production as a conceptual construction of empirical object deeply embedded in an epistemological system. In this way, security is the artefact: it is a substitution or a ‘placeholder’ for an assembly of nationalist aspiration. Thus, providing a social explanation to security means to replace some object pertaining to nature by another object pertaining to society that can be demonstrated to be its true substance (see Hacking 1990). Foucault’s description of security as an all-encompassing system is quite remarkable: What is involved is the emergence of technologies of security within mechanisms that are either specifically mechanisms of social control, as in the case of the penal system, or mechanisms with the function of modifying something in the biological destiny of species. The general economy of power in our societies is becoming a domain of security (Foucault 2009: 25). The development of technologies is more than a linear, rational progression. It is a component of a messy, co-constitutional relationship between society and culture, whose social norms are embedded within the very specification of technology, which in turn reflects and reproduces certain dominant logics. The reflections of Desrosiéres on statistical reasoning are a useful way to understand how these logics produce certain discourses of truth that can make space open and accessible to intervention. According to Desrosiéres, statistical reasoning is a social mechanism for knowledge selection that transforms certain results into recognised facts (Desrosières 1998). This process can further be illuminated by what Hacking describes as the powerful coupling of ‘there is’ (statistical reasoning) and ‘we must’ (its associated plan for action) (Hacking 1990), which sanctions (political) actions through the production of discursive reasoning. The process of producing knowledge then becomes a sort of biopower, a particular set of information organised to achieve power driven by interests, and in Samman’s work is 86 seen, as a tool to legitimate the ideology of the settler colonial regime by enabling the transformation from perceived (desired) to conceived space (Samman 2013). Over time, these logics have constructed the political landscape and have divided and inscribed the governed bodies with managerial codes based on an ideologically informed politics of difference. Codes relate both to the ideological core of any control regime but also to how the landscape is imprinted with codes that constitute the colonial (security/military) architecture. The innovation around new security technology is then to be perceived as a codification process: it is informed by and produces new codes. In order to identify the technical code for the innovation process, this research looks at how practices of transfer, separation, settlement, and urbanisation have produced a certain way of looking at the world and coping with its problems. It examines how security technology has grown into a global enterprise of security techniques, technologies, commodities, and practices conducted ‘the Israeli way’. In order to do this, it makes sense to analyse the broader issues of the political economy of nation building. I suggest that the scope of the research should be extended to the case of Israel and the Jewish and Palestinian experience of exile and return and how this has been mirrored in the Zionist ideology. Rather than limiting security to a vector of remedies against threats, security in a settler colonial perspective is a national vision, a tool for governing, and a discourse through which to govern. Dillon identifies security as a ‘technique of power’ working as ‘a principle of formation’ (Dillon 1996). The security visions of the actors in the security industry are inherently linked socially, economically, and ethically to the logics of the state. In the political theatre, security closes opposition to further security provisions as the goal of minimisation, sidelines other concerns, and mutes attempts to deconstruct its pretexts. In order to understand how order formation takes place, the ways in which security and insecurity are imagined and practiced by the sovereign carry strong explanatory power. Foucault’s notion of calculated technologies of subjection as part of the pursuit of power and wealth is a useful means by which to provide a broader perspective on the methods and techniques of security technology: If the economic take-off of the West began with the techniques that made possible the accumulation of capital, it might perhaps be said that the methods of administering the accumulation of men made possible a political take-off in relation to the traditional, ritual, costly, violent forms of power, which soon fell into disuse and where superseded by a subtle, calculated technology of subjection (Foucault 1977: 220-221). 87 While Foucault demonstrates the centrality of these techniques to strategies of accumulation, clearly security is a practice resting upon a discursive condition (Hansen 2006). On the discursive level, security strategies are used to counter a perceived threat or as a label for various processes of securitisation. In Collins’s words, to ‘name security’ entails a process of securitisation that serves to mask its deeper aims: ‘Settler colonialism is a political creature that refuses to speak its own name. Instead it speaks of security’ (Collins 2011: 50). As the dominant perception of security produces and organises ‘subjects in a way that is always predisposed towards the exercise of violence in defence of the established order’, security is intimately linked to violence (Neocleous 2008). Deconstructing a security vision is not only about identifying the route to emancipation from insecurity. It is in this imagination of security that the principles of formation and ordering lie. Security becomes a mode and a vision of hierarchical ordering based on the ruling interests and visions of state-bound elites. In the settler colonial context of the Zionist project, the very notion of security is impossible to separate from the settler colonial state’s ideal and visions of ethnic security. This also means an amalgamation of governance, war, and security into one unified system. Security is an idea embedded in broader vision of realising nationalist goals, conducting state practices, and legitimising liberal governance strategies based on differentiated logics of rule. This makes it a techno-national concept, where ideas on nationalism inform technological innovation and technological capacities come to draw the contours of the nation. Security practices, i.e. the deployment of security technology, rely on government strategies and the modes of the strategies of resistance of those subjugated. Consequently, what we should explore more critically is the way in which security and its provisions are imagined, produced, and consumed. In addition, we should pay attention to how insecurities are captured and taken to reflect certain needs of security. And last, we should consider how processes of innovation and the production of associated technology lead buyers and consumers into obsessive cultures of maximum security and an even broader culture of insecurity. 88 2.5 Conclusion In order to understand the relationship between security, state, and national building, the ‘black box of technology must be opened. It needs to be opened to allow the socio-economic patterns embedded in both the content of technologies and the processes of innovation to be exposed and analysed’ (MacKenzie and Wajcman 1985; Bijker and Law 1992; Williams and Edge 1995). The overall aim of this chapter is to provide theoretical input about how technological innovation is directed, selected, and deployed. This implies approaching nationalism as an imagined set of ideas constituting a community of shared beliefs and interests, and seeing the relationship between nationalisms and state practice as struggles of representation and continuous (unattainable) attempts to establish congruence between nation and state. By extension, it has been suggested that the permanence of the incongruence between nation and state so central to settler-colonial struggles are mediated through innovation. However, because settler colonialism provides technology with a mediating role in the sovereign’s strategy of creating a stable relationship between state and nation, this chapter has provided a multifaceted critique of the celebratory ideas and accounts of technological nationalism as emancipatory and democratising. The chapter has also made the case that the concept of technological nationalism can help unfold how the connection between technology, nation making, and state building is both a material and discursive process that is coinscribed with nationalism and colonialism. The chapter has disentangled and explained the notion of Jewish nationalism/ Zionism and the state of Israel as modern techno-scientific society, which is a variant of securitised nationalism enabled by and shaping a national system of innovation based on a state of permanent settler colonial warfare. While state building, nationalism, and militarism have been consistently linked in the literature, the broader notion of security has not been applied to nation and state building to the same degree. Thus, the chapter has suggested taking into account how the intertwining of security, techno-nationalism, and innovation structures produces a particular notion of securitised technological nationalism that works both as a liberal discourse of security practices and as a more explicit recipe for settler colonial warfare developed through the mediation between state and nation. These ideas and perspectives have planted the seeds for the thesis’ two background chapters on the history and nature of Zionism and by extension the social, economic, and industrial history and trajectory of the Israeli security sector. 89 90 CHAPTER THREE 3.0 BACKGROUND I: ZIONISM, NATIONALISED SECURITY, AND ISRAEL’S MOBILISATION FOR NATIONHOOD 3.1 Introduction This chapter unfolds the nationalist thoughts and practices of Zionism as movements and variants amounting to a settler colonial project (Wolfe 2006, 2012). Its analysis details how Zionism represents a case of how human and capital accumulation merge to realise a movement’s goals of national self-determination. This is realised through moves to securitise the entire space of Israel-Palestine by a tightly knit and closely associated system of violence. This system hinges upon the construction and moulding of a nationalised community defined by the ideological measures of inclusion/exclusion. The chapter first unfolds the claim that Zionism is an example of settler c olonialism imbued with a set of particularities. The analysis places Zionism along a continuum of colonial ruling systems in order to draw from both the general and the particular circumstances of the enterprise. It then discusses a range of modalities of settler colonial control, and state and nation making, including the role and nature of structural violence, the notion of Israel as a racial state, and the notions of ethno-classes, and ethnic capital. It introduces a biopolitical perspective on the battlespace of Israel-Palestine and finally, discusses some ideas on the specific nature of Israeli homeland security as an ontological concept and a settler colonial mode of rule. The chapter also provides a historico-conceptual frame to establish key points of Zionism. While the discussion takes a holistic or hegemonised view in order to show the larger contours of the Israel-Palestine, this is not meant to reduce Zionism to one unified experience, narrative, or group. Instead, this exercise allows us to get a handle on what Zionism is in order to discuss its diversity, contradictions, and sub-narratives in the subsequent empirical chapters. 3.2 Zionism as nationalised settler colonialism The case of Zionism and Israeli state building enables us to see some general features of settler colonialism with enhanced clarity (Wolfe 2012). Analysing Zionist nation making as a sophisticated process of social ordering calls for a multifaceted approach that seeks to identify a framework that does not essentialise any ideas of ‘Jewish apartness’ and Zionist experiences to a banal ‘Jewish question’, or to 91 a mere intra-capitalist struggle over territory and means of production. Avoiding these pitfalls requires an approach that seeks to historicise the Zionist experience in the context of broader trends of racialised governance and control, the political economies of militarism, and modern-day war and policing. At no point does this analysis conflate Zionism under one unified system or pretend that it is helpful to ‘fix’ Zionism under a static definition. Rather, the aim is to demonstrate the flexibility through which the materialised practices of social and economic engineering enabled by and enabling the securitisation of the Israel-Palestine complex have prevailed. Historically, Israel was created as a state for the Jewish people. Its founding was based on a (permanent) state of emergency and enacted by legislation based on the ingathering of and granting of citizenship to world Jewry. This took place in a formative period for the entire Middle East region that was marked by the process of state making under and in the aftermath of European colonial rule. By 1917, under the British Mandate in Palestine, Great Britain was required by treaty to implement the provisions of the Balfour Declaration, i.e. securing a ‘National Home for the Jewish People in Palestine’ (Owen 1992: 9). While this account addresses the formation of the Zionist state and the making of the Israeli state, it cannot be detached from the concurrent making of other states in the region, which took place under colonial control, with Britain and France as its ‘masters’ (Owen 1992). It included the drawing of boundaries by external powers that firmly laid the foundation of political life in the region, including many unsolved problems such as disrupted boundaries, nation-state incongruence, and ethnic and religious tension. This process also failed to ensure a state for the region’s ethnic minorities (the Kurds) and the lack of action to doing so by force majeure (the Palestinians) (Owen 1992: 10). The first waves of Jewish immigration to Mandatory Palestine began in the late 1880s and culminated at the time of state formation in 1948. Since 1967, Israel has occupied Gaza, the West Bank, East Jerusalem (unilaterally annexed in 1980), the Egyptian Sinai (from which Israel withdrew in 1982) and the Syrian Golan Heights. Since 1967, the racial governance system of Israel has developed into a fine web of religio-ethnic contingent differentiated rule through the continued occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights11. This 11 92 Since 1967, Israel has fought only one conventional war, in 1973 (and arguably a second in Lebanon in 1982). Since then, it has engaged in a range of attacks and counterinsurgencies in 1978, 1987, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2006, 2008, and 2012 that were connected more or less to the post-1967 occupation. has been supported by the steady institutionalisation of different legal systems depending on the religion, ethnicity, and geographical distribution of people (further refined through different occupational systems in East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank). In very broad terms, this process of Zionist colonisation can be divided into four periods: 1. 2. 3. 4. The pre-state era: initiation of the Zionist movement into the first waves of Jewish immigration to historic Palestine supported by the Jewish National Fund and the World Zionist Organisation in the 1880s, among others. Zionist collaboration with the British – from the 1917 Balfour Declaration to the collaboration with the Palestine British Mandate from 1923–194812. Between 1948–1967 Palestine was divided and further colonisation occurred beyond the borders demarcated in the Partition Plan13. The post-1967 era has been marked by military occupation and settlement construction in the OPT, combined with policing of citizens inside Israel’s internally agreed upon borders. From the outset of Zionist migration to Palestine, the Israeli strategy of building the nation has been two-fold: ‘designing a new Jewish Nation while refashioning Palestine as Jewish’ (Denes 2011: 34). When the nascent state was established in 1948, according to Israeli historian Segev, the new state institutions, in alliance with economic and political elites, established three objectives: 1. 2. 3. 12 13 To prevent the return of Palestinian refugees and expel those who succeeded in returning; To relocate (and occasionally to transfer) the population of partlially empty villages and neighbourhoods and Palestinian villages adjacent to the new borders and to transfer Palestinian-owned lands to Jewish settlements; and To establish political control over the Palestinians and segregate them from the Jewish minority. (Segev 1998). By the end of British colonial rule in the late 1940s, Zionists groups owned 5.8 per cent of the land in Mandatory Palestine. The United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine was a UN proposal intended to follow the termination of the British Mandate. In November 1947, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution recommending the adoption and implementation of the Plan as Resolution 181. The resolution recommended the creation of two independent Jewish and Arab (Palestinian) states and the Special International Regime for the City of Jerusalem. 93 These goals have been pursued through a steady process of colonial expansion and consolidation. In the course of its state making process, the new Israeli government created the Plan Dalet14, which outlined operational orders to destroy Palestinian urban sites and transfer the population to refugee camps in or outside the territory in order to clear space for Jewish settlement (Khalidi 1961). Khalidi describes how Plan Dalet was developed as a ‘master plan for the conquest of Palestine’ that laid out specific coordinates for future settlement and population transfers based on offensive military operations (Khalidi 1988). These practical expressions of future settlement clearly indicate the Zionist movement’s objective to transform British Mandate Palestine into a Jewish state; they are distinctly settler colonial in nature. (Abu El-Haj 2010; Massad 2000; Rodinson 1973; Mansour 1936; Nassar 1911). From 1948 onward, this destruction of Palestinian urban centres resulted in the strategic compartmentalisation of Palestinians in urban yet de-developed (i.e. low level or non/existent development, see Roy 1991) urban centres and zones, installation of a cantonisation process (the dividing into cantons), and efforts to prevent modernisation of urban structures and the industrial production apparatuses. According to a broad spectrum of scholars critical of Zionism, Israel as a settler state is still in the making today (Khalili 2013; Lockman 2012; Masalha 1992, 2000; Rodinson 1973). It continues to be territorially unfixed and to expand its geographical scope through continuous and systematic settling, annexation, and occupation of Palestinian territory (Gordon 2008; Tawil-Souri 2012; Yiftachel 2006; Zureik et al. 2011). Inspired by scholars of overseas colonial settlements, such as Moore and Frederickson (Fredrickson 1988; Moore 1966), Shafir provides a materialist analysis of the evolution of the Zionist project that stresses the conditions and consequences of the project on the ground as opposed to in abstract terms (Shafir 1996; see also Lockman 2012). He demonstrates shows how Zionism (as a case of pure settler colonialism) involves a process of forcible removal or destruction of the native population realised through a strategy of exclusion based on demographic and territorial calculations, i.e. the distribution of land and the concentration of natives and settlers in it (Lockman 2012; Shafir 1996, 2005). Israel’s expansionist objectives align with Bateman and Pilkington’s basic definition of settler colonialism as ‘a policy of expansion based on the notion of “unoccupied” or “virgin” territories’ (Bateman & Pilkington 2011: 1). 14 94 Plan Dalet, or Plan D, is seen by many as the shadow, or dark side of Israel’s state making process (See Khalidi 1961) leading to the expulsion of hundreds of native Palestinians. A steady expansion of territory has been key to the realisation of the Zionist ideas of Jewish emancipation. Indeed, despite internal differences and priorities among elite groups, militants, and ideologues, Zionism colonised native land not by way of exploitation, but by way of dispossession, which is an integral component of the traditional pattern of colonisation (Davis 1977: 8; see also Said 1978, 1995). After 1948–49, Ben-Gurion and his contemporaries refrained from trying to conquer the remainder of Mandatory Palestine not because they preferred less land, but because of demographic considerations based on the principled commitment to not sharing land with Arab inhabitants (Lockman 2012). Settler colonial violence not only targets populations, it prevails in the broader objective of restructuring the political geography of Israel-Palestine. In Said’s words, colonialism (of which Zionism is a variant) can be understood as an act of geographical violence discursively and practically (Said 1978). The colonisation of space is not (only) an historical era of territorial expansion, it signifies the intention of the colonial power to dominate and control by reproducing the dynamics of spatial production (Samman 2013). As Lefebvre further argues, space is both a condition and an action; the production of space is conditioned upon the material and mental aspects of producing things in space and producing space itself (Samman 2013). According to Sternhell, the internal Zionist disputes (the struggle between labour and revisionist rights over how to reach the objectives) did not revoke the overarching objectives of settlement and colonisation themselves. The ensuing national ideology was to conquer as much land for the Jews as possible (Sternhell 1998). In the mainstream Zionist narrative, the idea of Palestine as empty land ready for settlement downplays and obscures the confrontation and extreme violence necessary to create these empty spaces in the colonialist imagination. When the existence of the native is acknowledged, he/she/they are portrayed as inferior, scarcely human, and closer to animals than civilised people (Sa’di 2011). Settler colonialism entails both ignorance of the native and the built-in violence. This is especially true in the case of Zionism’s land grab and its division of labour along ethnic/racial lines, which entails a degree of replacement of existing structures with new ones. Therefore, settler colonialism carries with it a deep-seated relational dimension. From the outset, Zionist leaders were concerned with ‘the Arab problem’ (Habe’ayah Ha’arvit) or ‘the Arab question’ (Hashelah Ha’arvit’), which related to both the Palestinians’ ‘internal challenge’ and the larger Arab world’s ‘external challenge’. When Zionism rose as a political force in the late 19th century, there was little mention of the natives of Palestine as an internal problem (Masalha 1992). However, as the waves of Aliah (Jewish immigration to Israel) 95 accelerated, the messy realities of the encounter with an already existing Palestine became clearer. In 1937, Solig Soskin, the political advisor to the Zionist leaders, warned the Zionist congress that Zionism’s arrival at the moment of a material and territorial realisation of a nation state was dependent on the expulsion of the natives as a prerequisite for the project to succeed (Denes 2011a: 33–34). Because the colonial process of the extraction and replacement of peoples cannot avoid encounters with the natives, the colonial experience comes to hinge on both the concrete experiences of these encounters and the more abstracted representations of the native ‘other’. The settler colonial project will always carry with it an implicit structure of both eliminatory (Wolfe 2006) and relational (Fanon 1968) violence. As a reciprocal political force, a settler colonial perspective on Zionism points to the indigenous population as the single most important element shaping settler societies: ‘the interaction with the dispossessed is the history of who the settlers collectively are’ (Piterberg 2008: 57). For the Israeli settler colonial project, the internal ‘other’ – the Palestinian – is the constituting external for the (heterogeneous) settler community. In addition to its expansionist nature, from the outset the national project of national engineering, as Sa’di (2011) demonstrates, was based on demographic politics and the calculation of how to secure an ethnically stable Jewish state. Social and legal categories based on ethno-religious identity were enacted in Israel-Palestine, and were characterised by hierarchies of entitlement and rights to citizenship. These population engineering efforts also included a threefold strategy of decreasing the size of the minority population, rearranging its spatial distribution, and subjecting it to a tight regime of control and surveillance (Sa’di 2011). Consequently, these dividing lines became decisive for the structuring of the population of the entire terrain of Israel-Palestine into a hierarchical structure guided by a complex set of overlapping and historically contingent distinctions between citizenship and nationality. Concrete measures of mobilisation of Jews into the new state structure were institutionalised into the state apparatus. A key vector in Zionist state formation has been the aim to institutionalise the ‘right of return’ as a universal right for all Jews. According to the first act of Israel’s provisional council of state, ‘the State of Israel shall be open to Jewish immigration’. In practice, the course of immigration has been a complex, racialised selection process underscored by the strategy of balancing demographic calculus with absorption capacities and economic considerations. The ‘ingathering of the exiles’, i.e. abolishing all restrictions on Jewish immigration, was given legislative expression in 1950 in the Law of Return and the 1952 Law of Citizenship, which enabled every Jew to become an oleh (a newly arrived Jeish immigrant) when setting foot on Israeli soil. Indeed, once the state was established, it claimed to represent not only its inhabitants but also Jewish people everywhere. 96 When the Israeli nation had to be gathered and constructed within its territory in a short period of time, the meticulous ingathering gave birth to a national ruling logic that rests on biopolitical visions of national completion. Fundamentally, the process of population engineering in Israel was realised through the experiments and experiences of settler-colonial practice designed to unify the nation (Denes 2011a). Israel’s national system of innovation as Zionism’s nationalised order can be related to the concept of a biopolitical battlefield. Here, the sovereign’s decisions are made on the basis of calculated schemes of racialised control and violence. These schemes entail a process of racialisation of the battlefield as practices of ethnic differentiation, where the quest to Judaise the land is central. It is in this battlefield that the merits of the construction of difference attain real consequences for the ways in which peoples are governed. As Hacking (1975) reminds us, numbers (in the form of data set and statistics) were originally collected for the government’s simple purposes of maintaining revenue and military strength. Only after the collection of numbers began did the process create a new motive, what Foucault calls bio-politics, i.e information aimed at controlling classes of people or the whole of society. The question of Zionism’s population management ties into more general observations of how the generation of knowledge and data on a defined population has been a key biopolitical strategy of the modern state power (Foucault 2009; Hacking 1990). Controlling the demographics in Israel-Palestine has also been related to intra-Jewish debates and challenges. According to Shohat, Zionism from the outset has been engaged in a form of population engineering that has two interlinked processes. The first is the rejection of a Muslim-Arab context for Jewish institutions, and the second is the idea of a common Jewish past that began in the European Ashkenazi shtetl15 from the sixteenth century (Shohat 2006). In this perspective, erasing the Arab-Jewish dimension of the Sephardic-Mizrahim nexus was a key strategy because it disturbed the constructed Jewish-Arab binary (Shohat 2006). According to Shafir (1996), after the years of state formation, the interests of Zionist national capital and the Zionist workforce came to intersect. This has provided a basis over time for exclusionary measures to develop a labour market with as few Palestinians in it as possible, especially in its top layers (Ram 2011; Shafir 1996). Moreover, the modus operandi of the World Zionist Organisation (WZO) with its pure settler qualities lay in Zionism’s precept of nation building through Palestinian exclusion and demographic calculation schemes initiated by a national 15 The Ashkenazi shetl refers to the Jewish centres in eastern and central Europe that predate the Holocaust and pogroms. 97 movement in search of a state (Shafir 1996). Thus, as a ‘pure colony’ version of settler colonialism, Zionism did not take shape as a classical form of overseas expansion, but as a force that transcends the divisionary pattern of metropole and colony. As Denes describes it, the generation of Zionist nationhood took place through a relational opposition or in a ‘dyad’ between what was before and what came after, between settler and native (Denes 2011a). The peculiar forces of pure settler colonialism lay in this dyad of destruction and construction. Destruction/construction Wolfe’s views on settler colonialism help us understand the ideology of Jewish nationalism as a materialised practice of what is termed ‘a structure of invasion’ (Wolfe 2006). Recalling that race is a construction used as tool to define and organise the national community, Zionism employs what Denes refers to as a constructed yet powerful organising grammar of ‘racial unity’ (Denes 2011). This speaks to Goldberg’s emphasis on the ‘racial inception of the state’ as a fundamental condition (Goldberg 2006). According to Wolfe, settler colonial impulses have been forged through centuries of foreign expansion of other forces in other colonial sites. In the case of Zionism, the logics, which were moulded abroad, were associated with class struggles inside Europe and the experiences of Jewish diaspora – life under waves of anti-Semitism and exclusion from national communities. The settlers brought with them to Israel-Palestine what Wolfe refers to an ‘invasive inheritance’ (Wolfe 2006: 385–387). As in the case of other settler colonial movements, Zionism is bound up in a structure of elimination (Wolfe 2006: 387). Indeed, settler colonialism is viewed fundamentally as a system of destruction that seeks to replace (Wolfe 2006). This structure is deeply tied to the reigning ideas and practices of ethnic transfer of indigenous groups and policing originating in ideas of separation between coloniser and colonised. Within the invasive structure of Zionism, violence is mediated and regulated through cultural and legal codes that realise the nation through settler colonial state building. Wolfe’s perspective presents settler colonialism as having both a positive and a negative side. While it works toward the dissolution of native societies, it erects a new colonial society on the expropriated land base. It is exactly the binary between the act of dispossession and improvement of life and expansion of space for the settler that underlines the settler colonial features of Zionism. Therefore, settler-colonialism is a both a complex social formation and a continuous reworking of what Zionism means over time (Wolfe 2006). 98 Settler colonialism allows the settler population to expand at the expense of the land and the livelihood of the natives. On the positive side, the settler colonialism’s replacement process naturally causes the sovereign to erect new structures made to fit the needs of the settlers in the quest for nationhood. As a variant of settler colonialism, Zionism oscillates between policies of subjugation and moments of expulsion, which often happen simultaneously in different yet interlinked locales. This duality of deconstruction and construction characterised Israel’s violence towards the Palestinians even before the state’s inception. In these deeply structural elements lies the parallel processeses of judaisation and de-arabisation (Falah 1996). The social and demographic engineering of the settler community is a corner stone in the Zionist quest for nationalist separation from the native. On the constructive side, Zionism has tried since its inception to recreate the material and geographical reality of the Jewish people. These efforts have been supported and facilitated by a cultural-ideological revolution of Jewish nationalism that changed the content of Jewish culture and life by changing the geographical and demographic realities of historic Palestine. Zionism provided global Jewry with an offer of escape from life in the diaspora and a mental release from the bondage of the past. Because Israel/Zionist security is in large part bound up in a vision of freedom from the insecurities of diaspora life, the revolutionary and emancipatory tropes of Zionism are central to the construction of an analytical framework that views Zionism’s promises to settlers as a guarantee of security and prosperity. Not only is Zionism prescribed as emancipatory, it is also a return to a home of belonging. As the Israeli Declaration of Independence states: ‘The nation was expelled from its homeland by force’ (Ben-Gurion et al. 1948). This sentence highlights how Zionism is envisioned and experienced above all as the enablement of the Jews’ return to their home. The ethos of ‘ingathering of the exiles’ so central to Zionist mobilisation lies at the heart of the Zionist project’s internalised self-logic. It is the cornerstone of the movement’s strategy of legitimisation of the colonial project. When they stress legacy and historical rights to the land, Zionist protagonists are also creating discontinuity through a new space of national homeland and a new time of secular nationalism (Beit-Hallahmi 1993a). Emphasis on ‘the return’ meant a rebirth or re-articulation of what it meant to be a Jew from being part of a religio-ethnic community to taking on a national identity under the auspices of an emerging state. The negatively loaded condition (nay, diagnosis) of the ‘ghetto Jew’, which fits under the broader category of the exiled Jew, is coined in the term ‘diaspora mentality’. This became a motivation for change, and Zionism made good use of the shame that marked Jews of eastern Europe after World War II and the Holocaust. 99 Even in the early years of Zionism, ideologues of cultural Zionism, such as the seminal Zionist thinker Ahad Ha’am, made an explicit distinction between ‘the new Jew’ pioneering in the ancient homeland and the diaspora Jew, who stayed behind in the countries of dispersion (Ha’am 1897; Zipperstein 1993). Within this perspective, the diaspora Jew came to be seen as weak (galuti) only to be resurrected through the settlement of the land of Zion. The Zionist self-perception of the reborn or rejuvenated Jew, often presented as ‘the Sabra’, became the remedy through which to heal the exiles’ condition. This categorisation signifies both a skirmish with diasporic Jewish identity, where the image of the Jew as ‘the wanderer’ has been challenged and replaced by both the symbolic and real resurrection of the Jew as the cultivator of the land. In addition, as Shohat argues, the non-Jew or the Arab was in many Zionist narratives presented as a empty vessel to be shaped by the ‘reifying spirit of Promethean Zionism’ (Shohat 2006). Tales and legacies from the land has played a central role in espousing the Zionist narrative. The negation of the past in Zionist discourses has often been invoked (through the construction of a Zionist or ethno-centrist nationalist archaeology) to legitimise settlement. This served to demonstrate the Jews’ historic right to the land of Palestine (Masalha 2007; Thompson 2009). The emphasis on Zionism as a mix of Jewish legacy and the promotion of the idea that Jewish settlement is an extension of the Western project of civilising in the east has contributed to the creation of Zionism’s progressive-nationalist ethos. This reflects what Shohat terms ‘the polysomic notion of “return”’ (Shohat 2006). It entails a political project where the state (quite literally) created the nation. In other words, it engineered populations as part of the Zionist project of social engineering while drawing upon the commemoration of exile and pogroms as a context for demonstrating (Euro-)Israeli nationalism. This presented Zionist settlement in Palestine as the only possible logical answer to the horrific events that had characterised the history of the Jews (Shohat 2006). Thus, while Zionism was very much an ideological utopia in its nascent years, its ideas galvanised into realisable goals and material structures through their encounters with European nationalism and imperialism. This culminated with the genocide of the Holocaust (in Hebrew, the Shoah), which provided the urgency and international backing of the establishment of Israel as a homeland for Jews. The Jewish experience of ‘exile and return’ has played a double role in the formation of the Zionist project by shaping the desire of return based on a legacy of ancient times combined with a desire to escape the menaces of the past. This has served to motivate immigration to Israel/Palestine and to create the conditions necessary to install the rapid process of industrialisation required for the envisioned modern state. As is the case of other revolutions, violence against existing 100 structures and resistance has been a means to gain and retain power, which is why violence has implicitly supported Israel’s mobilisation for nationhood. To summarise: in the quest to nationalise Jewry under the Zionist movement, Zionist pioneers both detached themselves from their lands of origin and defined the Jewish nation as anathema to the natives in their new destination. Therefore, it makes sense to open up the conceptual inquiry by making some remarks on the construction of Zionism as a national idea. Zionism, like any other national vision, came about through the envisioning of a community tied together by bonds of national belonging. However, since the territory was located after the national movement was conceived (unlike many other national projects), the mobilisation process took force as a process of what began as de-territorialised nation building. In this way, the Israeli way of thinking about the national has taken on a particularly central role in sustaining domination and practicing control and security, not only to sustain a dominant position for the Zionist movement but also in order to pave way for the realisation of a state in a loosely defined territory. 3.3 Israel as a racial state, ethno-classes, and ethnic capital The racialisation of the Zionist project of national mobilisation has produced a distinct logic of ethnic capital or ethnic logic of capital (Yiftachel 2006: 12), where racial imagination becomes a structuring principle for economic and social organisation. Indeed, racial states also carry out targeted governance, where ‘race’ is constructed as a marker of a social unit or community. Wolfe argues that ‘race’ cannot be taken as a given, but is ‘made in the targeting’ of the native on the battlefield. According to Wolfe this means that the structural position of subjugation and ethnic/racial attributes are co-constitutive in the state building project. As he poignantly notes, ‘slavery constituted their blackness’ (Wolfe 2006: 388). The racial state is not static; it needs to be viewed as a political force operating within and shaping a given political, cultural, and economic context (Goldberg 2002). The translation of racialisation into specific practices entails the use of political economy and political sociology in order to examine the production of racialized (in)security as an indispensable tool of modern control. In the case of Palestine, Zionism came to define the native population’s ‘otherness’. This was also articulated in racial terms, even more so as racial differentiation became an Israeli policy that was not only confined to the realm of symbolism. Unfolding the genesis of nationalised kinship structure as a form of the racial state provides us with a better understanding of the practical and technical manifestations of targeted governance (Amoore and De Goede 2008). This takes an intense form under the auspices of a settler colonial project. 101 As part of the Zionist project, the notion of a Jewish kinship structure and its development into a national body has been the axis for the creation of Israel as an ethnic or racial state. Indeed, state power is contingent on the production of mental systems of unity and coercion. Israeli nation building and state practice are deeply tied to racialisation. Through the vector of ethno-nationalism, Zionism developed into an Israeli ethno cracy, a political movement struggling to achieve or preserve ethnic statehood by combining the Westphalian principle of statehood and the principle of ethnic self-determination (Yiftachel 2006). Israel was established by the means of constitutive violence with deep underlying racial/ethnic organising principles (Azoulay 2011). This has happened through the creation of a division/confrontation between Jews and Arabs with the aim of ensuring the dominance of citizens of Jewish origin, which then paved the way for a regime of differential rule between Jews and Arabs. As Azoulay explains, this has created ‘Arabs as a permanent menace’ exclusive of military expertise, which necessitates the state’s boundless support for military power and the secret service. The effect has been a discourse of racialised security where violence against Arabs has been rendered justifiable. This discourse is ingrained into the racialised ethos of the state. A range of scholars, including some from a more critical angle, have studied Zionism’s engineering of the Jewish people as a racialised nation in order to examine the construction of the Jewish nation and its geopolitical strategies (Denes 2011b; Falk 1998, 2006; Goldberg 2006; Sand 2009, 2012; Shohat 2006; Weiss 2004). Other more radical elements (Zionist scientists and intellectuals) document the existence of a Jewish nation as also a ‘biological question’ by attributing shared biological features to Jews (e.g. Nordau 1968, 1975; Ruppin 1913). In the late 1880s, debates on how to define and demarcate the Jewish nation took shape in Zionist circles outside Palestine that included the question of how to define a strong reciprocal link between kinship and nationalism. Israel is far from unique in its articulation of nationalism as a form of kinship structure. Kinship management in general draws on American and European thought and practice (Denes 2011a). What magnifies the Zionist case as an intense/extreme case is the tie between Zionist ideology and the goal of building a new nation under conditions of intense heterogeneous immigration, whereby the desire to ingather the exiles constructs the ethnic nation. Thus, in Israel as in other national projects, ‘race’ marks and orders the nation state. Indeed, the history of the modern state and racial definition are intimately 102 related because the Israeli state in essence became racially conceived albeit to different degrees and through various compositions. In the Israeli quest for nationhood, national aspirations were gradually fixed to a territory and realised through a range of security practices to improve the conditions for the Jewish people in their new land, both practically and ontologically. Shohat argues that historically, the discursive and practical goal was to produce a difference between Jews and Arabs. Judaism and Zionism were seen as synonyms and Arabness as an antonym (Shohat 2006). For example, Israel’s initial moves to introduce population management based on a politics of difference are made manifest in the universal immigration policy of the Israeli Law of Return from 1950. (This policy is a set of rules that define a Jew as anyone with two or more Jewish grandparents). The right of return law officially narrowed the gateway for Jewish immigrants coming to Israel, but at the same time made access into a universal and timeless decree. The 1954 Prevention of Infiltration Law was intended to prevent Palestinian refugees from ‘re-entering Israel’. It allows the Ministry of Defense to order deportation of an infiltrator before or after conviction. Besides referring to non-Jews, the category of ‘infiltrator’ shares features with the ‘absentee’, a category developed to codify dispossession through legalised land grabbing, whereby the normativity is regularised, normalised and intrinsic to the law. These categories of absentee and infiltrator mark a boundary between those within the ‘borders of Zionism’ and those outside16. This filtering of access based on a particular construct of ‘race’ reifies the Zionist’s requirement for open borders for all Jews that ensures right of return. 16 The question of immigration was still contested in 2014 when Israel’s borders were infiltrated again from the outside. A massive influx of African (mainly Eritrean and Sudanese) refugees chose Israel as their destination because of its proximity and relatively high standard of living. To combat this, the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, passed an anti-infiltration law targeting Jewish immigrants ‘arriving in Israel in an irregular manner’, which allows the government to detain them for a year without legal process. This new law is similar to those governing the Palestinians in the OPT, which is controlled by the Israeli military courts: the state itself has no constitution, only basic laws. Thus, by law, immigration for Jews entails the forced displacement and expulsion of others. 103 While Zionism works with a social definition of ‘race’ based on cultural (religious) kinship (in this case, Jewish nationhood), the nation becomes a tool for conjoining Ashkenazi, Sephardi, and Mizrahi – three prominent culturally and geographically distinct Jewish groups – into their own national entity in order to support Zionist territorial claims17. Ethnic differentiation became part of establishing the Jewish nation – the Zionist ‘ingathering of the exiles’ linked human existence to ideas of ethnic citizenship, and the Jewish body became the carrier of Israeli citizenship. While Zionism is a resource of secular nationalism mobilising Jews into an ostensibly collective project, its structure has engaged debates around the challenges of hosting both a vision of horizontal ties of kinship and vertical ties of ownership structure and capitalist orientations. To remedy this contradictory diagnosis, Sternhell categorises the nascent state as based on a configuration of Zionist thinking into a form of ‘nationalist socialism’ (Sternhell 1998). This formula was the central pillar in the organisation of social and economic life in nascent Israel, and was formed as a Zionist alternative to both Marxism and Liberalism that constructed an ethnic, cultural, and religious nationalism and established the nation’s primacy and the subjugation of the values of socialism to the service of the nation. Put otherwise, socialism lost its universality and became a tool for nation building (Sternhell 1998). According to Sternhell, this masked class warfare because the credence given to labour Zionism pushed forward an agenda of benefitting the collective whole as proposed by the natural Zionist elites, whose membership was determined by ‘sentiment and dedication’. As Sternhell notes, the Zionist elite never objected to private capital as such. Rather, it had to productively invest in enterprises – ‘serving national objectives, the capitalists needed to serve the community or else be disciplined and brought under control’ (Sternhell 1998: 9). The anomaly here centres on the circumstance that working class Jewish citizens of Israel would rather identify with a nationalist agenda than form a solidarity movement with the Palestinians. 17 104 Common classifications of Jewish communities: Ashkenazi is the ancient Hebrew word for Germany. Ashkenazi Jews are the descendants of the Central European Jews. Sephardi Jews are those expelled from Spain and Portugal in 1492 that settled in North Africa, the Near East, and the Ottoman Empire. The Mizrahi are descendants from Jewish communities in the Middle East (Falk 1998). Other scholars argue that the ‘Israeli anomaly’18 reveals patterns of solidarity bounded in kinship more than it expresses an economically determined class position (Shafir and Peled 2002; Shalev 1998; Yiftachel 2006). This warns us against taking narratives of horizontal kinship for granted in our effort to understand the dynamics of Israeli nation building. According to Anderson, racialised power relations (or the ideology of racial difference) emanates from class rather than from nationalist imaginations in and of themselves. Consequently, Anderson says, racial differentiation manifests itself inside, not outside state boundaries in order to justify repression and domination (Anderson 1983). The ethnocratic vision of a Jewish state was initially defined as a (isolated) national vision, but it became increasingly shaped by the experience of its relationship to the ‘other’ native population. Israel’s structures of violence take on interlinked yet distinct ideological, institutional, and militarised economic forms. In order to understand Zionism both as an ideology and materialised practices, we need to look at the persistent built-in features of destruction within Zionism, what Khalili (2014) has called the habits of destruction, i.e. systematic violence integral to settler colonial rule. In order to understand the ideological driver of Israel’s security logic and practices, it is useful to provide some perspective on how Israel became racially conceived. To unfold the genesis of Israel’s moral economy of difference, I introduce here some basic ideas on the racial state (Goldberg 2002). I draw on the ideas of the racial state to show how Israel’s racialised governing through subjugation and securitisation of its native ‘other’ is an expression of the fundamental conditions of the racial state. In the context of Zionism’s settler colonialism, racial and national constructs have been co-constituting and have taken various expressions and forms that have impacted heavily on how Israel’s organised state violence has been narrated and practiced as (masked) racialised violence. To summarise: the racial state’s structures and effects open up a fundamental discussion of how territorial control and population engineering and management have been co-imbricated. Foucault’s and Mbembe’s (2003) perspectives on this biopolitical battlefield are highly useful to unpacking how a politics of difference becomes the driver of population management in a given territory. When Israel deploys technologies of security as part of its racialised settler governmentality, 18 The paradox can be illustrated by the fact that Israeli voting patterns do not follow class interests. Since the state’s establishment, poor Israelis have voted for nationalist rather than for socialist/left wing parties (Hever 2010). 105 technology is a complex synergised interface where logics of separation and transfer are inscribed into the material. The spillover effect is the solidification of systems of differentiation based on a variety of parameters into a given piece of technology. 3.4 Frontier violence and settler governmentality Unquestionably, the birth of states entails acts of violence (Tilly 1990) and the fabrication of a powerful military-economic order within and between states (Mills 1956). This was also the case in the course of Israeli state formation. In the general course of settler colonialist activity, violence functions as a hyper proxy of both ideology and violence that is unified through the practices of the sovereign. As Khalili (2013) argues, expansionism has been the byword of the colonial settler state that is realised through a mix of (counterinsurgency) practices, war making, settlement construction, and architectures of occupation. Just as settler colonialism is relational, so is settler colonial violence. In the OPT, this logic makes up what Kimmerling calls the territorial frontier, and amounts to a control system formalised by Israeli law where the orientation towards the controlled population is purely instrumental (Kimmerling 1989). This is made possible as boundaries and frontiers are part of a complex political geo graphy, and the composition of a legal framework advantageous to the sovereign. In their thoughtful account of Israel’s structural violence vis-à-vis the Palestinians, Azoulay and Ophir (2013) explain the relationship between potential and actual use of force. They demonstrate how the continuity between potential and manifest violence is built into the Israeli state’s violence and makes up one structure of control. Consequently, over time Israel’s settler governmentality towards the Palestinians has taken many forms and shapes, but has consistently relied on deploying both crude and symbolic violence. To capture this duality, Azoulay and Ophir construct the categories of ‘spectacular’ (harsh, physical) and ‘withheld’ (the threat of violence, the threat of death) violence. ‘An act is also violent when the force is not eruptive and violence is withheld’.... Withheld violence is the presence of a violent force whose outbreak may be imminent but not yet manifest’ (Azoulay and Ophir 2013: 134). Weizman argues that military violence is not just about bringing death and destruction; it is also about communicating to those who remain, i.e. those who are not killed (Weizman 2011). Killing is only part of the broader managment of the population, both to sustain an atmosphere of fear and minimise resistance. As Weizman argues in his account of Israel’s warfare in Gaza, this form of military communication can function only if ‘gaps are maintained between the possible destruction that 106 an army is able to inflict and the actual destruction that is does inflict’ (Weizman 2011:19). Through such a gap, the colonising element is the ability to communicate with the people (Gazans) it fights. In a state of war, the gap closes but most of the time it is open, and the occupied people live under fear and the threat of violence. The lethal and non-lethal nature of Israel’s war technology allows the technology to both facilitate the closing and the opening of the gap. Israel’s Gaza strategy is not simply about security in its narrow sense, i.e. preventing attacks and unwanted infiltration. Rather, security for the Jewish nation constitutes strategic moves towards realising a pure Jewish state conditioned by the minimising of long-term Arab/Palestinian presence in that same space. Because Zionism rests on an ordering principle that pervades the nature of its enactment, it is pertinent to think of the creation of orders as a political project that conjoins war and policing as processes working ideologically and practically from the same ordering principles (Neocleous 2014). Neocleous argues that we should refrain from using categories such as the military or the police that make us think of specific institutions. Rather, we should view them as powerful forces shaping and enacting state power in much more fundamental ways (Neocleous 2014). In the course of generating nationhood and expanding its territory, the sovereign’s position depends on a continuum of violence, which can be explained as a constant dynamic between managing (and expanding) the frontier and managing the ghetto (Ron 2003). (Frontiers and ghettos are specific types of institutional settings, representing different points on the continuum of state violence and power fluctuating in temporal flows.) As Ron demonstrates, frontiers are outlying territories where central political authority is weak and formal rules don’t apply, and where states maintain their power through despotic methods. By contrast, ghettos are ethnic or national enclaves trapped within the dominant state (Ron 2003). Neuwirth describes a ghetto as ‘excluded from economic and social privileges, deprived of social esteem, and unable to influence the… rules which define their participation within wider society’ (Neuwirth (1969) in Ron 2003: 17). For Ron, the ghetto is incorporated into the dominant polity with ambivalence and disdain, rarely liquidated outright but segregated and repressed (Ron 2003). The urban ghetto is moreover often a space in which a certain – often high – percentage of the population lives below the poverty level (Chambliss 1994). Israeli frontier violence is institutionalised into a broader scheme of differentiated governance. The notion of ‘settler governmentality’ captures well a spectrum of more or less institutionalised modes of violence and discrimination. In their work on policing by the majority non-indigenous population in Canada, Crosby 107 and Monaghan (2012) develop the term settler governmentality as a sub-variety of Scott’s ‘colonial governmentality’ (Scott 1995). Scott demonstrates how British colonial power in Sri Lanka operated to achieve modernity based on a particular set of political rationalities tied to the particular locations in which these strategies were deployed (Scott 1995). In the case of Canada, the rationality guiding policing involves a denial of the settler colonial realities and racial discrimination of the majority settler population as a condition, not just an effect of the powerful majority’s settler governmentality (Crosby and Monaghan 2012). In the Israeli case, the stratification of ruling mechanisms has been evolving steadily. The settler colonial structure has sustained a ‘governing through violence’ strategy operating along a continuum of state-led practices of ‘creeping apartheid’ (Yiftachel 2009) that promote the interests of the colonising body at the expense of the colonised. Thus, in the course of the Zionist project the settler governmentality of the Israeli state has been sustained by exclusionary mechanisms to inform the endeavour’s aspiration to settle, transfer, and separate people from people and people from the land. This racialised class system, which presents social and racial problems as blurred and inseparable, has been normalised into settler colonial modes of governance. Thus, Crosby’s and Monaghan’s ‘settler colonial governmentality’ performs as a form of racialised governance, where social problems are treated as racial problems and racial problems as social problems (Crosby and Monaghan 2012). Underlying these measures, or settler colonial efforts lies the third integrated component: the question of ‘race’ and racialisation as an ideological driver of control and population management in the Zionist project. Indeed, Zionism’s correlations between power, nationalism, and racialisation and its associated institutionalised efforts of popular engineering amounts to what might be referred to as racialised settler governmentality that gives the entire terrain of Israel-Palestine the character of a biopolitical battlefield or a calculative field of action. The inherent, differentiated control and violence of Zionism target both geo graphies and human beings under the banner and pretext of homeland security as an ontological concept and a political strategy. 3.5 Israeli homeland security Italians got architecture or clothes [design], we go for security, because that is what we can do best. (Interview with Mr. Katz, Head of Marketing, Magal Headquarter, Yehud, 21 September 2012). 108 Security in Israel-Palestine, like everywhere else, takes on different meanings for different people. In practice and in very general terms, security for Palestinians is associated with fear, control, and repression. Writ large for Israel’s dominant population, security is the absence or minimisation of immediate and more abstract threats. As stated above, security is a techno-conceptual category, a (national, ontological) narrative, and a mode of (liberal) governance. In a settler colonial context, security is a techno-national concept in which the notion of homeland occupies a central position. Zionism’s establishment of Israel-Palestine as a biopolitical battlefield has generated a particular notion of security that is now dominant in Israeli security discourse and practice: the distinctively Israeli or Zionist notion of homeland security (HLS). This notion reflects both techno-conceptual shifts security apparatus and a conscious adoption of the global discourses of anti-terrorism. Israel’s surveillance industry is informed by flexible specialisation, a flexible production process dependent on flexible systems and equipment, and a more skilled and flexible workforce. There seems to be a shared understanding among security actors and politicians worldwide that, like Israel, all nations have moved into the time and space of homeland security that have been so central to the larger Zionist perception of national security. As Ofer Sachs, head of Israel Israel’s Export Institute, said recently: Two years is a somewhat short perspective, but what we have seen very clearly, and the industries have been voting with their feet – is that there is less expenditure on defense and more on HLS. You can see that all of the major corporations are present in the HLS worlds, too, including Israel’s major defense industries, where specific HLS divisions have been established (Sachs in Rapaport 2014). HLS has become a taken-for-granted category of security in company and security fair promotional material. In fact, as noted above, Israel’s own experience is sold as an HLS experience par excellence. As Gordon says: Israel’s homeland security industry, in other words, sells its products and services by maintaining that Israel has experienced the horror [of terror] – not virtually, but first hand –and consequently knows how to deal with such horror and has developed the appropriate instruments to do so (Gordon 2009: 3). 109 The idea of a Jewish homeland that is so key to Zionism has evolved into a particular concept of homeland security that unifies deeper insecurities with racialised, military/security practices into broader government logics. While settling territory has been so key to the settler colonial process, the vision and feelings of (in)security is not necessarily intimately linked to territory but to feelings of insecurity. This (in)security exists in the deeper structures of the broader Jewish experience of marginalisation, repression, and genocide and in the state’s claim to be the provider of Jewish security. Thus, biopolitical control and warfare in the name of Israeli security is not just about securing territorially bound citizens, but also flows and networks of people (Jews) deemed at risk ‘everywhere’. Moreover, according to Yiftachel, the oppressive impact of spatial policies is evident in ethni cally dominated ‘homeland-states’ embroiled in inter-ethnic conflicts (Yiftachel 2006). In such states, even when governed by formal democratic regimes, territory becomes a key group resource for asserting ethnic control, collective identity, and economic superiority. The idea and ideals of living in a secure Jewish state is confronted with the unfulfilled character of the project of ethnic isolation as envisioned in Zionist national ideals. This creates a gap between ideal and reality. As Azoulay and Ophir explain: ‘In the strive for ethnic purification, the coloniser cannot avoid to – in one way or another – be affected by direct or indirect encounters with the native’ (Azoulay and Ophir 2005). The challenge of the natives can have a structural character with broader ramifications. Both the pillars of economic organisation and territorial measures have their origins in Zionism’s fundamental geopolitical ambitions of the transfer of and separation between ethnic groups (Masalha 1992). In turn, transfer and separation have become nodes in the materialisation of this insecurity through the quest for ethnic homogeneity of space and place and ultimately the entire body of the state. This does not necessarily relate to conscious proposals of full-scale population transfer, but more to an intangible sense of insecurity in the encounter with the native ‘other’. It is in this binary between insurgency and counterinsurgency, and occupier and occupied that the space for producing security technology evolves as a scientific way of asserting the improvement scheme, and hence as a means to regulate the combat zone. The unfinished materialisation of the ideal of Zionist statehood carries with a state of illegitimacy or inadequacy that provides the security industry with its continued raison d’etre. In the Jewish-Israeli context, insecurity has taken on a sort of hyper-ontological posture that posits the establishment and protection of a Jewish homeland is a source of ‘ontological security’. Laing suggests that the notion of ‘ontological insecurity’ can be described as the fundamental feeling of insecurity that is often 110 structural and not necessarily linked to concrete, specific threats. He defines ontological insecurity as an individualised but collective feeling that ‘the full terror of the experience of the world as liable at any moment to crash in and obliterate all identity as a gas will rush in and obliterate a vacuum’ (Laing 1960: 45)19. Kinnvall presents the counter-term of ontological security, where individuals ‘draw closer to any collective that is able to reduce uncertainty and anxiety’ (Kinnvall 2002: 741; see also Kinnvall 2004).This opens up a view of security as an ontological concern, where security is a matter of the very survival of the community or nation. This chapter explores the impact of Zionism’s association between Israeli security and broader streams of Jewish insecurities. While in the 1930s social security was the main motif of public discourses on security, in the 1940s national security became a prime cursor of security. Before 9/11, national security discourses and their links to warfare overseas, the notion of homeland had previously been deployed sparingly in western security discourses. By contrast, in Israel, the notion of a ‘homeland’ predates the country’s founding and carries special connotations to Zionist visions of state building as the claim of a return to the homeland from exile places the concept in a highly emotionally and politically charged field. Tis is not to disregard the role of sentiment in the Zionist projects. In rought terms Zionism, like other settler colonialist projects, should not be seen as a force without face but as a ‘structure of feelings’ (Williams 1977) or experiences coupled with specific geopolitical strategies embedded in broader capitalist structures. Alonso underlines how the persuasiveness of nationalism hinges on the power of a structure of feelings that transforms space into ‘…home place and interpolates individual and collective subjects as embodiers of national character…’ (Alonso 1994: 386). Because Zionism has consistently been about building a nation and not just the state, homeland carries particular connotations. The notion of Israeli homeland security carries weight both in relation to geopolitical rationales and semantic calibrations of the word. The Hebrew word moledet, meaning homeland (for the Jewish people), appears four times in Israel’s 1947 Declaration of Independence (Ben-Gurion 1948), and the notion dates back to the first Zionist Congress in 1897 where the goal for a ‘home for the Jewish people’ was conceived and supported subsequently by the 1918 Balfour Declaration’s pledge of a ‘national home’ for the Jewish people. By comparison, the US enacted its first homeland act, the 19 The notion of ontological security is no stranger to macro perspectives on politics. For example, Laing’s concept of ontological insecurity has been deployed in IR analysis (See Mitzen 2006; Steele 2008). 111 ‘Quadrennial Defense Review’, in 1977 (Tama 2013), which was rarely applied to security strategies and public discourses on security and defence until 9/11. Israel’s homeland security vision underscores the historical connect between the land and the people coined in the framing of immigration as a return to ‘the homeland’. Yiftachel argues that the multi-layered history of any territorial claims for collective ownership of a homeland often forms the basis for protracted ethnic conflicts (Yiftachel 2006). In the case of Israel’s security vision, this means that to secure the homeland becomes more than a concrete effort to secure citizens, it becomes a tool for constructing the nation. Homeland defines and reifies an ethnic group’s constitution as a nation, or what Winichakul terms a ‘geobody’, i.e. the expression of the unification of the land with its symbolic meaning (Winichakul 1994). In Israel, the term homeland and its coupling with security outlines the premises for not just protecting the homeland but for its very raison d’etre through a distillation of prescriptions for inclusion and exclusion. Thus, the notion of Israeli homeland security is founded on and co-constituted by an ideologically informed quest to transform the Jewish (diaspora) identity into a Zionist nationalistic and territorialised outcome. Securing such a Jewish homeland has come to mean dealing with the challenges of translating its racial/ethnic logics into practice. The firm, resolute idea of securing for Jews a specific territory was central to this process. The ‘Jewish condition’ once characterised a persecuted minority that called for measures of self-protection in the diaspora. Along with the unfolding of the Zionist state building project, the term was transformed into an ‘Israeli condition’ that displayed ontological security that transcended even conflicting formulas for Zionist state building. Indeed, the Israeli vision of homeland security promotes a potent connection between community and national security. The vision of Israel as a homeland for the Jewish people in the form of a Jewish state gives weight to the notion of an ethnic community or a nation that cannot be detached from the way security is thought of. In this way, homeland security works as an ideologically charged mechanism through which the ‘container’ of security is provided with meaning, purpose, and a promise of a civilising mission for its citizens in need of protection. While ‘homeland’ is seemingly defined through security, it also attests to a broader aim of establishing and consolidating the racialised order of the Jewish state. Homeland works to protect those who are deemed part of the nation. While homeland security for the sovereign is a concept that carries positive connotations, the metaphor of homeland security can also work ideologically as an enabler of social and violent interventions. While the homeland benefits those deemed in 112 need of protection, homeland security does not provide security for everyone. While the positive assertion of homeland as a protective ‘home base’ works as a civilised label, in reality it masks the effects of these practices on those excluded from the homeland/nation. The pervasiveness of securitisation in the Zionist quest for homeland provides a language that gives the geopolitical enterprise meaning and hides the deep colonial structure from view. In Israel-Palestine, the distinction between homeland and violence is a false division. As we have discussed earlier, the very idea of homeland based on the ideological tenets of Zionism excludes large portions of the territory’s inhabitants. These people are threats to the homeland. To summarise: homeland security is a way of speaking of security that hinges upon the broader aim of establishing and consolidating racialised order inside the Jewish state. The concept of homeland security works both as an ideological metaphor and as a label under which most technologies can be promoted to optimise sales and used tap into popular discourses. While the metaphor works as an enabler of security, the question of a deeper qualitative shift fuelled by the permeation of HLS as a sector and industry is perhaps of less significance. These conditions rely in part on the state’s racialised national ideology. Scholarly work on ‘race’ as a social construct, as a class, and as a nationalist force often examines the diaspora’s support to the mother country or the kinship state (Waterbury 2010). In the case of Israel, there is no one country of origin from which Jews have dispersed into the diaspora, there is no one ‘mother country’. In this way, the question of securing the kinship structure or collective takes on a distinct role and influences how security is articulated. This has created a situation where the quest for Jewish security has been framed and practiced as a Zionist/ Israeli concern that now stretches far beyond the borders of Israel-Palestine. The Israeli security narrative includes both the impetus to protect (Jewish) minorities abroad and its Jewish majority at home. Thus, while security is projected as a moral impetus, it masks the settler colonial mode of rule, a rule that deeply defines, shapes, and limits the lives of the colonised. 3.6 Conclusion The Zionist vision of a state has been closely tied to the imaginings of the colonial state. It is organised around a grammar of Jewish self-determination and a logic of national-ethnic closure based on an idea of kinship exclusivity that seeks to establish an ideal correspondence between the national imaginary and the dominant state structure and its institutions. 113 The Israeli case of nation making is defined by its settler colonial features combined with the pervasive ideological structure of ethnic/racial stratification. The push for the Zionist nation has entailed a plethora of changing means of racialised intervention. This includes ‘race’ as a construction or a relational idea that depends on the inferior ‘other’ to mark its boundaries. In the case of Israel’s racialised control, the logics of control as realities and emulations of state practice lie in two realms: the ideational construction of Israel as an ethnically specific state realised through practical installation of measures such as its laws of immigration and the limitation on the access and movement of selected groups to the elite-state and spaces of the coloniser. This chapter has addressed the discursive, mental, and material features of Zionism by examining the various manifestations of settler colonialism and the distinctiveness that emerges from it. This schema suggests that Zionist mobilisation for Israeli nationhood is a variation of settler colonialism that deconstructs native structures in order to erect new constructions for the settler population. On the one hand, this has entailed the permanence of a state sustained through structural violence. On the other, the genesis of the Zionist project opens up more fundamental questions of nation making and the relationship between ideology and materiality, which is the backbone of Israel’s homeland security (practices). The remainder of the thesis expands on these conceptual architectures. The research asks how Zionism has developed its security practices as part of settling the land and managing groups of people through heavily interlinked processes of securitisation, urbanisation, codification, separation, transfer, and the delivery of social services. It does so by moving between time, themes, and sites. The next chapter unfolds the second background chapter of the thesis: the social, economic, and industrial development history of the Israeli security industry. 114 115 116 CHAPTER FOUR 4.0 BACKGROUND II: A HISTORY OF THE ISRAELI SECURITY INDUSTRY 4.1 Introduction This chapter is an historical account of the Israeli defence and security industry. It performs as a socio-material history of the industry, its conditions for development, and its production schemes. The chapter addresses how the mutually dependent relationships and collaborative efforts between pre-state and agencies, military, and private industry concurred in the making and advancement of the industry as part of forming a national economy, an advanced military machine, and a private sector carried forth by innovation and international outlook. What is of particular interest is how the Israeli security economy as part of the settler colonial project has developed as distinctively ethnic economy. Moreover, by asking how diversified patterns of state involvement have been mixed with creeping neoliberal reconfiguration, it is possible to carve out more specific conditions that enable liberalisation under tight state control. This chapter argues that the evolution of the Israeli security economy has occurred through the combination of intense militarism, tight state control, changing patterns of penetrating global capital, and neoliberal reform agendas. It traces the industry’s move from centralised state practice to state-led neoliberal de-regulation, privatisation, and globalisation. The chapter also examines the formation of state power through a network of security and defence units, corporations, and actors, tying in the military and economic sectors under the auspices of state-led capitalism. It paints a picture of the relationship between settler colonialism, military production, and neoliberal regulation sustained by the goal of building a national economy based on (not in spite of ) Israel’s conditions of permanent warfare. In line with the social shaping of technology (SST) approach, the chapter explains the direction, form, and outcomes of technological innovation in the Zionist project. 4.2 The Israeli security industry: A short introduction Israel modernised quickly, but in a different space-time context than that of European industrialisation and modernisation (Breznitz 2007). To understand the nexus and modus operandi of the Israeli security industry, the development of the Israeli security economy needs to be understood against the backdrop of 117 how Israeli industrialisation and financialisation have been co-constituted by the expertise and practices of the Israeli military apparatus. The consolidation of the Israeli state economy occurred as part of the transformation of a multifaceted Jewish condition in the diaspora into an Israeli condition of state making and of state-based security. This happened for the most part through the construction of a mass ethnic army and a capitalist state structure. The Israeli network developmental state has secured its settler colonial aspirations through a strong nationalised economy (Levi-Faur 1998; Maman and Rosenheck 2012; Ó Riain 2000, 2004 ). Its security economy is not just illustrative of this development; it has been a key driving force behind realising Israel’s military, settler colonial goals and creating the current Israeli high-tech nation. Today, Israeli security and military innovation and production are growth industries. More Israeli security companies are listed on the US stock exchange NASDAQ than all European security companies combined. Israel ranks third in the world in venture capital availability and second in the world in the availability of qualified scientists and engineers (Hiner n.d.). These rankings reflect Israel’s role as a high-tech hothouse. At the peak of the high-tech boom in 2000, Israel had approximately 4,000 high-tech firms; new start-ups were emerging at a rate of 500 each year (de Fontenay and Carmel 2001). According to the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, more than 25 per cent of the industrial workforce is employed in high-tech manufacturing. In 2008, the high-tech manufacturing industry employed 384,000 people in 11,000 industrial plants producing an output of more than 58 million USD at an average growth rate of eight per cent in the high-tech sector. Eighty per cent of all Israeli high-tech production is exported (The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2013). In 2011, according to the Israeli Bureau of Statistics, 47 per cent of all Israeli export was high-tech, which amounted to 31.5 billion USD in export income from clients in the US, EU and Asia (Israeli Bureau of Statistics 2012). Two critical trends characterise the Israeli security industry. First, there is a growing shift from conventional military production to homeland security. Second, the sector is marked by different modes of production – arms, defence and homeland security – that operate in parallel and at times in tandem. Altogether, the industry displays a broad portfolio of systems, technologies, and products. They include aviation security, maritime security, cyber security, land forces, public security, critical infrastructure protection, technological expertise in physical barriers and fencing, sensor intrusion, detection image processing, tracking and motion control, observation, access control, biometrics, recognition technology, smart cards, anti-forgery, commodity protection, surveillance, crowd control, command and control rooms, and advanced software. 118 The figures and numbers at hand that describe the nature and volume of the security sector vary considerably even across government sources. This is perhaps because of the unstable categories of what constitutes HLS and how it can be detached from defence and the military. What is more, discrepancies can be explained because of the different levels of secrecy at play in the industry. According to the Ministry of Economy, around 600 Israeli companies are active in the Israeli security sector: 35 per cent are involved in developing technologies, 35 per cent in production, 20 per cent in IT, and 10 per cent in services (Israeli Ministry of Economy n.d.). Some 320 marketers around the world are registered with the Ministry and sell wares supplied by Israeli defence firms (Sadeh 2014). Approximately 350 Israeli security companies export their products worldwide (Israeli Ministry of Economy n.d.). The Israeli defence and security industries provide jobs – directly and indirectly – for approximately 150,000 people in Israel. About 1,000 firms are registered with the Defense Ministry as arms suppliers, and 680 have export licenses (Sadeh 2014). A recent survey by Ethosia Human Resources shows that more than a third of workers in Israeli high-tech companies (including non-security companies) had served in a technology unit in the IDF, another one third had served in combat units. Overall, 90 per cent of high-tech workers were found to have a military background, 31 per cent having served in combat units (Hirshhauge 2013). In addition, about 10 per cent come from the elite Unit 8200 that is responsible for collecting signal intelligence and code decryption. This clearly demonstrates that not only does the security sector supply the military with technology, but also that the ‘the IDF remains Israel’s main path to high-tech’ (Hirshhauge 2013). A large part of Israel’s homeland security and surveillance companies are small to medium-sized ventures often specialising in one (patented) technology with a relatively narrow niche based on expertise and market focus. Since Israel’s homeland security, defence and surveillance industries (what I refer to simply as the security industry) are not considered a distinct sector by the country’s Central Bureau of Statistics (which is tied to an international coding system), it is difficult to obtain precise data about them (Gordon 2009: 98). This is very different from the companies of the conventional military industry. Since 2000, when the second Palestinian Intifada broke out, every few years Israel has had some form of military operation lasting a few weeks: Defensive Shield (in the West Bank) in 2002, the Second Lebanon War in 2006, Cast Lead in 2008–09, and Pillar of Defense in 2012. In each case, the IDF deployed new military technologies and arms that raised the value of stocks of their producing companies and had a positive effect on foreign sales. What is more, the Israeli security industry is situated at the intersection of Israel’s (high)-tech economy 119 and its enormous military sector. While this current research deals with security, homeland security, and military products as a whole, there are important differences between the overlapping, yet distinct subsectors the military and homeland security sectors. As Gordon documents, six of Israel’s defence companies are responsible for over 95 per cent of Israel’s arms production. Four of these companies20 are state-owned and are responsible for about 75 per cent of the arms sales, while the two private companies (Elbit systems and Elisra) make up most of the rest of the sales (Gordon 2009: 14). This general list of arms production companies can be divided into 1) large state-owned companies, 2) one large (Elbit) and several medium-sized private companies, and 3) a range of smaller companies that produce a narrow line of items. In 2013, the security giants all showed increases in sales: Elbit experienced annual revenues of USD 3 billion; IAI USD 2.65 billion, and Rafael USD 2 billion. At 15 per cent, Rafael’s sales showed the highest growth rate. Over the past three decades, Israel has expanded its arms exports significantly, reaching a value of approximately USD 7.5 billion in export agreements in 2009 (SIPRI 2011: 32). Government figures indicate that Israeli defence companies sold military hardware worth USD 9.6 billion in 2010, USD 2.4 billion of it to Israel’s military (Israeli Ministry of Economy n.d). Israel ranks first worldwide in the per capita value of USD300 in exports for each resident. (The United States, by far the world’s largest arms exporter, only has per capita weapons sales of USD90.) Moreover, Israel’s exports are growing rapidly: data from the Stockholm Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) show that Israeli weapons export more than doubled between 2001 and 2012. Its arms exports comprise more than 70 and up to 80 per cent of all arms production. Because the country’s production capacities exceed Israeli market demands, producers look to foreign markets. From 2005–2012, the largest recipients of completed arms sales by volume were India and Turkey, and the US provided by far the largest share of military aid to Israel. With a record high export of 7.5 USD billion in 2012, Israel was in 2013 ranked as the world’s sixth largest arms and security producer. In 2014 the rate has dropped to USD 5.66, according to the Ministry of Defense to reductions in defence budgets in Europe and the US (Lappin and Anderson 2015). The military industry hinges on a state-based institutional setup. The three main actors of the military subsector are the Israeli Ministry of Defense, the IDF, and the security industry. These entities collaborate in the process of R&D, procurement, and deployment. The IDF General Staff creates a special projects office (SPO) on a case-by-case basis to manage major R&D projects. As export plays a central role in arms procurement policy, the Ministry of Defense (MOD) 20 120 ELTA, Israeli Aerospace Industries (IAI), Israeli Miliary Indsutries (IMI), and Rafael. and Foreign Assistance and Defense Export (SIBAT)21 and the Defense Exports Control (API) directorates also work on dual-use products in cooperation with other state bodies. And the Government of Israel (GOI) funds the Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute in order to facilitate trade, joint ventures, and strategic alliances across sectors and borders. The broader security industry is more diffused into the broader tech- and high-tech economy. There is also a difference in state regulation of the military versus the HLS subsectors. The military subsector is restricted by a state demand that they remain Israeli despite privatisation, while the security sector experiences more flexibility and thus a stronger inflow of foreign investment. (This is why foreign investors and companies also buy up some Israeli companies). While the military industry (albeit increasingly less so over time) responds to demands from other militaries and stable mass markets, the homeland security and surveillance companies tend to target more differentiated and segmented markets such as militaries, police, transportation sectors, municipalities, and private corporations. While a total of 21 per cent of high-tech companies offer HLS products (Gordon 2009), and at least 15 per cent offer ‘equipment of control and supervision’, it is difficult to estimate the exact scope due to technological spill over to other sectors and the substantive possibility of dual use of security technology for commercial purposes. In certain fields, the state-owned military industry bears the brunt of paying for R&D and thus subsidises the private sector. The high-cost surveillance products tend to be manufactured by Israel’s military industry, while the large majority of surveillance companies produce ‘add-ons’ to already existing platforms, offer integration solutions for a variety of existing products, or provide services and training. The role of intellectual capital is cross-cutting in the post-fordist and more diversified industries, and in addition are the multifunctions of a piece of technology presented at company websites and PR-material to broaden the client base to the extent possible. We need to unfold how the development and organisation of the Israeli defence and security industry is marked by national defining motifs integrating the growing private industry with broader state strategies of control over territory and populations. To do so, we need to trace the development of the security industry back to before the establishment of the Israeli state. 21 SIBAT publishes biannual HLS and Defence Directories providing partners and potential clients with an overview of relevant companies and agencies. It is also possible to browse through the different technological categories configured under the HLS umbrella. 121 4.3 Background: How it all began The ideology of economic independence and ethnic capital During an interview at the Office of the Chief Scientist (OCS), the state agency for the support of industrial development in Tel Aviv, a state official explained the basic logics of Israel’s knowledge economy: We don’t need another textile factory. We want to go beyond manufacturing facilities. We wanted to be in the more sophisticated market. We sensed that there is a very big added value in products that are being sold to foreign markets. We didn’t need a lot of hardware but knowledge, and this is how we perceived this challenge: to have a significant footing in sophisticated tech (Noam BarGal, Chief of Scientists Office, interview Tel Aviv, 4 September 2012). As BarGal’s statement suggests, from the outset of Jewish settlement in alestine, the formation of the nascent capitalist state and its business sector were P shaped and nurtured by the Zionist movement and the state’s ideological vision of an independent Jewish-Israeli economy. As BarGal notes, the link between colonial advancement and advanced production has been a focal point and a cradle for the development of Israel’s military-industrial complex from an early stage. However, industrial development in Israel did not conform to a uniform pattern. The defence and security industries, and the military system and its deeply militarised form of state capitalism have evolved as a strong economic force on an ad hoc basis but according to Zionist principles of ethnically conditioned capital accumulation. As such, the security industry relies on and reproduces structures of ethnic capital. Piterberg lists three fundamental, specific narratives that have shaped the Israeli economy as an accumulation of ethnic capital: 1) the so-called uniqueness of the Jewish nation, 2) the entitled consciousness of Zionist settlers at the expense of the colonised, and 3) the denial of the fact that the Palestinian Arab population was the single most significant factor that determined the shape of the settler nation (Piterberg 2008). In the racialised state debate, the ethnocracy model asserts that the closer a group is to the heart of the Judaisation project (in its ideology and 122 practice), the higher its political and economic status (Yiftachel 2006) 22. Growing out of these structures is the practice of what Yiftachel has termed ‘ethnic capital’. This term refers to an ethnically structured economy where class relations and socio-economic status is determined or influenced by ethnic origins (Yiftachel 2006). Dikötter explains how society produces a condition where the rights of an abstract organic collectivity come to subordinate individuals’ rights (Dikötter 1998: 468). This intersection of class making and racial differentiation corresponds well with Yiftachel’s notion of ‘ethnoclasses’ in the Zionist project. Zionism’s ethnic logic of control and its capitals logic at times reinforce each other because of territorial expansionism and the ethno-social stratification within Zionism (Yiftachel 2006). By default, the racial state intervenes to sustain the conditions for the reproduction of capital, not least by ordering resources and attempting to ameliorate the external and internal tensions that threaten the conditions for capitalist expansion. In this way, under the auspices of the nation state ethnicity is reconstructed and used to reinforce the interests of capital-centric elites. What is more, taking the overwhelming role of military provisions and production into consideration, no account of Israel’s knowledge economy and settler colonial pursuits can be considered complete unless examined inter alia, against the dominant processes of the militarisation of the Israeli economy (Davis 1977). A prominent segment of activity for the Zionist business elites was, and still is, the military or security industry, whose emergence and consolidation as one of the Israel’s most central economic sectors is/was deeply reliant on the state agencies for investment, support, and purchases (Maman 1999: 323–325; Mintz 1985). Over time, the state’s enormous financial and institutional support, a huge military sector, and elite-bound corporate structures have given rise to a powerful military-industrial complex. This complex emerged as a fundamental constituent of the economic structure created and nurtured by the founding elites and, once it matured, the Israeli developmental state. Specifically, as Maman shows, the formation of the capitalist state and its business groups was inevitable due to the state’s ideological vision of an independent Jewish economy (Maman 1998: 753). I return to more empirical analysis of the formation and development path of the security industry later in this thesis. 22 Yiftachel explores Israel’s planning as a multi-sided process of Judaisation through territorial pursuit to create Jewish sovereignty by the concerted efforts of armed forces, ethnic logic in the flow of capital, and the location of ethnic hierarchies in development. He argues that Judaisation continues to be the most dynamic and powerful factor shaping the space, wealth, and political power in Israel/Palestine. As such, the entire military-industrial complex should be analysed as one politico-geographical unit (Yiftachel 2006). 123 4.4 Pre-state formations and the nascent security economy Early stages of military production When asked how Israel developed its technological capacities, Gillam Keinan, Marketing Director for the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labor said: ‘It all began with land, the kibbutz and the people’ (Interview with Gillam Keinan, Jerusalem, 28 August 2012). Keinan’s statement is an often-mentioned explanation of the Israeli economic miracle. Across the spectrum of my informants, the Zionist pioneers will to fight and their struggle to build a state were stated as the cornerstone of the foundation for the building of the security economy. Many accounts of the Israeli military-industrial complex in the academic literature attest to the events of 1948 and the formation of the Israeli state as the starting point for the Israeli military complex (Levi-Faur 1999; Lissak 1984; Mintz 1983, 1989). These analyses suggest that the origins of the Israeli defence industries can be traced back to the pre-state years, when the Jewish community expanded in Mandatory Palestine. Both practically and symbolically, the idea of the pioneering efforts of ideologies and warriors is a core narrative for the industry. In more practical terms, two separate yet mutually enabling processes of economic consolidation marked the pre-state years: local settlement and initial industrialisation, and external backing (including financial) to support and sustain Jewish immigration. While the initial means of expansion was financial, it came to be military. Consequently, the desire for greater economic and military self-sufficiency was the key concern; as Maman notes, the state did not rely solely on the market as an appropriate means for economic development (Maman 1998: 750). The developmental ideology of the role of the elite around building a state structure had a unifying effect on the economic interests of those involved. The economy of the pre-state Zionist (Jewish) community of the Yishuv was largely agrarian, despite its reliance on international capital. However, the early push for up-scaling production through technological advancement and the founding of numerous scientific institutions paved the way to its gradual replacement by a strong knowledge economy. Shafir and LeVine point to how the process of technological progress and modernisation during late Ottoman and Mandatory periods provided the Yishuv with advantages over the Palestinians because of massive cash inflows to the Jews and the British strategy of stifling of Arab modernisation as a threat to the British colonial system (LeVine 2012). In fact, British rule allowed for rapid development of a public and officially accountable Jewish political establishment as part of the Mandatory structure, and also acted in favour of the Zionists 124 by curtailing Palestinian resistance (LeVine 2012: 81–82). Moreover, throughout the pre-state organisation of the economy, kinship structures – pre-state Jewish networks and extended family ties often rooted in diaspora – were consistently used as a platform to productively invest in economic interests while also serving national objectives such as land development and technological advancement. From the outset, the Zionist elite’s ambitions to create economic independence entailed strong ethnocratic features that produced ‘ethnic capital’ and also injected an ethnocratic bias into the production system. Also from the outset, a range of dilemmas marked the structuring of the economy, in particular, the question of how to organise a Zionist-Jewish labour market and how to manoeuvre between retaining centralised political control and nurturing the interests of private capital elites. From a materialist perspective, Nitzan and Bichler argue that centralised pre-state institutions emerged in the Yishuv’s Jewish communities to tackle labour shortages and create the infrastructure necessary for profitmaking, and that nationalist-religious rhetoric was invoked in order to create legitimacy and consolidate a capital-friendly social order (Nitzan and Bichler 2002; Selby 2005). According to Selby, this view is too instrumentalist and reduces the colonial experience to a much too narrow strategy of capital accumulation (Selby 2005), while Wolfe notes that the co-coordination of human and capital imports was the true challenge (Wolfe 2012). According to Sternhell, labour Zionism was the primary common denominator for the dominating political elite of the Yishuv, which in Sternhell’s view provided no new social perspectives or direction ‘beyond a nationalism based on the “historical rights to the whole land of Israel”’ (Sternhell 1998: 8). In fact, Sternhell points to how the elite: …never objected to private capital as such – it had to productively invest in enterprises serving national objectives the capitalists needed to serve the community or else disciplined and brought under control (Sternhell 1998: 8–11). In practice, the Histradut, Israel’s organisation of trade unions, became a central part of the state’s economic planning and development (Maman 2002), which allowed the state to control labour (Barnett 1996). The leadership of the labour faction of the Zionist movement, the Workers Party of Eretz Israel (the Mapai), and its principal arm, the Histradut, controlled key elements of the Zionist project. These forces were not supporters of private capital, but sought to create synergy between colonisation, economic production and marketing, the labour force, and defence. 125 However, the pure settler colonial aspirations met some challenges from the native Palestinian population. In the pre-state and early statehood years, social connections were based on a shared social background, an ideological or socio-political framework (such as membership in political parties), youth movements, and military underground organisations (Eisenstadt 1967; Lissak 1984). Ideationally, already in the pre-state period the notion of Hebrew labour mandating the exclusion of Arab labour and a ‘Jews-only’ employment strategy shaped the ways in which capital was harnessed to the Zionist project. Since Zionist elites hired cheap Palestinian labour from the outset of the Zionist settling in Palestine, Zionist ideas of a Jewish economy clashed with a more messy reality. Indeed, as Piterberg underlines, as the encounter with the native Palestinian ‘other’ was formative to the Zionist experience, the Zionist version of settler colonialism diverts from other colonial structures as this form of colonialism to a lesser extent integrated native non-Jewish labour power into its productive sectors. While the use of Palestinian labour has remained in flux over the years, an intensification of the ‘Hebrewisation’ of the labour market has taken place through the influx of cheap Jewish labour. According to Shalev, the distinctive features of pre-state Zionist society and the young Israeli state developed not only as functional ‘cocoons’ for capital, but also through the sociologically specific character of the Zionist colonial encounter in Palestine (Shalev 1998). In parallel, another trend spurred the early push for economic independence that celebrated technological advancement as a sign of salvation and emancipation. From the outset regional Arab states and actors rejected Zionist settlement and by extension, regional economic integration. In fact, initial boycott trends can be traced back to 1891 in the form of pleas to the Ottoman rulers to inhibit Jewish immigration; in 1922, the fifth Palestine Arab Congress called for the boycott of all Jewish businesses (Sarna 1986). In 1943, a larger official boycott by the Arab League’s 22 members was enacted and extended to both a secondary boycott (of any company that bought or sold to Zionist forces/Israel) and a tertiary boycott (of companies that traded with blacklisted companies)23. The settler colonial project combined economic progression with territorial expansion. As is still the case, territorial expansion was key to realising the aims of modernising the Yishuv and de-modernising Palestine. The steady and messy 23 126 Still today Israel’s regional marginalisation prompted a need for a production of easy exportable goods. In focusing on far away markets, the entrepreneurial elite focused on knowledge and innovation technology such as telecommunications and smaller components. replacement process enabled and fuelled economic development and industrialisation. The Zionist envisioning of an ethnic economy has had profound impact on the development of Israel’s industrial sectors. The trajectory of Israeli security giant Israeli Military Industries (IMI) demonstrates this line of development very well. IMI: From clandestine underground factory to security giant Today, on a green hilltop between the central Israeli cities of Rehovot and Nes Tziona, just minutes from the sparkling new high-rises of the new high-tech science park south of Tel Aviv, there is a small launderette. A few metres from the launderette one can find a now- closed bakery with massive stone ovens and shelves that once held piping hot loaves of freshly baked bread. A trap door is installed under each of these facilities. Underneath the openings is an old underground ammunition factory. It was in this facility 65 years ago that a group of rag-tag pioneers worked day in and day out to produce the bullets that were used in Israel’s War of Independence – Palestine’s Nakba. At its peak in the early 1940’s, the clandestine workshop (and what was to become the factory of defence giant Israeli Military Industries (IMI)) produced 40,000 bullets a day. The bullets were engraved with the letters EA, ‘E’ for Eretz Israel and ‘A’ for Ayalon. Between 1945 and 1948, the factory produced more than two million 9 mm bullets, which were crucial to the early success of Jewish fighters in fighting Palestinian natives as well as British forces. By the 1930s, members of the pre-state Zionist militia Haganah had set up clandestine small arms factories. Shortly after independence, as the militias merged under the IDF, Israel no longer had to conceal its operations and moved them above ground. The Jewish resistance movements became institutionalised in the state through the formation of the IDF, and all of the Haganah’s weapons manufacturing were centralised in the state-based industry of IMI. Meanwhile, the pioneer group from the Ayalon Institute decided to stay together and established a new kibbutz, Ma’agan Micha’el, by the sea near Zichron Ya’acov in 1949. During the first two decades after the inception of the state, IMI produced many of the basic weapons used by the IDF, including the world-reknown Uzi sub-machine gun. The more costly aircraft and other advanced weapons were procured from foreign suppliers, principally France. The Uzi became a long-term component of Israel’s arms export to the Third World, where its producer Ta’as was involved with clients in numerous countries worldwide. This burgeoning production in the 1930s and early 1940s is one of the first material signs of Israel’s soon-to-be established security industry. 127 The succeeding course of Israel’s IMI, the oldest state-owned defence firm, embodies the history of Israel’s capitalist economic organisation and its connection to the defence industry. The trajectory of IMI provides a good entry point into understanding the path-dependence and trajectory of the Israeli security industry. Today, as one of the last state-owned behemoths in the defence sector, IMI produces precision rockets, mortars and artillery systems, white phosphorous, and provides upgrading for land warfare systems. It is a global company exporting worldwide and employing 3,200 people on several continents. IMI’s products have been qualified with the IDF, the US Air Force, Army and Navy, and other NATO member countries. Currently, the privatisation of the IMI is the subject of debate in Israeli policy circles. As a state-owned, steady supplier to the IDF, IMI’s first financial crisis began when, according to the Chairman Avaner Raz, IMI was turned from an auxiliary unit of the Defence Ministry into a government corporation in the 1990s24. Current plans call for moving the IMI headquarters from expensive land in Sharon to the Negev in the South, which will release thousands of valuable housing units. Plans to privatise IMI were generated by a growing realisation that a modern security corporation in Israel works better in cooperation with state agencies, not under their ownership25. Because of IMI’s continuing strategic importance, any foreign company or individual seeking to purchase the company would need senior Israeli partners in order to meet the Government of Israel’s likely strict restrictions that effective control of the company should remain within the country26. While there have certainly been shifts in IMI’s structure and mode of production, the defence giant has sustained its close ties with the IDF. Its evolution from clandestine to government-owned to potentially private company touches upon several key points that relate to how Israel’s military industrial sector developed vis-à-vis broader developments of Israeli military strategies, expansionism, and economic policies. 24 25 26 128 According to advocates of privatisation, under the ownership of the state, IMI lacks the character and ambitions of an intense military industrial complex. Due to a history of ineffective management and heavy debt from pensions owed to the state, IMI announced its privatisation plan to the public in September 2013. This is to be availed to the Prime Minister in October 2013. Israel’s other defence giants, such as Rafael and Israeli Aerospace Industries, have declared their interest in merging with IMI. In 2005, IMI sold off parts of its production to conglomerate Samy Katsav’s SK Group, renaming it Israeli Weapon Industries (IWI), to be integrated into Katsav’s larger defence industrial group. This could include for example, as a minimum, a requirement that IMI’s Board of Directors should retain an Israeli majority. In such a circumstance, it would also not be at all unusual for the government to retain what is known as a ‘golden share’, which can result in draconian voting rights under defined extreme circumstances. Over the last years, IMI has begun to develop more sophisticated products such as the new super-smart MPR-500 multipurpose rigid bomb, first used in Israel’s Operation Protective Edge in 2014. According to military sources, back orders for the bomb today total 5.6 billion New Israeli Shekel (NIS). However, IMI’s modes of production and technological advancement have been guided by the industry’s close integration with armed forces dealing with a changing battlefield. In the pre-state era, factory labourers worked around the clock turning out munitions. In the summer of 2014, as the Israeli military advanced its onslaught of the Gaza Strip, the 300 workers of IMI in its Nazareth facility were likewise working double shifts to ensure a supply of bullets for the IDF. IMI’s history reflects the broader developments of the security and defence industry and the path of Israel’s nascent national economy rooted in settling the land and reaching the end point in a militarised high-tech economy. Its attachment to the land, to a nationalised group of innovative (militarised) agents, and a religio-ethnically defined community clearly reflects the construct of the nation as a central factor in Israel’s national innovation Israeli Military Industries (IMI) The clandestine underground product portfolio display, bullet factory of the Haganah (to be IMI), today the Ayalon M useum. Eurosatory, Paris, France, June 2012. Photo: Author. Photo: Wikimedia. 129 Pre-state militias and initial production Israel’s defence industry was set in motion as part of the creeping colonisation of the late 1880s. Experiencing resistance to the waves of colonisation faced by increasingly hostile natives from the very outset, the Jewish community began to manufacture homemade hand grenades and explosives. As the IMI case has illustrated, the pre-state militias fighting in the Yishuv laid the first seeds for the security industry. The predecessor of the Haganah was already in place under the name of Hashomer in 1909, itself a successor to Bar-Glora, which was founded in 1907 to guard settlers in their new homes – Israel’s first gated communities. At this time, Hagannah (formerly called Hashomer) had only about 100 members, but with the increase in settlers and growing Palestinian frustration and resistance, the numbers went up and foreign arms were sought. The Hashomer and later the Haganah unit transformed from being a militia to an underground army engaging mostly youth and young adult males in its/their activities. Throughout the 1930s, most weapons production by the pre-state militias was centred on small-scale clandestine arms production units that produced and repaired rudimentary weapons. In the late 1930s, actual production slowly emerged from the Haganah’s militia organisation. The secret industry was established to support the underground paramilitary organisations opposing British rule in Palestine. In cooperation with Israel’s leading technical institution, the Technion, it produced explosives in secret workshops (Popkin 1971). At the time of the Arab revolt of 1936–1939, the Haganah fielded 10,000 men along with 40,000 reservists. In 1931, the network fragmented and Irgun (in Hebrew, Etzel), the more militant group, emerged. In addition, Palmach emerged as a special elite combat unit within the Haganah. In 1942, the Palmach became self-funding by having its members work in the kibbutzim. Each kibbutz would host a Palmach platoon and supply them with food, homes, and resources; in return, the Palmach members would provide security for the kibbutz. This mode of organisation would be formalised under the IDF in 1948 as the Nahal programme, combining military service and establishment of agricultural settlements. The use of settlements for military purposes took its most complete expression in the establishment of the security settlement the he’ahzut (Gorenberg 2006). The British did not officially recognise the clandestine military network, but cooperated with it by forming the Jewish Settlement Police and Special Nights Squads, which were trained and led by Colonel Orde Wingate. The battle experience gained during the training proved useful in the 1948 war, and paved the way for actual state formation and expansion beyond the prescriptions of the 1947 UN Partition 130 Plan. Just weeks after the partition plan provoked increased military confrontation in Palestine in 1947, US President Harry Truman invoked the Neutrality Act, which imposed a unilateral embargo on weapons on both Palestinians and Zionist fighters. This embargo created a smuggling culture within the Zionist movement even before state formation had taken place. From this the forces would benefit in the decades to come. Many elite members of the Yishuv, and later the state project, had central roles in the Irgun or the Haganah. At this early stage, the clandestine militias received most of their funds and artillery support from the outside, through illegal smugglings from wealthy Jews in the US to Jewish fighters in British Mandate Palestine (known as the Sonnenberg Group) (Calhoun 2007). In fact, the group became the fundraisers, facilitators, and behind-the-scenes masterminds of the Haganah’s illegal armaments procurement effort in the United States. In fact, it operated separately from the highest representative of the Jewish people, the Jewish Agency, which the Haganah shielded from direct involvement in unlawful activities. Indeed, to circumvent the British hampering with the organisation’s activities, the Haganah turned to Soviet and American sources for weaponry (Calhoun 2007). The Yishuv’s land acquisition tactics were bound to provoke native hostility, and violence increasingly became the chief method with which to gain new territory. This expansionism intermeshed with the organisation of the nascent settler economy and the strengthening of a clandestine network of armed militias. Settling the land and the dynamics of replacement The Zionist pre-state economy was characterised by a combination of absentee ownership, centralisation, and transnationalisation underwritten by the permanent restructuring of existing relations in Palestine (Nitzan and Bichler 2002). Certainly the Zionist movement’s assertive agricultural policies were key to realising the goals of land-grabbing and land development. The collective agricultural settlement known as the Kibbutz, with financial and technical support from the largely bourgeois-led Zionist Organization, could effectively absorb and activate new immigrants into the machine of production and hence advance the settlement of land (Lockman 2012). The Yishuv focused its energies on building communal agricultural settlements in order to make the acclaimed return to the land practical as well as symbolic, which reflected Ben-Gurion’s broad security concept of populating sparsely inhabited areas that demonstrated how national innovation was bound to territory. Between 1882 and 1947, almost 550,000 Jews, mainly young, socialist immigrants from Russia and Eastern Europe, arrived in Palestine. This massive in- 131 flux fuelled the need for increased production capacity and housing schemes. Numbering 12 in 1918, the collective settlements, or the kibbutz, grew to 19 in 1921 and to 25 in 1925. By 1945, there were 179 such settlements (Aaronsohn 1995). In the formative, pre-state years, from the early 1920s until 1947, the political enterprise of settling the land permeated every facet of life, so that the political elite – primarily Zionist leaders who had enjoyed key positions in their diaspora communities – dominated all other elites. Moreover, the low level of development in economic, administrative, cultural, communications, and professional domains helped to reinforce the pre-eminent position of the political elite, community leaders, and wealthy investors (Lissak 1981). As Shafir shows, the Kibbutz were modelled on the European colonial experiments elsewhere including the French colonisation of Algeria and Bismarck’s Germanisation of East Prussia (Shafir 1996; see also Wolfe 2012). With the possible (and early) exception of Baron Rothschild, the capital that Zionists garnered for investment in Palestine was not dependent on the return of financial profit (Wolfe 2012)27. Accordingly, as Max Nordau, co-founder of the World Zionist Organization has argued, the external pressure from the likes of Rothschild pushed for a move from small-scale agriculture to large-scale capital-intensive modes of production (Aaronsohn 1995). Even during a period of global recession in the 1930s, settler colonial expansion, especially in the construction industry in the new Jewish city of Tel Aviv, enabled the sheltered Jewish economy to grow at the same time as the predominantly agrarian native economy of Palestinians was increasingly under strain (Wolfe 2012). The legacy of a shift from agrarianism to tech-economy is often cited in the industry’s narratives success. In the summer of 2012, I interviewed Dan Tishler, CEO and owner of the electronic security company Control Bit. Born in Israel and of Polish descent, Tishler’s career aspirations had followed the shift from an agrarian to a knowledge-based economy. As he explained to me over coffee in a mall in the lower floor of the extravagant futuristic Azrieli Towers in the central part of Tel Aviv: Only 25 years ago I based my company on the Jewish dream of being farmers; to have land. But today agriculture is not a good source of income 27 132 At the turn of the century, Baron de Rothschild transferred all his properties and interests in the moshavot (rural settlements) to the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA), which was founded in 1891 by Baron Maurice de Hirsch and had previously been active in South America, primarily in Argentina (Aaronsohn 1995). so I had to shift to high-tech. And then the IDF started coming to us with their problems and it all took off from there (Interview Dan Tishler, Tel Aviv, 2 September 2012). Tishler’s experience is quite indicative. During the period of state formation, two-thirds of the land consisted effectively of desert and infertile hills. As Beit- Hallahmi argues, a major challenge was that the many new Jews in Palestine were educated and trained as intellectuals and scientists and ill-equipped/untrained/ unprepared for physical labour (Beit-Hallahmi 1993a). This created a strong incentive to develop industries that could absorb a highly skilled labour force. The kibbutz milieu, early militarisation, and the emerging capitalist state structure based on an ethnic stratification system, including the ownership structures emanating from the cooperative, helped form the political and economic elite of the Yishuv. The link between the kibbutzim, the Histradut (the core Zionist labour union), and the establishing of major corporations was often one of a few central families (Davis 1977). This alliance of public and private capital was moulded in the kibbutz economy and came to play a key role in the formation of the security industry. Essentially, through the combination of increased militarism and a considerable amount of intellectual capital in the Yishuv, a form of cultural militarism grew and took shape as the armed forces became essential to the social experience of settling the land (Ben-Eliezer 2012). While the early emphasis on agriculture was the natural effect of the conditions of settling in a land with limited water supply, agriculture and civilian industries required larger workforces in relation to output. As capital flooded the technology and defence sectors, the kibbutz-based agrarian economy steadily declined as an industry. The intense efforts of establishing industrial production proved lucrative later on, as Israel’s agricultural productivity and innovation allowed the country to become largely self-sufficient in terms of food production. In the longer term, the state refocused its innovative skills and other non-military avenues of advanced technology. Collectively, the cooperative efforts and conditions of the kibbutz movement’s strong organisation in networks, the support of capital elites, and the entrepreneurship of pre-state militias were crucial in the preparation of the moral and material economy of Zionism. The resources amassed in the pre-state era were central to the actual process of state formation and the construction of the security industry, resulting in possibly overlapping interests between the formations of an entrepreneurial security elite, the distinctive features of Zionist capitalism, and territorial expansion. In the time to come, the ever-changing patterns of state involvement would become central to the shaping of the industry. 133 4.5 The state revolution The creation of the state of Israel was not evolutionary; it was swift and left hardly any time for transitional development. It came to provide its nascent structure with tools for Zionist military and business elites to use to build their colonial state through coercion, violence, and state intervention. Israeli state making became an outlet for consolidation rather than a point of origin for the security industry. From a military point of view, the transition from underground militias to a fully-fledged army became a cornerstone in the state’s consolidation. During this transition, it sought to concentrate the bulk of power in its domain (Ben-Eliezer 1995, 1998; Medding 1990). When the British left Palestine on 14 May 1948, the Jewish militias consisted of 3,000 Palmach soldiers, 9,500 in the special Haganah field unit, and about 35,000 Haganah people trained for local defence. There were 2,500 foreign volunteers, mainly airmen or naval personnel, a total of 10,000 rifles, about 900 machine guns, 800 small mortars, 19 antitank rifles and some grenades, explosives, and homemade Molotov cocktails (Popkin 1971). Thus, at the time of state formation the militarised nature of the Zionist movement was in place. After the 1948 War and the declared independence, the Zionist movement was ready to use Jewish sovereignty to build an effective military machine (Levi-Faur 1999). As the institutionalisation of the clandestine militias into the IDF and clandestine militia groups was accomplished, the relative anarchy of both economic and military life decreased (Barak and Sheffer 2006). Ben-Gurion and his aides sought to push for a state army unencumbered by party politics as the means by which the new state would construct an ethnic population as a nation in arms (Kimmerling 2001). The growth of a popular army was encouraged because of the perception of military power as the major statist tool for the ‘Israelification’ of the new immigrants who embodied the Zionist melting pot ideology (Kimmerling 2001). The declaration of the state of Israel radically changed the nature of Aliyah ( Hebrew for immigration of Jews to British Mandate Palestine and Israel-Palestine). The intensified immigration accelerated industrialisation and created a political order in which the (security) elite could grow and take shape. In practice, while Jewish immigration and the war efforts had exhausted the government’s budget, they also provided platforms to launch large-scale industrial projects. In fact, huge inflows of immigrants, the development of state policies, and massive foreign capital were the basis of Israel’s economic boom in the 1950s (Aharoni 1991). 134 From the late 1940s until the mid-1950s, the first stages of local military production focused largely on the manufacture of small arms and ammunition and the refurbishing of old weapons, (predominantly World War II surplus) for use by the IDF. Probably the most notable institution resulting from the establishment of the IDF was the formation of the Authority for the Development of Armaments, Israel’s national R&D laboratory for the development of weapons and military technology organised within the Ministry of Defence. Under the acronym HEMED, the IDF’s Science Corps and the precursor of security giant Rafael, was founded in 1948. In 1952, HEMED was renamed the Research and Design Directorate and split into two agencies; one purely scientific and one focused on the development of weapons (EMET), which was renamed Rafael by Ben-Gurion in 195428. As a national laboratory, Rafael was required to address the critical demands of the IDF, including top-secret projects such as the development of weapons of mass destruction. Israel quickly attained status as a ‘strong state’ because of its high degree of militarisation (Ben-Dor 1983; Migdal 1988). The state and its military regimes came to be seen both as problem-solving institutions (to deal with military/security threats) and an actor in the country’s rapid modernisation process. As per the triple helix model, the fact that the government invested in large R&D projects and the production of knowledge strengthened the long-term institutionalisation of the knowledge economy, which may have been more limited in an R&D environment located in the private sector. From early on, the construction of the military sector expressed a deep entanglement of ideological and material forces. Establishment of state organisations and the takeover of functions performed by the British Mandate and Jewish community organisations fuelled the power of political elites around the new state leadership and the core capital actors who were also engaged in building the security sector. State-controlled production The centrality of the military in the early state years was ‘one of the main indications of the high degree of stateness of the Israeli polity in creation’ ( Levi-Faur 1998, emphasis added). Consequently, the combined strategy of moulding a citizen’s army or a nation-in-arms espousing close civil-military relations often 28 The responsibility for R&D was transferred in 1958 from the Research and Planning Branch of the Ministry of Defense and transformed into a separate unit, Rafael, which was still part of the Defense Ministry. With 2012 sales of 1.775 billion USD, an order backlog of 4.2 billion USD, and a net profit of 148 million USD, Rafael is currently Israel’s second largest government-owned producer of defence technology and hardware (Rafael Advanced Defense Systems 2013). 135 with fluid borders (Ben-Eliezer 1995), and the strengthening national military production made clear the centrality of militarism to the new polity. In the first decades of the nascent state, the labour movement increasingly cooperated with a range of larger conglomerates or holding companies29. This movement retained control of industrialisation in areas (including the defence industry) deemed critical to the development of the state. These key developments were evident from the 1950s onward: the state selected and decided which industries to develop, their location, and which subsidies to provide to which individual entrepreneurs. The defence industry was a high priority in this process. The state also provided a platform or skeleton set with institutions from which the security industry was structured. In addition to the IDF and the state-owned security companies, a range of state agencies were steadily established that came to be involved in supporting the security industry. Among these major actors are: the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Defense (and SIBAT – Ministry’s International Defense Cooperation Directorate), the Ministry of Science, Trade and Labor, the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and smaller agencies such as Chief of Scientists Office (1974) and The Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute (1958). Other private and state-owned research centres and universities also supported the security industry, including Hebrew University (1918), The Technion (1912), The Weizman Institute of Science (1934), Tel Aviv University (1956) and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (1969). The state’s policy of intense militarism was pursued under tight state control and spurred the strategic organisation of military production where the selection of production came to hinge on more centralised power structures. The state also strengthened and institutionalised the dominance of powerful Zionist families (who were often from wealthy diaspora families) at the centre of new industrial endeavours in Israel, where elite structures became integral to the foundation of the security industry, a pattern that was also evident in other sectors such as banking and pharmaceuticals (Davis 1977). Because building the knowledge economy around military innovation was an important part of the army’s modernising role as a key agent of development and integration in Israel (Johnson 1962; Lissak 1976), capital and military interests merged with the innovative- and production-based spheres. 29 136 Such as Bank Leumi (1902), Bank Hapoalim (1921), Koor (1944) and Clal (1956). Since the network structure of the security industry was born out of these conditions, it makes little sense to speak of separate, stable subsystems of private-public configurations. It is better instead to investigate the state-bound mechanisms of interdependence and the penetration of the state into corporate militarism. The argument can be made that Israel’s creeping corporate militarism reflects Jessop’s argument of how the state is compensated by capital’s increased networking and other forms of public-private partnership in order to ensure the reproduction of the state’s dominant structures (Jessop 1996, 2004). Following this logic, the Israeli state organised the dominant classes according to its own productive capacity and long-term military interests. The state’s character – its having been born out of a war and in a permanent condition of war or armed peace – allowed the new state structure to mobilise both the private and public sectors for its own uses. The birth of Israel’s defence and security giants was vital to this process. The birth of the giants From Israel’s early state formation years, the emergence of the largest defence and security companies has been decisive in determining Israel’s path in the inevitable direction of economic success. As in the case of the IMI, the development of these companies’ products and ownership structures has paralleled that of the Israeli state. The composition, path of development, and production circles of these giants reflect the core features of the industry’s key structures and of the socio-economic history of Zionism in general. The individual foundation and trajectory of each of these security giants in material terms and as a sort of technological folklore echoes the path of the Israeli security industry vis-à-vis the broader scheme of state building. As part of the building project, the giants – publicly traded Elbit Systems, IAI, Rafael Armament Development Authority and IMI – were formed in close synergy with both state industry and military needs. Today, IAI, Rafael, and IMI remain state-owned and are deeply entangled with the very structure of the state. In 2007, it was estimated that over 95 per cent of defence material produced in Israel is manufactured by six companies, whereas 90 per cent of all export is produced by four of the giants (Sandler 2007)30. From their establishment, the defence companies were almost all owned by the state or under the direct control of the Defense Ministry as an ancillary unit. These include Rafael and IMI, and those under less strict control such as Israeli Aircraft Industries and its subsidiaries such as Elta. Fewer, but some companies, such as Tadiran and Soltam, were under the control of the Histradut. 30 IAI, Rafael, Koor Industries, Tadiran, and Elbit Systems appear on the list of the 100 biggest defence companies in the world (Peled 2001). 137 At the time of their inception, few of the security giants were in private hands; if they were, they were often in some kind of partnership with the Histradut. The giants’ ownership structures are emblematic of what Jessop (2004) describes in the strategic-relational approach to the study of state practice. He argues that it has become clear how the state is compensated by capital’s resort to networking and other forms of public-private partnerships to ensure its reproduction and requirements (Jessop 2004). Israel’s industrial companies, including the security giants, reflect this strategic duality of private-public alliance building. These configurations have accelerated the development of new, improved systems and products, and played a substantial role in the industrial, technological, and economic progress of the country and its national security. Zionist pioneers, elite networks and defence legends: The case of IAI and Elbit From early on, the state controlled the allocation of key economic resources such as land and other natural resources (Levi-Faur 1998). The Defense Ministry’s initial strategy was to place most defence production under its control (Barnett 1990). From the outset, Israel sought to retain defence production under the auspices of the state by providing MoD contacts only to state enterprises. State agencies were extensively involved in promoting economic change and growth, acting as central agents of development and modernisation (Levi-Faur 1998; Maman 2002). The development of the industrial infrastructure of the Israeli developmental state was determined by the broader and political logic of building and consolidating the state and its economy according to Zionist or ‘ethnic’ principles and interests (Shalev 1992). Reluctance to rely on the free market led the state elites in the 1950s and 1960s to set up different organisational measures that together with import substitution and the state’s re-distribution of capital enabled the emergence of business groups that focused on developing the security sector. These (security and defence) business groups enjoyed protection from competition with multinational corporations31 because the state-led economy did not pursue deep internationalisation at this stage, preferring to develop strong national industries instead (Barnett 1996). By 1950, the workforce in the defence facilities had reached 5,000. The aircraft maintenance facility Bedek was established in 1953 as a department within the 31 138 According to a study of 66 countries, Israel, despite its laws and regulations designed to attract foreign investment, ranked second lowest in the proportion of wholly foreign-owned firms (Mardon 1990). Ministry of Defense, specialising in maintaining and repairing military aircraft. Israel’s aviation industry and another giant, IAI,32 started to develop outside Israel. IAI was founded in 1953 by the legendary Al Schwimmer, who was a Jewish, US-born, a Lockheed Martin technician, and a former WWII aviation fighter. During the 1948 war, Schwimmer decided to use his connections in the US aviation industry to assist the pre-state Jewish militias in smuggling American military materiel through Europe to Israel. In the coming years, he ran an aircraft maintenance company in California while intensifying his dialogue with Shimon Peres, then chief arms buyer for Israel general director of the Ministry of Defence ((The Jewish Daily)) The Forward 2011). In 1951 Ben-Gurion invited the Schwimmer to Israel, an overture that led to the establishment of Bedek as the precursor of IAI and Israel’s main hub for military aviation industry. As the cooperation bore fruit, the company was founded in 1953 under the name Bedek. In close cooperation with the technical university Technion in Haifa, Schwimmer’s enterprise paved the way for a whole new engineering field in Israel. Thus, without third party investment dollars, Peres and Ben-Gurion had managed to recruit an American Jew to provide one of the biggest long-term jolts to Israel’s economy. Schwimmer became CEO of Israel’s aviation industry and remained in that position until 1978. In many of the accounts of Israeli military history, he stands out as a key person of the Marhal, the pioneering volunteers. By 1960, Bedek (the precursor of IAI) was producing a modified version of the French Fouga fighter plane33. While IAI’s trajectory illustrates how the force of ingathering the exiled played into techno-national development, the path of security giant Elbit’s success rests on a different trajectory. While IAI was a key vector in state-based military production, Elbit, now Israel’s largest private defence and security company, grew out of an alliance between Israel’s financial and military industrial forces. Prior to founding Elron, the holding company of defence giant Elbit, Uzia Galil, a pioneer Israeli entrepreneur, had been the head of the Electronic Department of the Faculty of Physics at Technion (1957–1962), Head of Electronic Research in 32 33 On 6 November 2006, IAI changed its corporate name from ‘Israel Aircraft Industries Ltd.’ to ‘Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd.’ to more accurately reflect the current scope of the firm’s business activities, which includes not just aircraft, but also systems, satellites, and launchers, as well as maritime and ground systems (Israeli Aerospace Industries 2012). IAI has for more than 60 years supplied advanced systems for the MoD and the IDF. With a current export rate of 80 per cent of its products to more than 50 countries and 30 subsidiaries worldwide, the wholly state-owned IAI has grown into a leading developer and producer of advanced defence and aerospace systems and stands as the flagship of the Israeli security industry. 139 the Israeli Navy (1954–1957), and had once worked in R&D for Motorola in Chicago (1953–54). Galil explained in an interview conducted in December 2007 that in the late 1950s he concluded that there was a need to confront the common idea that agriculture was the future of the Israeli economy. As he explained in the interview he felt instead that there was a potential for transforming IDF military research goals into a knowledge-based economy (Galil in Baal-Schem 2007). Through generous support from the Rockefeller Venture Fund in 1962, Galil founded the first high-tech multinational holding company based in Israel: Elron Electronics. After its inception, the Elron Group was involved in setting up more than thirty companies. Elbit grew out of the Elron Group and was tied to the Discount Bank founded in the Yishuv in 1935 by Leon Recanati, a Greek billionaire and head of the Greek Jewish community. Elbit soon merged with the Histradut-owned Bank Hapoalim. In 1966, Galil teamed up with Dan Tolokowsky from the Discount Bank Corporation34 and Michael Doron, the Israeli financial representative in the US, to found the Elbit Computers. In the same year, then Deputy Foreign Minister Peres convinced Galil to produce minicomputers for defence applications, which culminated in a joint venture between Israel’s Ministry of Defence and Elbit. (The Ministry of Defence and Elbit owned half of Elbit’s shares; the other half was in the hands of Elron.) The MoD transferred staff with military and technological expertise to the company, invested considerable start-up funds, and gave Elbit the initial contract. Elbit Systems was formally established in 1977 in Haifa in northern Israel. Today, the company is a major business group producing arms and sophisticated security technology, and is largely considered one of the founding pillars of Israel’s high-tech sector35. To summarise: the early Israeli developmental state model was characterised by its extensive and deep control of capital mobilisation and resource allocation. As these cases illustrate, the industrial development policies of the 1950s and 1960s were implemented by the state through a close alliance between capital elites, key entrepreneurs, and the state’s military agencies. 34 35 140 Today, Tolkowsky is known as ‘the father of venture capital funds’ in Israel. The financier co-founded the Athena Fund, which was the one of the first funds in Israel to make a large number of investments in high-tech start-ups. Today, Elbit employs 11,000 people worldwide, has subdivisions in more than 15 countries, and exports more than 70 per cent of its production. Expansive military production During the period of the establishment of the security giants’ industrial configurations, the IDF increasingly strengthened its role of determining standards for the industry and acting as the prime customer of security products. The emergence of a strong military machine consumed a large part of the GDP of the nascent state – approximately 5.7 per cent in 1953, 16 per cent from 1956-1975, and 30 per cent of GDP two years after the 1973 Yom Kippur War (Bassok 2014). However, while such an expense might seem to be a burden, it also made fundraising from the diaspora easier. Public support and volunteer projects supported the military with funds such as the Defenders Fund – Keren Hamagen – in the 1950s. Concurrently, while receiving support from external sources, particularly imperialist powerss in the 1950s, large firms began to accumulate huge amounts of capital from state developmental budgets that constitute a major instrument in executing state developmental policy. Throughout the 1960s in particular, this materialised in the subsidising of loans to approved investments, many of which were granted to the military/security industry (especially metal and electronics). These subsidies were not only key to the growth of the sector, but also accelerated the consolidation of business groups (Maman 2002: 747–748). The Sinai War in 1956 brought to Israel a rapid inflow of tanks, jet fighters, helicopters, and new communication systems that led to the rapid growth of maintenance facilities. The long-term preparation and public mobilisation for the military campaign, and the nature of the battlefield itself, consolidated the character of the IDF as a mass army whose practices that blurred the distinction between military and civil industry (Ben-Eliezer 1995). The latter necessitated both large foreign currency expenditures to purchase weapons and diversion of the productive labour force, which resulted in a loss of national production. These factors also stimulated the economy, as production was galvanised to meet both defence and consumer needs. During this same period, Israel relied on external military aid in the form of a unique international conjuncture of support from the US and the USSR and from the 1950s, a strong military alliance with France, which was fighting its own war in the colonial frontier of Algeria (Lockman 2012)36. During this same period, France sold advanced aircraft, armoured vehicles, naval craft, and other weapons to Israel. 36 Lockmann (2012a) argues that it is worth recalling that Ben-Gurion and his colleagues refrained from trying to conquer the remainder of Mandatory Palestine in 1948–49. This was not because they preferred a smaller Israel, but because they wanted a demographically more concise Jewish state, and much less of a principled commitment to share any land with its Arab inhabitants (Lockman 2012). 141 Shalev demonstrates that during the period from 1948 until mid-1960s, Israel’s economy was marked by rapid growth. To a large extent, this was due to large war reparations from Germany and the influx of resources from newly arrived, wealthy immigrants (Shalev 1998). Between 1949 and 1985, Israel received more than 33 billion USD, most of it after 1973 (Maman 2002: 747). Between 1953 and 1964, Israel received about 800 million USD in German reparations; between 1948 and 1990, it received 7 billion USD in donations from world Jewry. Most of the US support was in military loans and grants (20 billion USD), and a smaller part consisted of economic loans and grants (10 billion USD). In addition, the French provided the Dimona nuclear reactor and technological knowledge for the Israeli ballistic missile program. The French also agreed to provide Israel with technological assistance for the licensed production of combat fighters and trainers. All this generated a major transition in the development of local arms capabilities. This support structure of reparations and military support made Israel a unique case in the Middle East as it continued to build an economy financed by imperialism without being economically exploited by it (Eisenstadt 1967; Lockwood 1972). To summarise: the first two decades of industrial development in the nascent Israeli state created an institutional environment marked by both the involvement of foreign investors and heavy state allocation of resources to the military sector through a protected developmental economy in close alliance with strong, private capital forces. This configured into a governing system based on strong state mobilisation of capital around alliances with the military-industrial elites of the defence giants. 4.6 Post-1967: a new impetus and restructuring The 1967 Six-day War rejuvenated an opening of the colonial frontier in new terms and ways (Shafir and Peled 2002). A total of 300,000 Palestinians left the West Bank or were deported during or immediately after the war (Masalha 1992; Ron 2003; Segev 2007). Israel conquered and occupied the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights (from Syria), and the Sinai (from Egypt), and installed military administrations in the conquered territories without incorporating the residents of the areas into Israel (Gordon 2008). The geopolitical ramifications of the post-1967 reality set in motion new incentives for the Israeli security industry. Adjustment to the new reality meant that the state-based industrial entrepreneurs reinvigorated the ambitious strategy of making Israel more self-sufficient in defence supply. Shalev speaks of a ‘1967 system’ as a new axis for the state: the Israeli military-industrial complex became based increasingly on local military 142 procurement, and on US funding of Israel’s foreign purchases of arms as the occupation of the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza spurred economic military growth along new lines (Shalev 1998). This shift was of part of what Barnett (1990) has referred to as a two-faced strategy: intensifying preparations for confrontations with an external enemy and increased engagement in a regional arms race (Mintz 1989) while mobilising societal resources (Barnett 1990). A third dimension can be added to Barnett’s list: equipping IDF’s operations in the OPT with technology suited to changing needs. The acceleration of military production was driven by the IDF’s military needs and reconfigurations in the overall structure of the Israeli economy. At the same time, production was furthered by the enhanced goal of developing an independent security economy intensified by an explicit doctrine of military self-sufficiency. The latter was clearly strengthened throughout the 1960s and took on an air of necessity because of the French decision to place an arms embargo on Israel in 1967 (Barnett 1990; Mintz 1985)37. The goals of necessity and autarky led Israel to pursue an economic policy of non-reliance on foreign elements for security material and equipment (Sheffer and Barak 2010) and consequently, a restructuring of defence production. To begin with, the French embargo triggered a massive governmental program to support the domestic security industry and reduce dependency on foreign technology. This happened both through an increased support to state industries such as IMI and Koor and by abandoning the reluctance to support a private industry. Israel initiated programs for the indigenous production of advanced aircraft, tanks, naval craft, as well as tactical and strategic missiles, electronics, and other subsystems. These schemes led to more resources becoming available for the defence industries. In this way, economic progress (entailing economic liberalisation, decentralisation, and exposure to competition) and security coalesced in the eyes of Israel’s leadership, which embarked on long-term investment in private defence companies and the encouragement of private-public defence ventures. From 1960 to 1967, Israeli imports totalled approximately 58 per cent of domestic military consumption (Derouen 2000). After the 1967 Six-day War and perhaps more so after the 1973 Yom Kippur War, when military production cemented its central role in the Israeli economy, the need for a national and self-sufficient defence industry increased. After its 1967 victory, Israel began to 37 De Gaulle’s France cut off its support following the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory and its raid on Lebanon in 1968. 143 produce sophisticated weapons systems, including fighter jets, tanks, and missiles, both for its domestic market and increasingly for exports. At the time, Israel was devoting about 85 per cent of its military budget to domestic enterprises (Mintz, Ward, and Bichler 1990). Israel’s military sector began to intensify its production of light arms and communications equipment. Israel’s defence spending, the share of the gross national product (GNP), doubled from 10.4 per cent in 1967 to 20.2 per cent in 1969. In 1970, it reached 25.7 per cent, as the government poured massive resources into R&D. Employment in the defence industry grew from 14,000 in 1966 to 34,000 in 1972. Altogether, the interwar years of 1967 to 1973 saw a huge increase in Israeli defence spending because of new security requirements, and the push to optimise national production because of the huge impact of defence production on the national economy combined with a shift to more expensive US technology. In the two-year span between 1972 and 1974, Israeli defence spending jumped approximately 20 per cent as a result of the 1973 War (Derouen 2000). Clearly, by this point in time, the security industry was functioning as an essential engine of economic growth. As Barnett explains, in a capitalist context, interests in expanding the security sector had to extend beyond the capitalist state to ensure an environment conducive to a militarised economy (Barnett 1990). Employment in the sector and an emphasis on the external threat were key and were made possible by the fact that the state still retained a high degree of autonomy to construct its financial policy. The result, in terms of industrial endeavour, was recognised immediately. The post-1967 decision to accelerate weapons production altered the sector’s structure. It was a major turning point for Israel’s military industry and the formation of the sector’s business groups. Firms in the industry enjoyed protection and preferential treatment by the state. According to Hever, the state used an emergency security status to rapidly push through a neo-liberal reform agenda to diversify the output of the security production by facilitating the build-up of a market for private companies to tap into and benefit from (Hever 2010). The recession of the mid-1960s led to the collapse of smaller security companies, which were then purchased by larger groups, thus reinforcing the security industry’s hierarchical pyramid structure (Aharoni 1976; Maman 2002), in which business groups and holding companies connected to state elites were favoured. Surely, the war made the developmental role of the government more attractive and attainable. Concurrent with this renewed centralisation of production, Israel became a main hub of security technology and high-tech for other countries to buy from. One of the 144 most significant changes in Israel’s economy following the 1967 war took place in the country’s government-financed security industry. The defence sector became instrumental in transforming the Israeli civilian sector into a high-tech sector. After the War of 1973, the defence industry continued its expansion alongside the IDF’s accelerated process of weapons acquisition and personnel expansion. The 1973 War sent Israel’s defence budget soaring even higher as Arab countries, flush with newly acquired petrodollars or aid from oil-exporting states, could now purchase the most advanced weaponry. When the Middle East arms race, exacerbated by cold war rivalries, took off, Israel’s defence costs reached an annual average of approximately 32 per cent of GNP for the period of 1973–1976 (Sharaby 2002). Yet despite this heavy acceleration, Israel’s defence establishment still lacked the industrial infrastructure and capacities needed to produce advanced weaponry, which is where the role of the US intensified. External reliance: Pax Americana and the role of foreign capital The steady inflow of foreign capital was one of Zionism’s principal sources of pre-state capital accumulation (Wolfe 2012). Nitzan and Bichler argue that while the inception of Israel was indeed a product of foreign support, the country subsequently developed a strong national economy (Nitzan and Bichler, 2002). However, the inflow of foreign capital was still needed to compensate for the ‘ethnicity over efficiency’ policy and pure market rationality that still haunted the Israeli economy (Shafir 1996). Israel’s ostensible strategy of self-reliance was made possible by support from the US. Its post-1967 political economy was marked by a sharp increase in military expenditure and a sharp increase in the transfusion of foreign capital, primarily from the US. Despite the drop in direct foreign military support after 1967, Israel saw an increase in foreign capital loans. Whereas the pre-1967 inputs of such loans amounted to 22 per cent of foreign investment in Israel, after 1967, 47 per cent of investments were loans that intensified Israel’s dependence on external interests. Israel’s external liabilities as a percentage of its budget rose from 15.4 per cent in 1967 to 26.5 in 1977 (Sella and Yishai 1986). This support helped subsidise Israel’s expanding defence needs: the Israeli-US alliance was seen as a bulwark against Soviet expansionism. According to Davis, this foreign injection of capital was based on massive multi national investments concentrating mainly on boosting the military industrial sector (Davis 1977). Thus instead of direct military aid, foreign powers supported Israel through capital injections that allowed the national system of technological 145 innovation to continue its course. In larger terms, US aid to Israel has been shown to stimulate investment and tax cuts in the private sector thereby boosting capital production (McGuire 1987). This US support allowed Israel to slowly but surely fill out certain niches or areas of expertise, which spurred the blurring of the lines between the civilian and the defence sector and became a central factor in the institutionalisation of national arms production (Brzoska 1989; Derouen 2000). Between 1972 and 1979, US military aid amounted to about one-quarter of Israel’s total defence consumption. During this period, total defence employment (including sub-contractors) doubled to 63,000, or more than four procent of the total work force, most of which was organised in strong unions within the stateowned sector38. At the same time, arms export sales increased 25 times (Cohen, Eisenstadt, and Bacevich 1998; Klieman 1985; Sadeh 2001). After the Yom Kippur War, Israel began to realise that the era of war had ended. The alternative became the adoption of a doctrine that would facilitate hitting enemy targets without direct battlefield engagement, and a shift towards a small, smart army. The post-1967 US loans and gifts to Israel were not only about short-term procurement but also functioned to support the development of the military-industrial complex by national hands. Needless to say, given the population ratio between Israel and the surrounding Arab states, this initiative was also a quest for regional technological superiority. The steady external military support during this period gives credence to Hamish’s argument that until the 1980s and 1990s, most of Israel’s economic relations was an expression of its political relations rather than pure business (Hanieh 2003). The non-economic character of the transfers – the fact that the money came explicitly for development purposes rather than for profit – afforded successive Israeli governments considerable leeway to direct development and subsidise a high standard of living (Sharaby 2002)39. As Koshav argues, security threats and military escalations in Israel resulted in higher levels of foreign transfers of financial support, which reflects the general tendency of contributions from world Jewry to Israel to increase during wartime (Koshav quoted in Sanbar 1990: 37). Altogether, the domestication of defence production intensified the character of the Israeli security industry as a unified yet versatile cluster, where contacts in and 38 39 146 In 1987, IAI had 20,000 workers, IMI 14,000, and Rafael 6,000. The rest (Elbit, El-Op, and other companies organised under Tadiran) had 12,000 employees combined (Sadeh 2001). Israel’s privileged access to US and European technology, funding, joint research. Joint projects have been crucial to the expansion, extent, and depth of the sector. linkages to Israeli society were cultivated throughout the industry. The national efforts to secure economic development nurtured stable and reliable relations between Israeli policy makers, academics, and industrialists that brought about the formation of successful R&D networks. In 1969, Israel’s military expenditures amounted to 25 per cent of the country’s GDP and military expenditure tripled from 1967 to 1971 (Davis 1977). In the 1970s, the MOD absorbed seven per cent of the nation’s industrial output and a staggering ten per cent of the civilian labour force directly involved in the production of military goods. These efforts to upscale also entailed a reorganisation of the Israeli aircraft industry: Israel’s new capacities turned it into a nearby service centre for US jets already in the region, and added clients such as Greece, Iran, and Turkey. By 1970, Israel exported military hardware amounting to 75 million USD to foreign clients. While the military production in large terms happened with reference to existential security threats, already in the 1960s the size of the sector reflected a supply channel that went beyond demands of the home front. As Lockwood describes it: The rapid expansion of Israel’s arms industry since 1967 offers one of the most striking refutations of the notion of a “defenceless Israel” (Lockwood 1972: 73). To summarise: following the wars in 1967 and 1973 and in the context of geopolitical changes and Israel’s expansive territorial policies, the security industry saw a rapid increase in spending. This was made possible because of large-scale modernisation programmes undertaken by the IDF and strategic investments from the state. Moreover, transnational sources of capital have in a number of ways amassed into the subsectors of the military and security industry and the broader high-tech economy of Israel. Over the next ten years the security industry consolidated further along this pattern. The ‘economic peace’ of the Oslo Accords The sigtning of Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt in 1978, the two Palestinian Intifadas and the Oslo Accords between Israeli and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) had a profound influence on the Israeli state’s control regime and the security industry. Israel’s cold peace with Egypt scaled down militray provisions at its southers borders. In 1987 the First Intifada erupted and ended with the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, while the Second Intifada erupted in 2001 among those disappointed with the outcomes of Oslo. Both revolts rested on public mobilisation against the Israeli occupation constituted by violent and armed and non-violent and non-armed resistance. However, while the First Intifada is generally considered to have been more grassroots- oriented and 147 less militarised, the Second Intifada was co-opted by elite political movements, such as Fatah, the growing Islamist movement, and the Hamas party, and altered through the deployment of arms. It was also in the course of the Second Intifada that Palestinian militants upscaled their suicide terrorist attacks against civilian Israeli targets. These developments transformed the nature of the battle between the IDF and Palestinians. Ben Eliezer has termed Israel’s current modes of confrontation, which arose in the Intifadas as ‘new wars’. These are technologised and asymmetrical battles between state and non-state actors, but perhaps just as important, much like guerrilla warfare, they show no clear boundaries between times of war and peace (Ben-Eliezer 2012). The Middle East peace process to end the First Intifada began with the Madrid Conference in 1991 and continued through to the 1993 Oslo Declaration and the 1994 peace treaty with Jordan. The Oslo Accords were produced under the auspices of the international community and signed as an interim agreement to institutionalise quasi-autonomous Palestinian self-rule in the OPT (East Jerusalem excluded). Defenders of Oslo often describe the set-up as a failed attempt to push for progress through confidence building measures and the granting of gradual autonomy to the PLO. Critics have argued that the Accords served to undermine Palestinian rights and provide legitimacy to the Israeli occupation by accepting de facto the continuing occupation (while ‘building confidence’) and implementing measures that would rupture and fragment Palestinian territory through zoning systems. In practical terms, the Accords included the installation of measures of Palestinian self-policing ingrained in the security agreement between the parties as well as the consolidation of a Palestinian dependency economy regulated by Israel. In short, the Oslo Accords enacted a vocabulary of peace building, while in practice imposing a range of new opportunities for governing the Palestinians under occupation (notably the establishment of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) and massive international donor funding scheme). At the same time, it helped liberalise the Israeli economy through privatisation efforts and state investments and also helped Israel become one of if not the most technologically advanced country in the region. This provided ample opportunities for the Israeli government to take advantage of its new place on the international scene and the correspondingly accelerated international flows of capital into the country. These major events have in turn shaped and formed the path of the security industry. Despite the effects of the First Intifada in the late 1980s, Israel saw enormous economic growth spurred by mass immigration and foreign investment. The in- 148 tensification of attacks on Israeli civilians during this First Intifada did not curb Israel’s industrial activity40. Because the majority of the international diplomatic community embraced the peace process, the Accords provided the opportunity for Israel to advance its participation in the global economy and intensify its foreign trade (Bouillon 2004; Shafir and Yoav 2000; Shafir 2005). During the 1990s, Israel became one of the world’s largest per capita importer-exporters, in part as a result of the Oslo Accords. In this way one of the spin-off effects of the Middle East peace process was a rapid increase in the flow of foreign direct investment (FDI) to Israel, expansion of its industrial zones, and further development of its infrastructure and communications (Frenkel 2001). What is more, throughout the 1990s Israel experienced substantial economic growth powered by massive immigration from the former Soviet Union41 and a dynamic high-tech sector, both of which operated under the relatively favourable geopolitical climate of the Oslo Accords. On the ground in Israel-Palestine, the Oslo process created peace dividends for the elites, including those in the Israeli private sector (Bouillon 2004). In fact, the liberal peace paradigm of the 1990s (Richmond 2011) embraced by the Oslo Accords led elites to push for ‘peace dividends’42 through a kind of conflict management scheme that enabled production to circulate into global markets despite the absence of a political solution (Bouillon 2004). As Richmond argues, the liberal peace paradigm in this post-conflict period led to the ‘resecuritisation’ of conflicts because of the paradigm’s goal of managing rather than addressing political and social ‘root causes’ or the core structural impediments to peace. In effect, this reproduced Israel’s normative and political hierarchies (Richmond 2011). In fact, the continuing Israeli state’s colonisation and occupation did not have much direct influence on the development of its economy. Moreover, Israel’s physical infrastructure was largely insulated from the fighting, and its ‘intellectual’ infrastructure did not provide a ready target for attack (Sharaby 2002). 40 41 42 According to Sharaby (2002), the nature of terrorism and the fact that it aims at psychological rather than physical destruction. Since the early 1990’s, around one million Russian-speaking Jews have moved to Israel, increasing the country’s Jewish population by 20 per cent. The term ‘peace dividend’ was deployed by regional key actors and external core powers that were engaged in conflict resolution (Ben-Porat 2006). Ben-Porat suggests that globalisation affected both national conflicts and subsequent peace studies, which began to focus on the potential for economic incentives to promote peace. 149 Paradoxically, the dead-ended diplomatic track of the Accords renewed and enhanced Israel’s diplomatic relations. Rather than solving the conflict, it seems that the diplomatic overtures of the Oslo period facilitated the upholding of Israel’s ongoing territorial expansion43. In the wake of the Oslo peace process, the IDF pursued efforts to create a ‘leaner and smarter’ force, with changes in structure, missions, conscription policy, and budgeting (Cohen, 1995: 1). The then IDF Chief of Staff Ehud Barak envisioned the creation of an IDF with less foot soldiers and more advanced technology. Barak’s well-known vision was not unique to the IDF, but it does underline the immediate centrality of the goal of scientific innovation to ensure Israel’s military superiority. In part, the shift from boots on the ground to smarter, learner practices was made possible by the political structure that resulted from the Oslo Accords. This structure effectively transferred the human and economic resources from Palestinian political activism and resistance to the collaborative Israeli-Palestinian project of stability and security measures aimed at keeping the Oslo opponents at bay while securing Israeli interests. This development made the outbreak of conventional war less likely, and required a broadening of defence production to include more subtle security technology and increased focus on export. Thus, the Israeli production apparatus had to strike a fine balance between upholding stability and managing the occupation. With the new political geography brought about by Oslo, new systems, such as border crossings and zoning data registration (more hereof in the remaining chapters), shifted much of the centre of gravity for Israeli military production to homeland security, software, border security, and surveillance. The security sector’s changing needs on the domestic front led Israel into the market of homeland security, risk management through surveillance, digital techniques of population management and technology, and systems for asymmetrical warfare such as unmanned aerial vehicles. Thus it was that war and peace amalgamated in this era of liberal peace. As the empirical chapters unfold later in this thesis, more warfare and policing provided the Israeli military forces with new features and logics that had a tremendous effect on the qualitative nature of security production and its organisational structure. 43 150 Crocker and Hampsons characterise the basic criteria of success of ‘liberal peace’ as support to structures that discourage the parties from taking up arms again (Crocker and Hampson 1996). In the heyday of the Oslo Accords, managers and owners of newer private security companies took advantage of favourable economic environments created by the Israeli state. With the scaling down of Israel’s defence budget in the post-Oslo period, thousands of skilled workers left the army to form the base of start-ups, which found a receptive business environment that had been consolidated as a result of sustained government deregulation, privatisation, and liberalisation since 1985 (Ben-Porat 2006; Hanieh 2003; Shalev 1998). The burgeoning sector of start-ups of the 1990s attracted intense flows of foreign capital, which in turn spurred the emergence of new business groups in the security sector. By 1997, 150 of the largest industrial corporations in Israel (based on sales) included ten firms in the defence sector, two of which were among the largest five (Dan and Bradstreet in Peled 2001: 4). Thus, the relative optimism of the Oslo years provided a cover-up for corporate peace dividends, while the move towards a high-tech economy provided a way to redistribute income and wealth. By the mid-2000s, around half of the 100 largest companies listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange and almost all of the 25 largest companies were controlled by large business groups (Kosenko 2007). This suggests that the normalising features of the Oslo Accords remilitarised the economy into a security economy based on both low- and high-tech strategies that strengthened deeper ties to the civilian high-tech sector. The state successfully pushed groups, particularly within the security industry, to engage in joint ventures, which minimised the risks for those involved and enabled a smoother reallocation of capital. In turn, this shifted the balance of power so that the state has increasingly come to depend on their organisation and production. In the 1990s and 2000s, the growth of the high-tech economy was considered the locomotive of the entire Israeli economy. Its share of the GDP grew from eight per cent in 1995 to 14 per cent in 2007, and the share of high-tech manufacturing exports grew (Maman and Rosenhek 2012). The level of foreign direct investment exploded and became a pronounced component of the economy, totalling more than 7 billion USD between 1993 and 1997, and hitting a record high in 2000 of almost 5 billion USD for that year alone. At the same time, Israel’s high-tech industry went global, providing the third highest number of initial purchase offerings (IPOs) on the NASDAQ in New York, after the United States and Canada, and the second highest number on London’s Alternative Investment Market, behind Britain. In the 1990s, a number of annual Middle East-North Africa (MENA) economic summits brought Israelis together with representatives from Arab governments and businesses. This high level participation of Israel in international summits lent the country a sense of legitimacy as an economic partner and may 151 have helped assuage fears about its precarious position in the region. It also may have helped to increase incoming foreign direct invetsment flows (Bouillon 2004; Hanieh 2008). Peled argues that Israel, as an effect of the state’s neoliberalisation reforms in late 1980s experienced a sizable consolidation of defence combined with a much greater reliance on outsourcing and subcontracting of both production and R&D among defence contractors (Peled 2001). This in turn spurred an increased use of commercial technologies in military applications, mostly IT, which today plays a central strategic and tactical role in modern armed forces. Within this context, steadily larger shares of R&D and applications of advanced technologies came to be performed and funded by the private sector (Peled 2001). Around 2004, the peace dividend discourse was replaced by a new discourse – that the effect of Israel’s occupation and the unresolved situation with the Palestinians had only an insignificant effect on the Israeli economy (Sharaby 2002). This confirmed the argument of the Israeli political and economic elite that neo-liberal policies can lead to prosperity despite conflicts (Landau 2008: 98). Israel’s private security entrepreneurs thrived in a neoliberal environment of overlapping networks produced by small communities, common army service, and geographic proximity. The Israeli stock market increasingly conflated with the international stock markets. In 2006, 46 per cent of Israel’s net industrial exports (excluding diamonds) were classified as high-tech exports (ICBS 2008B). Clearly, while the changing international context of Israel-Palestine affected Israel’s political economy, national production was still based on the demands from the field, i.e. the steady yet constant need for innovation and production of new refined technologies. Rather than globalising the innovation process, the internationalisation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict provided new opportunities for the Israeli security industry, and the financialisation of the economy became key. From third world villainy to Silicon Wadi Within the realm of defence and security, Israel’s international involvement was not a new phenomenon. For the past 50 years, Israel has been engaged with and selling arms to repressive third world regimes, thus asserting its role in warfare abroad (Beit-Hallahmi 1987). Throughout the 60s, state officials, private ventures, and the Histradut’s Afro-Asian Institute sought to direct cooperation with and military aid to countries such as South Africa, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Bolivia, Ecuador, Costa Rica, and Singapore. In this way, through non-diplomatic economic ties, Israel re-established relationships with oil- and mineral-rich countries that had been tarnished in the wake of the 1967 war. This internationalisation strategy espoused pragmatism and opportunism with little or no guiding policy hand (Africa Research Group 1970). These are only a few examples, but they serve to 152 highlight how changes in Israel production schemes and the political economy of the security-technology sector have moved from being characterised by more conventional trade and aid policies to a more consolidated way of building transnational business ties through financialisation, capital investment, and R&D. Since the 1990s, Israel has emerged not only as a favourite destination for high-tech investors, money managers, and the illegal flight of capital, but also as the source of much capital outflow, with locally based capitalists acquiring assets outside their countries (Nitzan and Bichler 2002). In 1997, then Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the synergy between military and private activity: Israel is now enjoying a ‘swords into silicon chips’ trend as its military industrial sector casts spinoffs and externalities into the private sector (Netanyahu 1997, quoted in DeRouen 2000: 70; Netanyahu 2007). In the Israeli economic ecosystem, the combination of transnationalised capital, the national-security state, and the military industrial complex constitute a successful marriage with the business model ingrained in the financial operations and marketing mechanisms of neoliberal governance44. Neoliberalism can be explained briefly as a strategy of accumulation, a political project of restoring capitalist state power by liberating capital from its constraints through a programme of marketisation and privatisation (de Graaff and van Apeldoorn 2010). It is a form of deregulation that works both as an ideology and a governance practice bound up in processes of globalisation whose enabling feature is financialisation. The neoliberalisation of the Israeli economy has reconfigured the Israeli security industry by linking ownership structures and offshore exports to the interests and growth strategies of the most globalised transnational corporations and armed forces, in particular those representing global financial capital. The Israeli state’s embrace of neoliberalism has resulted specifically in its raising investment funds from abroad for its high-tech ventures (de Fontenay and Carmel 2001). Frenkel demonstrates how Israel’s clustering of high- and medium-tech companies in its metropolitan zones because the spatial concentration impact on the high-level of innovation has strengthened Israel’s competitive edge (Frenkel 2001). The availability of information resources, the vicinity to research institutions and 44 The path to high-tech has coincided with Israel’s steady privatising and outsourcing of security that began in the 1980s. Hever points to three cases of outsourcing or privatisation of the South Lebanese Army (founded in 1979 and collapsed in 2000), the Palestinian National Authority (1993) and increasingly, the private HLS industry (Hever 2010). 153 other areas radiating an air of success, and the government’s policies of making regions attractive to high-tech firms were all factors that led to the success of hightech clusters (Felsenstein 1996; Frenkel, Shefer, and Roper 2001; Frenkel 2001). Within the last decade, the overlay of foreign investments, clustering of high-tech ventures, and financialisation of the Israeli economy have spurred what is referred to as ‘Silicon Wadi’, Israeli moniker for its technology cluster. (Wadi means canyon or gorge in Hebrew and Arabic.) This cluster of high- and medium-tech companies is essentially a clone of California’s Silicon Valley and is structured around: 1) public and private R&D support and incubators, 2) investments – the injection of foreign capital and venture capital and international collaboration projects such as with Motorola, Lockheed Martin, Apple and Hewlett Packard or with research institutions such as Brown and Yale universities and foreign militaries. Currently, Cisco, Microsoft, Google, Apple, IBM, Oracle, Motorola, Facebook, and EBay have research centres located in Israel, 3) a strong military sector production scheme. The notion of the wadi refers to geographical areas around Tel Aviv in particular, and smaller clusters such as Ra’anana, Petah Tikva, Herzliya, Netanya, and Israel’s first private city, ‘Airport City’ (located next to Ben-Gurion Airport) that have a high concentration of high-tech industries. Wadi also refers to the functions and roots of the cluster of companies and actors with close ties to elite echelons of the state and the military. Over the last 20 years, California’s technology industry has channelled billions of dollars into Israeli high-tech (especially venture capital) firms. For example, in 1996, Israeli firms raised over 1 billion USD from Wall Street (Album 1997), while more than 70 Israeli technical firms trade on US stock exchanges (Rapaport 1998). Today, venture capital firms such as California-based Accel and Sequoia are grand players in the Israeli economy (Bond-Graham 2014). In 2007, venture capital firms invested USD 1.76 billion in Israel according to the OECD, in 2012, Israel received 1.846 billion USD in direct investment from US investors (Bond-Graham 2014; OECD 2013)45. This flow of capital is principally digital and transmitted as stocks, currency, and intellectual property. International capital has also and perhaps especially penetrated the security sector through investments and the export of techniques and technologies, a pattern that will be discussed in greater detail later. However, the implications of Israel’s global reach go well beyond quantitative measures. 45 154 This is approximately two thirds of the total military aid to Israel that the US government provided Israel in the same year. 4.7 Conclusion To paraphrase Foucault, the history of the Israeli security industry is a colonial genealogy of modernity. While periods of relative peace are not conducive to growth in the Israeli security industry, this is not concrete evidence that Israeli goes to war in the pursuit of profit. Rather, this chapter has shown that the trajectory of the Israeli security industry is a history of technological nationalism informed and directed by a wide range of conditions, ideas, and events. Fundamentally, Israel’s efforts to realise its national dream of a Jewish state operates through a settler colonial structure that makes innovation a key vector for the normative choices that shape the country’s endeavours. A key node in this course is the national movement’s dual goal of transforming national community into state practice and to settle and develop acquired land. Three basic conditions have been decisive for the development of the industry: First, Israeli security economy has concomitantly been both a shaper of, and shaped by broader developments in the Israeli economy; its network structure, globalised features, and geopolitical reconfigurations are central to its settler colonial project. Second, the ideological impetus of Zionism has been informed by, and has informed vectors of economic organisation. Third, the cluster structure of the industry has – as a variant of a triple helix system – benefitted from the close institutional and informal personal links between state, military, and the private sector. The Israeli security economy has grown from Zionism’s conclusion that permanent war was a necessary modality for national survival. Practices of kinship relations – horizontal networks of comrade relations – shape the platform from which national and economic interests are articulated. The deep-rooted militarisation of the Israeli economy has sustained a security innovation network where knowledge from the field and scientific laboratories are mutually beneficiary and work as a synergetic two-way street. The bias of the Israeli security is to be found in the co-imbrication of Zionism’s national vision and the concrete efforts of merging national community and state interests and practice. Altogether, Israel’s security establishment, including its private sector, has consistently upheld a comparative advantage anchored in its colonial experiences while saturating the IDF with sophisticated technology. The collaborative effort between companies, state institutions, and the IDF is the spine of the Israeli national system of innovation that is tied to territory and the ideational aspirations of the settler colonial movement. The system’s political bias constructs the industry as 155 a distinct economy based on ethnic capital. Techno-conceptual shifts rely on the negotiation between material and ideational forces in the colonial settler project. With reference to the theoretical framework calling for social explanations of technology, which the next section further unfolds, it has become clear that the idea of the nation lies at the heart of innovation, science, and technological production. 156 157 158 CHAPTER FIVE 5.0 SECURITISED NATIONALISM, TECHNO-SCIENCE, AND WAR 5.1 Introduction ‘If you will it, it is no fable’ (Herzl 1998 (1902). These are famous words from Herzl’s nearly Orwellian vision of a Jewish state in Palestine. In his utopian novel Altneuland, published in 1902, Zionism’s founding father Theodor Herzl pictured the future Jewish state as a pluralist, advanced society (Herzl 1992 (1902)), a sort of a ‘light into nations’ (Efron 2011). The Zionist ideologue envisioned a new society that was to rise in the ‘Land of Israel’ to advance science and technology as part of developing the land and building the state’s institutions. Herzl’s fable has become a symbol of the Zionist vision of how to create, in his words, a ‘western yet Jewish capitalist miniature state’ (Herzl 1987(1902)) This chapter shows how Herzl’s vision of a modernising state through scien tific progress has informed the both settler colonial and hypermodern features of Zionism. It examines the ways in which science, innovation, and entrepreneurship have been and continue to be cornerstones of the Israeli knowledge economy and how they express a settler colonial techno-nationalism. This includes a discussion of the formation and role of frontier institutions and how the scientific echelons of Israeli society play a central role in nurturing the Israeli security industry and in the overall framing of the settler colonial project. The chapter substantiates the argument that scientific innovation and the production of technology have been at the core of the Israel’s colonial enterprise and have helped shape the progression of a ubiquitous security-war-technology nexus. It also examines how the push for scientific progress and wealth accumulation has laid the groundwork and provided the resources for the security economy. The chapter argues that science and innovation has enabled the development of technologies and has also rationalised the colonial process, thus helping frame the political project of Zionist state building as a progressive endeavour. 5.2 Science, settler colonialism and Zionism Even before the inception of the state of Israel, science was the centrepiece of pre-state military innovation. It was central to the Zionist security ethos and has consistently figured at the heart of the nation’s self-image as a key force in 159 Zionism’s broader colonial pursuit of territory. During this period, science took a leading role as an ideological force in creating an entitlement to the land. As Efron adeptly shows, in order to ‘shape the progressiveness’ of the Zionist state building project, Zionist pioneers would ‘capture the land through science and technology’ as a matter of principle and practice (Efron 2011: 417). By invoking the ethos of a scientific nationalism, Israel (like other nations) established the idea that nationalism is an unproblematic, even progressive force. While visions and narratives of rationalised scientific progress are common features of modern nationalisms, a central element of the Zionist project has been centred on a premise of nation building as a ‘civilizing mission’ (see Elias 1995). In a settler colonial context, knowledge of the population and its territory is particular information organised to achieve power driven by interests. It is also a tool to legitimise the ideology of settler colonies that enables the transformation from ‘perceived’ to ‘conceived’ colonial space. In fact, Samman argues, in the case of the transformation of Palestine’s colonial urban space, ‘it is the upper political level of the political structure of the colonial state, which decides what knowledge is needed’ (Samman 2013: 27). Moreover, science was also used by Zionists elites to shape the justificatory discourses that underpin the political intent behind the colonial undertaking. Zionism has traditionally emphasised the value of the scientific as an expression of self-reliance. Israel’s ‘modernity’ and ‘post-exilic’ identity has ensured that the Israeli state has ‘historically invested in institutions and positions of technical expertise’ (Efron 2007: 224). In the case of Israeli state making, the relationship between science and social formation has served to shape and form the settler colonial rule as a dominant logic marked by discourses of and calls for modernisation. The relationship between science and Zionism has also been marked by the particular circumstances of Israeli state making. In the course of an interview conducted for this thesis’ research, Gillam Keinan, Director of International Marketing at the Israeli Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labor, emphasised the early challenges of uniting science and military production: In this country, in the beginning of the 50s, one could identify a very advanced research and development in the military, and a very advanced research and development in the universities, but the security industry had nothing to do with that. The major problem was that the people that worked in the industry at that time, did not know to communicate with the people in the military R&D, or with the people in the universities. 160 Everybody was trying to tell me that our future was in agriculture. I did not believe it. I believed that in the long run what was happening in the States, where people from the universities, were also setting up start-ups and business would also happen in Israel. And finally it did (Interview with Gillam Keinan, Jerusalem, 28 August 2012). Keinan’s words reflect the much-celebrated entrepreneurial foundation of Israeli economic prosperity. The lack of shared national tradition and experience posed a number of challenges for the Zionist pioneers as they settled in Palestine. However, these were largely compensated by the resources harvested from the experiences and capacities in the various milieus of the Jewish diaspora. According to Beit-Hallahmi, this multifaceted cradle of resources formed the foundation of the success of the military in the nascent state of Israel through the help of modern science and technology (Beit-Hallahmi 1993a). Two primary conditions enabled this: first, Jews in this new setting experienced less discrimination than in more traditional societal structures. But once the new immigrants had begun to arrive in Palestine, the settler population began to enjoy some advantages. Since they were for the most part urban, literate, and experienced commercial middlemen, these Jewish immigrants were predisposed to set a knowledge economy in motion (Beit-Hallahmi 1993a). In the same vein, Feivel notes that Jewish marginality in the diaspora also played a major role in making Jews what they are in the modern world. Their past experience as a minority, victims of subjugation, and and also as agents of adaptation provided the Zionist pioneers with critical tools of entrepreneurship. As Feivel argued, before the inception of the Israeli state, ‘Jews have been the best interpreters of civilisations and cultures, always as outsiders looking in’ (Feivel [1938] in Beit-Hallahmi 1993a). Stressing these Jewish advantages do not mean that they are an essentialising point or feature; rather, this emphasis is meant to highlight a set of particular, socio-historical circumstances that led many Jewish communities to be flexible and to adjust to new settings46. In addition, the relatively high level of education of the settler community, combined with the establishment of a state structure, opened up the possibility of the entrenchment of liberal capitalism. Taken together, these conditions help explain the reasons behind the rapid scientific and business-related progress in the Yishuv. The second Aliyah (the second wave of Jewish immigration to Palestine) contained the embryo of the logic of ‘western 46 A similar case can be made in the context of elite strata of other diaspora communities. 161 progress’ that was enshrined in Palestine. The sense of Zionism as a civilising mission shaped both the self-perception and the strategies of legitimisation of the Zionist pioneers (Davis 1977). Ein Breira science and avenues of warfare Moral justification of war and security as existential necessities takes a central role in celebratory explanations of the special role of science in Zionism (Beit-Hallahmi 1993a: 13). The coupling of national survival and scientific progress is expressed in the notion of ein breira technology (in Hebrew, out of necessity), a term often used by Zionist protagonists (see Popkin 1971). Certainly, from the earliest times, the co-imbrication of knowledge and power in intelligence and military operations has been central to warfare (Crampton 2007; Khalili 2013; Zureik et al. 2011). In his remarkable account of the interrelationship between modern warfare and science, Bousquet (2008) presents the notion of a scientific way of warfare that seeks to explore the role of science in warfare and in perfecting technology. This perspective helps us see how technology has been systematically recruited and selected to inform thinking about the very nature of combat and the forms of military organisation best suited to prevail (Bousquet 2008). As Bousquet argues, ‘the scientific way of warfare’…refers to an array of scientific rationalities, techniques, frameworks for interpretation, and intellectual dispositions which have characterised the approach to the application of socially organised violence in the modern era’ (Bousquet 2008: 4). This way of war has its origins in war that is understood, shaped, and delimited by what is scientifically possible and by how the state has shaped its policies of science. More fundamentally, security technology is attached to broader national and moral claims. As Denes notes, the Israeli security and defence industry is a ‘hub of techno-scientific practice but also a site where national meanings are given substance, and reflect several tropes from readings of Zionism’ (Denes 2011b: 178–179). Collins discusses the symbolic value of the tie between Zionism and science; he describes how ‘Zionism’s self-fashioned mythology of unity and revivification’ offers a sort of ‘botanical twist’, whereby the erection of structures is celebrated as a ‘sign of new life’ (Collins 2011: 88). This envisioned ‘new life’ not only attests to the return and resurrection of the Jew in a new land, but was rooted in the bifurcation of science and the practice of settling the land supported by the state’s strategies of accumulation. As Collins further argues, the forces of colonisation were set in motion: ‘…by the revolutionary fusion of militarism, acceleration, science, and technology’ (Collins 2011: 88–89). In the course of colonising Palestine, the scientification of security and control entered into the political discourse 162 and the security industry itself, and has both legitimised and masked violence and domination. Both practically and discursively, scientists and Israel’s institutions of science have been central to the perpetration of Israel’s military advantages. 5.3 Scientific frontier institutions ‘Just as some people live by the sword we will live with science’ (Weizmann 1949)47 In the case of Israel, scientific institutions have historically been at the heart of the nation’s quest to build a strong state. During its nation building phase, these institutions took shape and became links between the pre-state build-up of both ideological and material resources and the post-1948 consolidation of scientific-academic institutions and networks. In a broader perspective, Turner uses the example of the development of institutions in the US settler colony in the 19th century, when settlers were compelled to settle the nation’s frontier and adapt themselves: …to the changes involved in crossing a continent, in winning a wilderness, and in developing at each area of this progress out of the primitive economic and political conditions of the frontier into the complexity of city life (Turner 1921: 6). Both before and after 1948, Israel’s academic institutions and research centres have been key ‘frontier institutions’, both in terms of their geographical location and in terms of setting scientific standards for cutting-edge technology. These institutions have steadily functioned as smaller engines of state building, both by educating the public and connecting industry, state, academia, and the military through collaborative knowledge production. This has included the production of new, patented knowledge for the security industry. The vitality of scientific institutions to Israel’s settler colonial project has given Israel’s academia a central role in the security industry. For example, these universities are responsible for training academic reserves and screening junior candidates for specialised IDF units, where graduates form the backbone of the knowledge base of both security and the broader high-tech economy. 47 Chaim Weizman, Israel’s first President, in a speech at the UN in Geneva, Switzerland, 27 November 1949. 163 In 2012, my fieldwork took me to Israel’s renowned Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, some 20 kilometres south of Tel Aviv. The institute is a world leading academic institution named after Israel’s founder and first President, Chaim Weizmann. As a world-renowned scientist and Zionist ideologue, Weizmann was devoted to establishing science and industry in the nascent Jewish state. At the Institute’s futuristic-like campus area, an emblematic quote from Weizmann is literally paved into the stony gateway: I feel sure that science will bring to this land both peace and a renewal of its youth, creating here the springs of a new spiritual and material life. I speak of science for its own sake and applied science (Weizmann (1946) in Calder 1958: 75). In the pre-state era, Weizmann was a key player in the development of the Israeli knowledge economy and remains a symbol of Zionism’s civilising legacy. In 1907, he visited British Mandatory Palestine to see if industry and development could be brought to the land and met the Jewish immigrants and members of the elite who were among the first Zionist pioneers. This visit cemented Weizmann’s commitment to establishing a Jewish national homeland. His efforts paved the way for concrete innovations. In 1947, Albert Einstein and a group of other scientists recommended that the University build an electronic computer and sustain it as a public commitment to the people of Israel (Ariav and Goodman 1994; Breznitz 2007), which resulted in one of the world’s first computers. In 1948, Weizmann directly linked Zionist aspirations and scientific activities: The great value of the university in [the] building up of our ‘National Home’… to … vanquish the ‘plagues of Palestine’ via scientific research and its application (Weizmann cited in Efron 2011: 288). Weizmann’s profound engagement in the development of scientific institutions in Israel is clearly reflected in the connecting of the practice of science to the realisation of the broader national vision. Israel’s settler colonial structure has provided scientific imperatives with a sense of purpose and a mission. The nation’s mobilisation to create a hypermodern Israel is a consistent theme in the self-narration of the scientist: he or she has a special national duty to perform. In general, today and over time, Israel’s scientists engaged in the field of (homeland) security and have viewed science as the tool for realising the homeland, which has carved the individual scientist’s efforts into the larger national project. 164 Main gate entry into the Weizman Institute of Science. Rehovot, Israel. Photo: Author. Main research facility, Weizman Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel. Photo: Weizman Institute of Science. 165 Policies of science: R&D and security In their seminal account of the relationship between (hot) science and the Cold War in Europe, Bud and Gummett (1999) argue that the relationship between pure science and applied science becomes more intense in wartime, when many military and industrial military research laboratories resemble ‘large university campuses and even industrial zones with many building employing thousands of people’ (Bud and Gummett, 1999). Israel’s settler colonialism entails not just the quest for territorial supremacy, but a preparation for war marked by sophisticated R&D and scientific advancement 48. This is what Virilio calls the ‘technological race’, which is linked to the ‘infinite preparation for war’ (Virilio 2006). The technological race has become the backbone of the link between science and warfare in Zionism. Today, the Israeli state’s innovation strategy encourages scientific initiatives and state co-ordination of such initiatives to promote efficiency and to ensure that research complies with national militarily and financial objectives. Comprehensive science and technology policies have also been developed to create economic and military competitiveness. This is done in part to stimulate firms to develop, commercialise, and/or adopt new technologies and to influence universities to continue their basic research and facilities with commercialisation activities – policy tools, macroeconomic regulatory instruments, tax incentives and network initiation. More concretely, the Israeli government devotes 3.6 per cent of the GDP to R&D, which ranks it at the top of the list of countries (Central Bureau of Statistics Israel 2002). The demands of the military impose special conditions on security innovation. Israel’s defence and security sector has consistently been provided with both the resources and the opportunity to develop new technologies for military applications that also have wide civilian applications, e.g. satellite communications and microwave technologies. (In Israel and abroad, the technical capabilities and know-how accumulated through military R&D are valuable resources for technologically related civilian high-tech applications (Peled 2001)). In times of military escalation, the conduct of research for immediate use intensifies, while in times of relative peace, it is generally conducted as long-term strategic projects. Both are salient features of the R&D of the Israeli security industry. 48 166 As was, for example, the case of Great Britain’s science and technology endeavours during the Cold War (Agar and Balmer 1998; Bud and Gummett 1999). The commercialisation of science and the Chief Scientist’s Office The inherent reliance in scientific institutions on human or intellectual capital gives the scientist a prominent role in security and defence innovation. As shown in the historiography of the security industry (in Part Three), Israel’s institutionalisation of the relationship between science and violence (and economic growth) has resulted in the advancement of a very prosperous academic-military-industrial complex. In recent years, this has been fortified by a liberalisation of research to include a stronger institutionalisation of technology transfer, commercialisation of research results, and structures designed to enrich individual researchers through individual bonuses and grants. Neocleous demonstrates that the saturation of the political and social landscape with the logic of security is generally accompanies by the emergence of an academic industry that churns out ideas about how to defend and improve technologies (Neocleous 2008). The Israeli state’s strategic alliance with security companies and their cooperation with research institutions pushes defence innovation forward. The commercialisation of technologies and transfer of knowledge from institutions take place in many cases through strategically allocated grants. In Israel, scientific practices, for example, in nanotechnology or advanced communcations technology, that contribute to the national project are nurtured through an incentive structure, where the commercialisation of scientific results are linked to the use of technological devices by the military or other state agents. Scientific results are commercialised through patent systems based on individual reward systems for the researchers. The most notable transfer centres in Israel are Technion Technology Transfer (at Technion’s Centre T3), Yissum Technology Transfer (at Hebrew University), Ramot, the technology transfer arm of Tel Aviv University, Yeda Research and Development Company (at the Weizman Institute), and BGN Technologies (at Ben-Gurion University). Today, under the philosophical and policy umbrella of neoliberal knowledge-production, most research and science institutions in Israel are deeply involved in collaboration with the IDF. Perhaps the most tangible expression of this is the range of multidisciplinary centres for defence and security research, which are organised in collaborative efforts between the IDF, state agencies (funding and investment), and private security companies as well as foreign institutions. For example, Ben-Gurion University and Technion work with the Israeli Ministry of Science and the national security giants Elbit, IAI, and Rafael on joint R&D ventures. Partaking in much of the R&D of the security industry, the institutions themselves constitute hothouses for the scientification of war in Israel. Innovation happens through a fertile overlap between commercial and military interests. 167 State funding of research and start-up capital has been key in supporting the national security industry in Israel. In 1985, the state enacted the Law for the Encouragement of Industrial R&D, which also aimed to develop science-based, export-oriented industries to fully utilise national resources and human capital (Trajtenberg 2000). The state’s Office of the Chief Scientist (OCS) in the Ministry of Economy facilitates and regulates the cooperation between scientific institutions and the security industry. The agency was established in the late 1960s and works toward the dual goal of directing research in the interests of the state and overseeing industrialisation development based on science. Through a diverse set of funding schemes, the OSC takes it upon itself to carry the risks involved in long-term strategic research and technological development. Currently, it is responsible for overseeing government-sponsored R&D in the industrial sector, and managing an annual budget of more than 1.2 billion USD (Office of the Chief of Scientist 2012). Under the auspices of the OCS through various national, bi- and multilateral programmes such as the Magnet and Magneton, the Israeli government funds the development of ideas and requires no return on that investment. These schemes are similar to the major BIRD programme with the US, which is a joint venture funding over 800 high-tech projects with up to 50 per cent of R&D costs for companies involved since 197749. For example, Motorola’s cooperation with the IDF to provide a portal of smart platforms is a BIRD product. At the second biannual HLS expo in Tel Aviv in 2012, Avi Hasson, Chief of Scientist, explained the reasons for Israel’s competitive advantage in security technology. He stressed the inbuilt features of innovation, which he considers critical to the Israeli nation project: ‘Innovation is not a hobby, this is who we are’ (Speech of Avi Hasson, HLS Israel, Tel Aviv, November, 2012). Hasson oversees the allocation of state funds to both public and private scientific projects. He enjoys considerable influence over the design and implementation of research projects and the state’s areas of intervention in R&D to ensure that they express the long-term visions and strategies of the state. In the course of summarising the government’s role in Israel’s ecosystem of security, Hasson used the words of Leonardo Da Vinci: 49 168 BIRD is an acronym for Israel-US bi-national Industrial Research and Development. The BIRD Foundation’s mission is to stimulate, promote, and support industrial R&D that benefits both the US and Israel in what is seen as a synergetic venture. I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough. We must do (Avi Hasson speech, HLS Israel, Tel Aviv, November, 2012). According to Hasson, his work is part of a special mission aligned with the broader goals of Zionism as an urgent nationalist impulse. In the realm of Israeli defence and security innovation, there is little difference between basic and applied research and the circulation of knowledge is ensured. Seen in this light, Hasson’s words underscore that, in Israel, there is no difference between knowing and doing in the field of security innovation. When I visited OSC’s offices in the World Trade Center in Tel Aviv overlooking the Mediterranean, Noam BarGal, head of International Collaboration, explained to me how their programmes supporting the Israeli high-tech industry with R&D capital were set in motion in the 1970s to help create ‘an infrastructure of innovation’ in Israel that would exceed the already renown infrastructure of education and the army, ‘to get a footing in sophisticated tech’ (Interview with Noam BarGal, Office of the Chief of Scientists, Tel Aviv 6 September 2012). In 2013, the OCS, in cooperation with Ben-Gurion University’s Technology Transfer Company and the Israeli venture capital fund Jerusalem Venture Partners (JVP)50, established a so called homeland security incubator specialising in cyberspace security (Siegel-Itzkovich 2013). It also recently launched a programme to encourage multi-national companies to organise a portion of their research according to a zoning system that ensures the spread the knowledge economy across geographical locations. Basically, while the state agency ‘Invest in Israel’ was tasked with attracting investments, the military with outlining demands and deploying the technology and the security companies with actual production, the mission of the OCS was and is to boost the industry and encourage new paths for innovation. As BarGal emphasised: 50 JVP was established in 1993, and manages eight venture capital funds totalling over 900 million USD. It has created and supported over 90 companies over the past 19 years. JVP has long focused many of its investments in the area of cybersecurity and enterprise software, the most prominent being Cyber-Ark, which has over 1,100 customers worldwide and is installed in eight of the world’s top 10 banks. 169 We do everything in collaboration. We have an excellent ecosystem. We did manage to create and help quite a lot of companies such as IAI, Teva, and Checkpoint (Interview with Noam BarGal, Office of the Chief of Scientists, Tel Aviv, 6 September 2012) 51. Along with other agencies and collaborative efforts, including cross-border inter-academic cooperation, the OSC’s practice is to connect Israeli expertise and companies/research institutes to economic powerhouses. This also contributes to the global economy while keeping knowledge nationalised in Israel. The broader internationalisation of Israeli science has been in flux in recent years. For example, several major enterprises, such as Google, Hewlett Packard, Motorola, and Intel, have established research centres in Israel. These companies have received funds from the OCS under a funding programme designed as a multiplier: the state invests funds in the form of grants and expects nothing in return except for taxes and the broader benefits harvested from general economic growth. A central aspect of this funding scheme is to make sure the high-tech base economy remains ‘blue and white’, meaning in Israeli hands 52 (Office of the Chief of Scientist 2010). To summarise: Even before the state’s inception, Israel’s research and scientific institutions operated ‘at the frontier’ by providing necessary knowledge to the pioneers of the battlespace and geographically as frontier institutions expanded into peripheral lands. This, as the following two cases will show, has become manifest in the erection of modes of production such as science parks and interdisciplinary scientific security centres established to boost both the security and the broader high-tech economy and to promote qualitative technological advancement (while expanding territory). The development of the Negev at the expense of the native residents is a case in point and attests to the broader tendency of military-academic-industrial syntheses to format in clusters, or what the next section examines as a form of militarised technopolis. 51 52 170 IAI is one of Israel’s largest military enterprises, Teva is the largest pharmaceutical, and Checkpoint is Israel’s fastest-growing software security giant. The slogan ‘blue and white’ is commonly invoked to promote Israeli products and as strategy of state officials and private companies to keep (within the restraints of a free market economy) most of companies in Israeli hands. The technopolis To demonstrate the concrete correlation between science and war, I discuss a case where a collaborative push for land development and innovation has fortified this relationship: the new Advanced Science Park in the Negev. In general, science parks represent an effort to assemble the military, industry, and higher education and research in one dynamic cluster. Such parks have been increasing world-wide for some time as an urban planning scheme, a strategy of accumulation, and as a consequence of the acknowledgement that cross-sector synthesis can best be achieved in this way. Wakeman uses the term ‘technopolis’ to describe the phenomenon (Wakeman, 2014). She describes how governments build science parks to strengthen technological transfers and cross-sector innovation in order to optimise the synergy between public and private training institutions and research laboratories linked directly to private companies through professional contacts, research contracts, and service activities (Wakeman 2014). Thus, the technopolis works as a sort of hybrid agent of innovation and represents a trend whereby science and business are clustered into urban centres for the growth and production of scientific synergy growth and production. Wakeman describes the technopolis as distinctive because of: …its uniform composition, its rational analysis and arrangement of space, and its symbolic architectural forms located scientific practices within the cultural and territorial orbit of provincial utopia. The technopolis offered the scientific community as the ideal of modern life and the scientist as the archetypical ‘modern man’ (Wakeman 2014: 255). In Israel and elsewhere, the building of techno-cities around scientific initiatives often combines metropolitan expansion at peripheral frontiers with an explicit strategy of enhancing the state led scientific-militarism53. The plan to develop a new technopolis in the Negev is a case in point. 53 The strategy to combine the development of industrial parks and academic/research institutions has proliferated in Israel. For example, there are collaborations between the Kiryat Weizman Industrial Park and the Weizman Institute in Rehovot, between the MATAM High-Tech Park and the Technion, and between Jerusalem’s Har Hotzim and Malkah Technological Park, and between Hebrew Universities and the settlement of Ariel (the latter enjoys close cooperation with ventures in the Ariel Industrial Zone). 171 The Negev technopolis In 1951, then Prime Minister Ben-Gurion specified that the new national space should be transformed through cultivation and innovation on the newly cleared frontier. According to Ben-Gurion, the task entailed: Transforming human dust into a crystallised and firmly-established national unit and work to populate the frontier districts and spacious desolate areas (Ben-Gurion 1951: 14–15). Decades after Ben-Gurion’s statement, the Negev’s urban centre Be’er Sheva, one of Israel’s fastest growing cities, has a population of 200,000, and has been an area of priority in recent years in the development plans of the Israeli government54. In 2012, at the second biannual Homeland Security conference in Tel Aviv, plans for the establishment of a new cyber eco-system or science park in Be’er Sheva were presented as part of establishing Be’er Sheva as a hub for security. This ambitious plan was presented as a component of the state-led strategy of supporting tech-clusters and as part of a long-term policy to promote and improve life in the country’s periphery. In some ways, the new construction of the Advanced Technology Park (ATP) in the Negev is an archetypical technopolis that operates as part of advancing the settler colonial project and to ensure continuous capital accumulation. The Israeli government and ‘master developer’ KUD LLC International are in charge of executing the development of the ATP in partnership with Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and the Municipality of Be’er-Sheva. In this sense, the Park is a hybrid agent that coordinates the innovation in an industrial penumbra, i.e. performing the role of regional/local innovation organiser (da Rosa Pires and de Castro 1997). In recent years, Be’er-Sheva has become a hub for security research, as Israel’s military is moving its headquarters to the southern city. At an official event in 2013 to mark the construction of ATP’s first building, Prime Minister Netanyahu declared: Today we are launching the economic anchor that will turn Be’er Sheva into a national and international centre for cybernetics and cyber security. 54 172 About 170,000 semi-nomadic Arab Bedouin roam the Negev outside Be’er Sheva. From the time of early statehood, Israeli authorities have pursued a strategy of controlled transfer of Bedouins out of the Negev and the ghettoisation of the Bedouins inside the Negev. This has been part of the intensification of Israel’s demographic war for the past ten years (Adalah, 2011; Hussein and McKay, 2003; Swirski, 2006). This is a day that will change the history of the State of Israel and we are doing it here in Be’er Sheva (Benjamin Netanyahu at the opening of the Advanced Technology Park’s Building #1, 3 September 2013, quoted in Hiner n.d.). The ATP technopolis is designed to advance research and technology growth in Israel and to develop the desolate desert region; the Park is clearly part of the broader national goal to develop the Negev. This strategy falls in line with the Israeli aphorism that the development of the Negev is a reflection of the vigour and depth of Israel’s development of the land. In other words, such a park expresses the parameter by which Israel’s overall success in realising the Zionist vision of successful settlement should be measured. As Ben-Gurion has famously stated: ‘It is in the Negev that the Youth will be tested, its pioneer strength and creative and conquering initiative’ (David Ben-Gurion 1955). As far back as 1963, IDF Chief Moshe Dayan expressed the political goal attached to reconstructing the Negev. He told the newspaper Haaretz: ‘The reality known as Bedouins will disappear’ (Dayan quoted in Shamir 1996). In 2013, Robert Ilatov, chair of the Knesset Israeli High-Tech Caucus (officially the Subcommittee for the Advancement of Science Intensive Industries) of the Knesset explained the establishment of Israeli technopolis as a way to rethink and ensure the state’s cooperation with the industry (Ilatov, Knesset Lobbies, November 2013). According to the state agency Invest in Israel, the ATP will be the backbone of a larger plan to develop the region through high-tech based business initiatives coupled with broader strategies of strengthening education and quality of life for newcomers. It is also intended to ensure long term self-sufficiency of the new ATP as a sort of techno-military eco-system, including a renewal of the Negev’s production capacities (Invest in Israel 2012). A key node in the ATP plan is to link the scientific activities of the adjacent Ben-Gurion University of the Negev to the commercialised science park and the IDF’s new Negev headquarters. The transfer of the IDF’s headquarters from the heart of Tel Aviv to the Negev (together with a 2 million square foot high-tech telecommunications R&D centre), is a massive undertaking. Its size and scope bear testimony to the importance granted to the project, which has been deemed a move to turn the south into a ‘cyber valley’ to strengthen the synergy between military, innovation, and science. To summarise: the ATP is a noteworthy example of how state-led planning strategies enforce and reconfigure the academic-military-industrial complex while serving the interests of Israel’s internal colonisation. It is a culmination of Israel’s 173 efforts to direct a maximum number of Israeli Jews and resources to the Negev, where a simultaneous forced transfer of native Bedouins has been a prerequisite of the erection of new Israeli metro-technological frontiers. The targeting and potential ethnic cleansing of the Bedouins and their structures and livelihood is an integral yet silent component of the ATP technopolis that demonstrates the interrelationship between the settler colonial project and the modernisation efforts at the nation’s frontier. Masterplan of the Advanced Technology Park (ATP) in Be’er-Sheva, Israel. Photo: Ben-Gurion University. 174 Examining the practices of Israel’s scientific institutions can shed further light on the role of academia in the security industry and its broader implications for the nature of Israel’s warfare and security practices. The next section offers a micro perspective of one of Israel’s research centres for homeland security. Blumberg’s Homeland Security Institute One of the centres expected to benefit from the synergies of the ATP is the recently established Ben-Gurion University (BGU) Homeland Security Institute in the Negev. In the summer of 2012, I visited the Institute in this desolate part of the country to interview Professor Dan Blumberg, the head of the centre. Blumberg specialises in robotics and remote sensing in the university’s department of geography. He explained how he expects the ATP and especially the IDF’s move to the Negev to boost the Institute and promote the South as the new hub for innovation in Israel (Interview with Dan Blumberg, Ben-Gurion University, Beer Sheva, 29 August, 2012). Blumberg explained how the centre’s proximity to Gaza creates an extra incentive for the project to succeed. He drew a direct line of causality between the patriotic duty of safeguarding Israel’s citizens and the function and results of the institute. This is not only crucial in the abstract but also practically, he said, as the centre’s work is based on the experiences of being under rocket attack launched from the Gaza Strip, a geographic condition that unifies the institute’s staff around the project. The BGU Homeland Security Institute is a multidisciplinary research centre composed of representatives from almost of all of the University’s faculties, including more than 80 members of the scientific staff. It employs a collaborative approach to maximise the synergy of multidisciplinary approaches to security research that range from natural science to psychology and even the arts. This enables the Institute to work on homeland security-related matters spanning from nanotechnology to cultural intelligence (Interview with Dan Blumberg, Ben-Gurion University, Beer Sheva, 29 August 2012). The Institute is virtual and does not house massive production facilities. It operates on a project-based, ad hoc basis: scientists and researchers collaborate depending on the specific project. The composition of research fields and the shifts from large-to small-scale research tasks of solving more technical problems reflect in many ways the nature of the production schemes of Israeli security technology. The Institute focuses primarily on applied sciences allocated through the aforementioned R&D incubators Magnet and Magneton. Blumberg described the 175 scope and depth of the centre’s ambitions during the interview: while the Institute focuses now on applied research, it is interested in moving into avenues of more basic science and research: Because this is where the real breakthroughs in innovative homeland security take place. For example, in nanotechnology which can then be applied to remote sensing and drone technology (Interview with Dan Blumberg, Ben-Gurion University, Beer Sheva, 29 August 2012). Bloomberg’s emphasis on the potential to link research in defence and security with long-term basic research echoes that of the Office of Chief of Scientist, and attests to the centrality of science not only as means to solve technical problem but also as a fundamental pillar in the state’s accumulation and development strategy. A major focus area for the centre has been its work to make security platforms autonomous. It has been involved in refining the technology of UAVs deployed by the IDF, including advances in artificial intelligence and robotics. Blumberg addressed the challenges attached to this work: We need to find a way to give the robot human skills, like when it picks up a tomato, we need to teach it not to crush it. The same goes for combat (Interview with Dan Blumberg, Ben-Gurion University, Beer Sheva, August 29 2012). A range of the Institute’s cutting-edge projects is presented in its viral promotional video for external communications. The video also shows a description of another project, where video Professor Hugo Guterman explains how the Institute has developed a miniature drone (UAV) based on the idea of having to behave like a human being. Guterman discusses his project’s focus on transferring drone thinking into fields such as healthcare, medicine, industry, and, of course, HLS in general (Promotional video, Ben-Gurion University Homeland Security Institute, Beer Sheva, 2013). Another example of the centre’s work featured in the video is from the field of cyber security. Professor Bracha Shapira and his team of researchers have developed a sophisticated algorithm to detect data leakage, anomalies of infrastructure and critical networks in order to address threats on both individual and national levels. In addition, ProfessorYair Neuman, who specialises in semiotics, information technology, and psychoanalysis, heads a project on security and cultural intelligence. Here the focus is on how to adjust the role of cultural and political rhetoric in 176 order to conduct precise and advanced intelligence analyses, i.e. a software programme for translating culturally specific language and slang. This research focuses on understanding ‘different minds’. As Neuman explains it (while pictures of Arab newspaper clips are displayed on the screen), ‘We have to understand the different language this mind speaks’ (Promotional video, Ben-Gurion University Homeland Security Institute, Beer Sheva, 2013). Neumann refers to the mind of the potential criminal, for example, and the culturally coded language used by criminals that could be extrapolated into culturally coded language used by potential enemies. An example of this cultural intelligence is the development of a software programme that teaches the computer to differentiate between simple and literal language, and helps to understand the meanings or the connotations of metaphors. Or as Neuman said, ‘the deep cultural meanings’ to be able to differentiate between saying ‘sweet baby’ or ‘sweet candy in Arabic’ (Promotional video, Ben-Gurion University Homeland Security Institute, Beer Sheva, 2013). Blumberg himself is dedicated to remote sensing in the specific field of HLS. Referring to the centre’s work to improve the use infrared glasses (night goggles) Blumberg said, ‘Homeland security is about being in on guard all the time, also if it means turning night into day’ (Interview with Dan Blumberg, Ben-Gurion University, Beer Sheva, 29 August 2012). The Institute illustrates how Israel’s scientific advancement has been enabled primarily by private-public-military partnerships moving between the laboratories of the battlespace and the laboratories of scientific institutions and state agencies. It is the link between science, innovation, and warfare that is most blatantly demonstrated in Israel’s use of the OPT as a laboratory and a conceptual showroom of war and control. 5.4 Laboratories of war Scientific advancement and military domination within the Israeli security industry are routinely seen and talked about as two sides of the same coin. Because Israel’s war is a permanent continuous reality, Azoulav argues, it is dependent on the state’s structural control and the techniques at hand to uphold its dominant position (Azoulay 2011). This structural control, which is embedded in Israel’s settler colonial governmentality and modes of warfare, has been contingent upon techno-scientific progress among the military and scientific sectors of Israeli society. As Virilio argues, when the state was developed, it developed war as an organisation, 177 a territorial economy, an economy of capitalisation of technology’ (Virilio 2006: 11). As a consequence, ‘the military space is first and foremost technical space, a space of time, a space of the rapidity of attack and reaction’ (Virilio 2006: 76). For the Israeli security industry, the multiple operational theatres in the OPT are platforms for experimenting with new methods and techniques of warfare and revitalising older ones. The cumulative effects of the Israeli systems of dominance have produced and over time reconfigured powerful patterns seeking to optimise ethnic isolation, enacting a regime of what Khalili terms a kind of ‘tribal management’ of subduing, eliminating or ‘improving’ the native (Khalili 2013). The field experience is a rudimentary source of inspiration and practice for the security companies. Sagi Laron, a representative of El Far Security, a mid-size homeland security company, explained it during an interview: Every product must be field-proven. Especially when dealing with outdoor environment, it’s necessary. You always need proven tech in times of war and in times of peace. Even being field-proven in Israel is not enough – you need to prove on the site that you’re good enough to make it anywhere. He continued: Israelis are used to working in the fields. At home they spend quite a big deal of time in the field level operations. Their personal experiences are based on life in an austere country. …This kind of experience pays off when you’re doing a job on someone else’s territory. If you’re from a country with first-rate equipment, you’re lost in a development country…but if you come from a country that knows what good equipment is, but also knows how to make it without it, you’re ahead of the game (Interview with Sagi Laron, Tel Aviv, 23 September 2012). Judging from Laron’s words ‘working in the field’ includes both the seeding and harvesting of crops in the kibbutz and the development of new technology in the battlespace. It’s all a laboratory for national development. With reference to the latter, as in a conventional lab, as Gordon notes, proof by actual trial and practical demonstration is the default method whereby technology is put to test (Gordon 2009). Dan Tishler, CEO and owner of Control Bit, a niche security company, explained the path of his engagement with the IDF in the process of innovation: 178 The IDF came to us with a problem. Slowly we shaped it into a programme; a technology. The IDF could then go to the field and make the improvements. We were not aware of the market – they had the idea and we had the capabilities (Interview with Dan Tishler, Tel Aviv, 2 September 2012). The innovative process of collaboration with military actors is a feature that cuts across the security industry. Often, innovation and ideas in the industry stem from a negative experience in the field combined with a technical education translated into a technical solution to avoid this situation from reoccurring. In fact, the permanency of Israel’s war conditions has shaped the institutionalisation of the relationship between science and violence (and economic growth). So far, this analysis has argued that correlation and mutually dependent science and warfare in the settler colonial project of Zionism are used as a unifying, civilising narrative and instrumentally, as a strategy to unfold its racialised interventions. This extends into the practical level of the battlespace, where the OPT at this time performs the function of a space for innovation and testing in collaborative efforts between the military and security companies. To illustrate and unfold the latter in more detail, the next section of presents a case of how the laboratory model plays out in practice, demonstrating the very micro perspectives of these dynamics. The juxtaposition of real and fake war: ‘Seeing is striking’ A core task of military experts and arms and security salespeople is to elevate security technologies and make their products attractive to a broad spectrum of buyers. At the Eurosatory, one of Europe’s largest biannual security fairs, held in Paris in 2012, a young female Israeli Aerospace Industry (IAI)55 representative demonstrated the capabilities of an integrated system titled ‘Seeing is Striking’. The hostess explained to more than a hundred potential buyers and competitors in the audience how the ability to attain battlespace domination through scientific innovation has been key to the development of the cutting-edge system. ‘Seeing is Striking’, the company’s new operational logic and integrated system, is a sophisticated system of surveillance, sensors, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, i.e. drones), intelligence analysis, and shooting capabilities. According to the IAI representative, the ‘targeted space’ is charged with a multisensory system that registers any kind of movement, while the IAI Panther UAV collects data from the air. In the interactive demonstration, the landscape is 55 State-owned IAI is one of Israel’s largest and most successful exporters of drones and security systems and markets itself as a global leader of security and warfare technology. 179 presented as a generic desert or countryside. The battlespace scenario shows how data and coordinates are collated and transmitted through a network of fibre-optics and then incorporated into detailed situation awareness reports. Based on the reports, the system provides recommendations for the commander to shoot at the push of a button. The system inserts ammunition appropriate to the type of target and provides a ‘virtual trigger’. According to the IAI hostess, this enables the IDF commander and his team to carry out a mission in the following sequence: ‘Identify, request, designate, and fire…allowing the commander in the battlespace to be the first to know, to understand and to act’ (IAI demonstration, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). The shooter is a distant observer in the control room, whose act of ‘seeing’ invests the strike capacity with high precision. In this way, the entire system is an integrated ‘system of systems’, which is emblematic of Israel’s brand of expertise in warfare – as IAI’s slogan goes, ‘when results matter’ (IAI demonstration, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). While the presentation espoused a deracinated battlespace, the system has been used by the IDF in Israel’s battlezones56. According to the IAI representative, this system has resulted in a steep drop in attacks from the peninsula, and has prevented the penetration of terrorists and immigrants. At the same fair, a public relations representative of IAI explained that these integrated systems were deployed, tested, and refined during their start-up phase at the Israeli home front. These deployments included coastal surveillance in the south along the Gaza coastline and in the north around the naval border with Lebanon. IAI has also assisted in the construction of a similar system – an electrified fence/wall at the US-Mexico border. It has provided: ‘the eyes and the ears of the system’ (Interview with IAI representative, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). The ‘Seeing is Striking’ system is just one of many developed to obtain battle space domination at the home front; as such, they are based on the IDF’s intimate knowledge of the landscape. As noted, the enemy’s landscape was portrayed in the security fair demonstration as dry, Mediterranean, and seemingly Middle Eastern settings such as the West Bank or South Lebanon. At the same time, the landscape was displayed in a sterile, context-neutral fashion to appeal to consumers and users whose enemy landscapes are different. In the process of elevating the combat field to a universal level, the battlespace (village, desert, military bases) is turned into what Graham, in the case of Gaza, calls ‘zones of danger’. Here, the land and its people are made into a piece of lethal geography (Graham, 2010a: 255). 56 180 A similar radar system has also been deployed in the Sinai in combination with a 270 kilometrelong electronic system, or fence, along the Egyptian-Israeli border. Israeli Aerospace Industries exhibition platform for ‘Seeing is Striking’ presentation. Eurosatory, Paris, France June 2012. Photo: Author. Visit by the Prime Minister of India at IAI showroom at Aeroindia 2015. Photo: IAI Gallery IAI demonstration at Aeroindia 2015. Photo: IAI Gallery 181 Israel’s battlespace domination, which has been achieved through decades of control over Palestinian territory, has been transformed into a plethora of technological innovations. As the IAI case demonstrates, in order to sustain battlespace domination, Israel has consistently conducted innovation in the field as part of a sort of technological race. In fact, in IAI’s presentation, as in other promotional efforts and marketing strategies, a language of science is deployed that masks the logic of the technology in order to generate an association between devices and evolving scientific truths. Clearly, Israel’s security technologies are not produced in a vacuum. They are grounded the unifying ethos of moral necessity and a conceptualisation of war that is narrated in Zionism as a matter of national survival. The concrete battlespace experiences themselves helped to drive the industry forward. To expand on the importance of ethos and narratives in the Israeli security industry, the following discussion examines how the industry and its rationale and mission are given meaning by its own members: Israel’s entrepreneurs of science and security. 5.5 The entrepreneurs of science and security: between pragmatism and ideology The spirit of entrepreneurship The Israeli security industry hinges upon a spirit of entrepreneurship rooted in Zionist tropes of modernisation57. This spirit is expressed as a mix of national mentalities, techno-military moralities, and the quest for profit. These factors are in various ways and to varying degrees embodied in Israeli security entrepreneurs, who operate in a national innovation system and constitute a more or less hetero geneous group. The system in which they operate is driven by cultural and material factors shaped by high degrees of militarisation combined with the political economy of Israel’s intellectual/human capital. According to the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labor, Israel has 140 scientists and 135 engineers per 10,000 employees, a higher concentration than in any developed country (Office of the Chief of Scientist 2007). A high percentage of these work in the military and security industry; taken together, this pool of talent has fuelled a surge in technologically driven economic growth. The system 57 182 An entrepreneur is a person who refines or creates a business idea that ultimately leads to the production and commercialisation of certain products. In the Israeli security industry, he, or she (albeit rarely), is the businessperson, the engineer, and the scientist who range from middle-income workers to wealthy industrial magnates. in which they operate is driven by cultural and material factors shaped by high degrees of militarisation and the intensity of the knowledge economy. The security sector is first and foremost driven by this intellectual capital, its specialised human knowledge, a high degree of militarism, and an overarching commitment to nationalised security. This commitment is an important component of the industry’s locus and identity. An extraordinary mission In the late summer of 2012, I interviewed Gillam Keinan, Director of International Marketing at the Israeli Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labor. Keinan, who actively engaged in branding Israeli technology abroad, explained the state’s rapid modernisation of the land and its production schemes and emphasised the historically close relationship between the army and scientists: A typical career for an Israeli (man) starts with 4 years in the military, usually followed by several years at Israel’s leading technical university, the Technion, and after which he returns to the army to serve the country with a mix of intellectual capital and hands- on combat experience (Interview with Gillam Keinan, Jerusalem, August 28, 2012). Keinan’s narrative draws a direct line between the effect of conscription and the risk willingness espoused by Israeli security entrepreneurs and scientists. In a larger perspective, the self-conception among members of the sector represents the link between creativity (defiance i.e. not capitulating to rules, conventions and censorship and thinking ‘out of the box’), and risk taking is often highlighted as one of the most important features of the state’s economic success. Similarly, during an interview Dr Boris Hersovici, an employee in the R&D division at Israel’s prestigious University the Technion in Haifa, underscored the power of intellectual capital: It’s in the head. It’s not muscles. Through our natural skills, we survived 2000 years of life in the diaspora. We have to take risks and make decisions, and we’re good at it (Interview with Dr. Boris Hersovici, the Technion, Haifa, 12 September 2012). A scientific rationale for the production of security technologies helps to hide the normative content of the technology under the cover of technical specifications and challenges to be overcome. This fortifies the industry’s narrative: that with the right 183 solution, any threat can be overcome. This sort of scientific discourse is supported by the problem-solving engineer, who applies innovation to real-world scenarios. In a larger perspective, it became clear during my fieldwork that in the industry’s own discourse, man’s mastering of the machine is commonly referred to as the ‘human factor’, a term explicitly used by several of my informants to underline the limits of technology and the need for skilled manpower in both development and field operations. This terminology corresponds well with the likewise often emphasised ‘man-made science’; a sentiment that was often expressed at fairs and by my informants was that behind every piece of technology is an innovative idea. This focus on man and science as a sort of binary accentuates the link between human intent and mastering of the scientific process and its effects in the battle space. In addition, my informants from the academic-military-industrial sector also expressed repeatedly an almost inherent national logic to explain Israelis’ progressive spirit. In general, representatives of the Israeli security industry assert Israel’s capabilities as a sort of mobilised ethos containing a variety of qualities. According to Gillam Keinan, a major asset of Israeli entrepreneurship is the capacity ‘to get things done. To get them done the Israeli way’ (Interview with Gillam Keinan, Jerusalem, 28 August 2012). Among the industry actors interviewed, this logic of exceptionalism equals a drive for efficiency combined with a narrative of moral duty and existential necessity. I concluded in the course of my interviews that Israeli security is both defined by the local and regional enemy landscape and by the larger Jewish struggle for emancipation. Several of the entrepreneurs interviewed pointed to Israel’s comparative advantages in security innovation as the result of the combination of Jewish legacy and the promotion of Zionism’s project of ‘civilising the East’. In general, these security professionals see Israel’s capabilities as a mobilised ethos and entrepreneurial spirit that bypasses orders and conventions. While military actors often stress the notion of battlespace experience based on a historical necessity, scientific and academic actors tend to ascribe Israel’s technological superiority to a special (sometimes inherent) Jewish quality and certainly a consequence of a historical predicament. Necessity is the mother of invention…. We don’t want to be like the other (European) innovative countries. We are something special, we need to stand out (Interview with Gillam Keinan, Jerusalem, 28 August 2012). 184 When I asked the aforementioned Noam BarGal of the OCS why Israel has become a hub of high-tech and security technology, he said, ‘Israel succeeded because it was innovative’ (Interview with Noam BarGal, Chief of Scientists Office, Tel Aviv, 4 September 2012). However, he stressed that this is not the whole story – the ‘secret’ also lays in a special Israeli mentality, perhaps even a special Jewish inheritance. Security companies often create slogans that refer to a particular ‘Israeli way’; IAI’s slogan is ‘Total solutions - it is in our DNA’ (IAI promotional material), and Nice’s slogan is ‘The right people, at the right time’ (Nice Systems promotional material). On various PR platforms, many companies also refer to the ‘Jewish people’s experiences’ in developing their capacities into qualified responses to permeating global threats. Naturally, these experiences are also tied to the concrete experiences of security in Israel-Palestine. At the biannual security fair ‘HLS Israel’ held in 2012 in Tel Aviv, Yonatan Danino, Chief of the Israel National Police, explained how the threat landscape has expanded to comprise both ‘thieves and terrorists’. He underlined how routine shifts from emergency to normal life are ‘almost a part of the Israeli DNA…. The only certain thing in the work of the Israeli police is uncertainty’ (Yonahan Danino, Speech at HLS, Tel Aviv, November 2012). While this may be simply a rhetorical device, such references to an innate skill or destiny are activated as a driver and an explanation for military superiority. While military actors often stress the notion of battlespace experience based on a historical necessity, scientific and academic references display an even more potent tendency to prescribe the Israeli technological forefront to a special (sometimes inherent) Israeli quality and first and foremost, the consequence of a historical predicament. This is a widespread self-conception in the Israeli security industry. Among its actors, Israel’s comparative advantages in innovation are mediated as a sort of pure and apolitical techno-national ethos, expressing a very narrow (almost non-existing) gap between idea and practice that sets Israel apart from other advanced nations. While they can be seen as ‘mere’ metaphors, these rhetorical gestures serve the purpose of boosting the ethos of a shared capacity and shared roots and destiny among actors in the industry. In September 2012, I interviewed Shmuel Sternklar, Professor of Electronic Engineering and head of the HLS Center of the University of Judea and Samaria, a controversial frontier institution located in the occupied West Bank. Sternklar spoke explicitly about his ‘Zionist commitment’ to the establishment and consolidation of the university. In his view, the relationship between Zionism and science is a natural part of the Zionist trajectory: it is a moral imperative to pursue scien- 185 tific progress that is ingrained in Jewish culture and history. Sternklar said that this mindset expresses a ‘grassroots character deeply embedded in the Jewish people: There has among Jews always been a desire to think out the box. It’s not a surprise. We came here and wanted to develop a modern state and we succeeded because the Jewish people wanted to be at the forefront and give to humanity as a whole (Interview with Shmuel Sternklar, Ariel University, West Bank, 13 September 2012). Sternklar also explained that there is a direct connection between surviving and practicing science. ‘There are different ways of surviving, you can live in a refugee camp or you can do what we did, as a collective: innovate’. Noting that after 1948, the immigrants had ‘to struggle just to get a phone line’, he explained later that ‘things took off exponentially in an unforeseen way’ (Interview with Shmuel Sternklar, Ariel University West Bank, 13 September 2012). This ‘grassroots mentality’, which is expressed across the spectrum of Israeli academia, has helped forge close links between the military and the idea of the scientist as an ideologue and a national pioneer. While Sternklar describes himself as a true pioneer who is dedicated to the Zionist mission, he, like many industry sector’s representatives, is also driven and motivated by a private agenda of profitmaking. University of Ariel or University of Judea and Samaria, West Bank, OPT. Photo: Powerbase 186 Borrowing from Senor and Singer (2011), the term ‘profitable patriot’ is an apt description of actors in Israel’s security industry. Profitable patriots are actors involved in developing, deploying, and exporting security material inside and outside of Israel. They do so by combining high-tech knowledge, entrepreneurship, and capital with military experience, experimentation, and current/future domestic strategies. However, these patriots can neither be reduced to pure profit makers nor to purely committed ideologues. Rather, they have found ways of combining these aspects in techno-professional innovation, the power of which remains rooted deeply in the Israel’s building project, and is embedded within the organising structures of society. Based on the utopian vision of maximum security, Israel’s security sector has become a profitable platform and a way to make a living for a number of profitable patriots. Their success hinges on a range of ‘national mentalities’ and experiences that constitute the foundation of the national security ethos and work as explanatory variables for the Israeli success. Chik-chak, bitzu’ism, chutzpah, and rosh gadol The link between Zionism and science across the security industry is given meaning by actors involved in producing new knowledge and generating ideas. In his celebratory account of these links, Zionist historian Popkin says that ‘Israeli alertness to practical application often leads the nation’s scientists far beyond their original ideas’ (Popkin 1971: 31), and the Israeli ethos of a nationalised entrepreneurism draws on past experiences. Clearly, nationalist aspirations have endowed the Israeli economy with a sense of purpose. Among Israeli entrepreneurs, this is broadly referred to as a lesson of survival through success. As Senor and Singer argue, the creative energy of the Israeli business elite grew from the nation’s particular circumstances. In my interview with Dan Tishler, CEO and founder of the security company Control Bit, he talked about the importance of ‘the Israeli mind’ to the industry. According to Tishler, this ‘mind’ or mentality is a mix of Jewish and Israeli identities that helps explain the drive and success of the Israeli knowledge economy. The cradle of the industry is, Tishler said, the Israeli education system and mandatory army service. Serving in the army means that young Israelis ‘mature faster and are exposed to tough life much sooner than in many other places’ (Interview with Dan Tishler, Tel Aviv, 2 September, 2012). A range of particular Israeli concepts and words surface in interviews with security industry representatives and in historical narratives about Israel’s economic prosperity. These are used in the sector’s self-narrations to capture and explain particular Israeli conditions and help build a common ethos that sustains Israel’s comparative advancement in the technological race. 187 A headline in Senor and Singers’s business-entrepreneurial bestseller ‘Start-up Nation’ characterises Israel as ‘a country with a motive’, which is a much-used phrase (Senor and Singer 2011: Part IV). According to the authors, not only has strategic investment and education been essential to the success of Israel’s security industry, the industry would not have been able to blossom without the cultural commitment of an entire people to realise the Jewish nation as ‘a cultural core built on a rich stew of aggressiveness and team orientation’ (Senor and Singer 2011). The economic miracle of Israel relates to the very ‘ecosystem that creates radically new business ideas’ (Senor and Singer 2011). The Hebrew word for ‘very fast’ – chik-chak – is often used as a way to describe progress of the state project (and the pace of its development). During my interview with Keinan he used chik-chak repeatedly to describe Israel’s peculiar entrepreneurial spirit (Interview with Gillam Keinan, Jerusalem, 28 August 2012). Another often-used term is bitzu’ism. According to Senor and Singer, butzu’ism is ‘a thread that runs from those who braved marauders and drained the swamps to the entrepreneurs who believe they can defy the odds and barrel through to make their dreams happen’ (Senor and Singer 2011). As the implementing agent of the initial visions of the national project, Ben-Gurion performed a classic bitzu’ism. In promotional material and in celebratory academic and non-academic accounts, this concept is often highlighted as one of the underlying reasons for Israel’s economic miracle. The more popular term chutzpah is used as a source of innovation and dynamism. It means ‘audacity’, or ‘nerve’. The term can be described as a cultural trade and a military strategy marked by the Israeli mindset of defiance and dissatisfaction. If chutzpah is used in a right manner, it can benefit the conduct of business and testing of new ideas. This concept provides both a celebratory approach to the entrepreneurial spirit and a willingness to defy. According to several informants, defying and challenging conventional wisdom is deeply rooted in both Israeli militarism and in the ethos of Zionist pioneering. Technion’s Ron Yekutiel explained the effects of chutzpah at the company’s centennial anniversary when describing the difference between doing business in the US and in Israel: We need to teach the Americans how to ask. And we need to teach the Israelis how to listen. The Americans do not understand the Israeli dissatisfaction, their culture of chutzpah (Ron Yekutiel, the Technion’s Centennial Anniversary, Jerusalem, 11 September 2012). 188 At the same event, Ronen Nir, a partner of Venture Capital Fund Carmel, stated in celebratory terms: Nobody, not even the Americans, understand the depth and the resources hidden in the Israeli sense of dissatisfaction. We innovate because it is all we have learned (Ronen Nir, Jerusalem, Technion Centennial Conference, Jerusalem, 11 September 2012). Chutzpah and the culture that it defines provide a fertile environment for experimentation and seems to work on a meta-level as the glue that binds together the actors of the industry. Rosh gadol is another vivid term often used to characterise Israel’s success. It literally means ‘big head’ in English, and implies that the person in question is able to get things done, to go beyond the job description, or beyond the call of duty. It is invoked to describe the success and intensity of the Israeli spirit of entrepreneurship. The notion of ‘rosh gadol thinking’ is often used by members of the security industry and in its promotional material (Senor and Singer 2011). The expression is used in the army and is now used the labour market in Israel to describe and promote Israeli efficiency in general. (Its antonym, rosh kattan, means ‘a small head that sticks to the plan’). At a security fair in Israel, a retired general explained to me how the combination of undisciplined rosh gadol and the rosh kattan has provided the Israeli military sector with an advantageous mix of secure performance and risk takers who challenge conventional knowledge and dared to challenge the orders of their commander during IDF enrollment. What Israeli companies excel at is ‘being more cocky and showing less shame’, as one security entrepreneur and manager of a smaller homeland security company interviewed briskly defined it (Interview with Raz Yatskan, Latrun, 6 September 2012). According to Yatskan, this mentality leads to both innovation through risky experiments and provides Israeli entrepreneurs with the guts to explore new markets abroad and stand out from the crowd. These narratives attest to a common tendency for security entrepreneurs to elevate the Israeli security experience to a universal level, ascribe their success a particular Israeli, or even Jewish quality, and generalise from the particular Jewish experience to the scientific progressiveness evident in the industrial success of Israel. While they are clearly rooted in strategies of self-promotion, the narratives also go beyond instrumentalist strategies. While it is difficult to verify and quantify the effect of these unifying narratives, they are clearly important to the self-narration of the industry. 189 5.6 Conclusion The Israel experience moves in sync with its own expansive colonialism (Sa’di 2010) at the home front. As part of bringing security to the Jewish body/nation, scientific experiments attached to the battlespace have deep roots in Zionism’s own modes of population engineering and territorial expansion. Building on a strong ethos and investment in science, Israel’s exercise of violence has been covered up and wrapped in an ethos of civilising scientific progress. In practice and more conceptually, scientific progress has been a marker of the Jewish escape from exile and diaspora life. Science has practically and discursively helped to create a new life within the framework of a bounded, sovereign knowledge economy. Scientific progress has been key to sustaining Israel’s battlespace domination. This chapter has shown how Israel’s permanent war is a source of innovation and testing for scientific institutions, but also how these institutions feeds into the cycle of violence. It has done so by laying out the different facets of Zionism’s techno-war, and demonstrated how the binary between insurgency and counterinsurgency, and occupier and occupied provides a locus for thinking and innovating technologies of war, control, and security. It has established how the production of security technologies evolves as a scientific way of regulating the combat zone as a way to assert the improvement scheme for those the state wishes to protect through isolation and restrictions of ‘the other’. Deep-rooted scientific narratives have materialised as innovations that sustain control, which provide the security industry with a techno-scientific ethos of progress. Moreover, the scientific ethos of Zionism serves to reinforce the notion of a barbaric, uncivilised enemy on the other side of the moral divide. The intersection of science and war reflects the culmination of scientification of Zionism into a high-tech economy married to specific modes of repression organised along geo-economic strategies. 190 191 192 CHAPTER SIX 6.0 ALGORITHMS OF CONTROL: DIGITAL ENVELOPES AND THE MANAGING OF THE EMOTIONAL LANDSCAPE 6.1 Introduction In the fall of 2014, dozens of reserve soldiers from Israel’s elite electronic surveillance department Unit 820058, the Israeli counterpart to the National Security Agency in the US, announced publically their refusal to spy on Palestinians living under occupation – a practice as old as the Zionist/Israeli control over Palestinians. For the signatories of this public statement, the IDF’s surveillance measures had taken the Palestinian occupation to an unprecedented level, involving intrusive gathering of Palestinians’ private information, and monitoring and invading their lives59. An Israeli dissident stated anonymously in the British newspaper The Guardian: The intelligence gathering on the Palestinians is not clean…they don’t have political rights, laws like we have. The nature of this regime of ruling over people, especially when you do it for many years, it forces you to take control, infiltrate every aspect of their life (Beaumont 2014). Despite the revelations about and criticism of the control regime detailed in this newspaper article, there was little response from the official security establishment. Digitalised technologies of control have altered the ways in which Israel practices security and structures its battlespace. This chapter examines Israel’s digitalised security practices that have been developed and deployed in the OPT and the impact of this creeping digitalisation and ‘softwarisation’ on the Israeli security industry. To explore how this digitalisation plays out between and among the IDF, the state, and the security industry, this analysis discusses the roots of these logics and its effects. It also discusses the processes of commercialisation attached 58 59 This unit is well known as the ‘ears of the state’. It is said to produce most advanced high-tech companies and the most security start-up entrepreneurs on a global scale (Senor and Singer 2011). The IDF’s Intelligence Division has become not only Israel’s main information gathering agency, but also the main body analysing Israel’s strategic position and the centre of strategic and political thinking in Israel’s policy making process (Peri 2005). 193 to companies’ extraction of digital, algorithmic, and biometric ideas from the military field and their transplant into other settings. The key claim I make is that these processes provide the Israeli security industry with an ethos of being able to control both present and the future. The chapter unfolds key questions relating to digitalised risk management, cyber security, and the role of calculated technologies in Israel’s settler colonial control scheme. This includes an examination of Israel’s cyber and digital security sector in general, and the steady entrenchment of digital/software-based systems and programmes in the OPT as a technologised control regime. Israel’s cyber and digital security economy Cyber attacks and ongoing insecurity about organised online political mobilisation for collective revolts or organised crime has become a central concern and a theme in Israeli’s security discourse. As an Israeli security software developer explained to me at a security fair: Israel needs not only physical firewalls – protection of its city gates and borders. It needs virtual firewalls that can provide Israelis with sufficient protections against cyber attacks (Interview with CEO of software security company, anonymous, Tel Aviv, 8 September 2012). At the same time, the IDF’s desire to advance in the field of cyber and software-based security in order to protect and expand the homefront has never been greater. Over the course of the last 60 years, Israel has been strategically engaged in a form of network-centric warfare. This has been spurred by a deep-rooted push for virtual and digital control by the intelligence and private tech sectors. This push for control has materialised in the form of cyber security research institutions and the strengthening of huge network-centric capacities and advanced levels in the IDF. This has occurred along with the broader technologisation of the Israeli industrial scene. Miky Admon, a high-tech director of the Israel Export Institute, said during an interview: There is a lot of synergy within high-tech – of course, military – very strong digital units in the military and thousands of IT graduates. We have 200 companies in security. It’s great for our export business (Interview with Miky Admon, Tel Aviv, 23 August 2012). Israel’s cyber sector includes cyber security, data storage, mobile communication, and analytical algorithms and many others niche sectors. Israeli software inventions often originate in military technologies that include instant messaging, 194 the USB memory stick, the firewall, and secure data links that enable most of the world’s banking transactions and TV signal decoders. Israeli cyber security now accounts for seven per cent of the annual 60 billion USD global cyber-security market, and as much as thirteen per cent of new R&D in the sector (Cohen 2014). (These percentages do not include the spillover to commercial enterprises. The Israeli state has been a key player in promoting this sector. Technical/ intelligence echelons of Israel’s military (predominantly Unit 8200 and MAMRAM, IDF’s IT support unit) are key innovators in the production of both Israel’s digital envelope and the human resources with the appropriate technical skills. In 2010, the Israeli government launched the National Cyber Bureau to support military, university, and business cooperation around cyber-security issues, to advise political echelons on matters of cyber warfare, and to create a national plan of action embedded in the goal of Israel being among the top five countries leading the field ( Office of the Prime Minister 2013). In 2011, under the slogan ‘A Vital Player in a Digital World’, the Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute published data revealing that Israel’s cyber security industry had leaped almost 400 per cent in a decade: Israeli software exports rose from 1.5 billion USD in 1998 to 6.2 billion USD in 2009 (The Israel Export Institute 2011). In addition, the value of recent mergers and acquisitions in Israel’s cyber sector has exceeded 2 billion USD and involved 18 multinational corporations. While this sector functions in a global context of cyber war, initially much investment and emphasis in data systems grew out local security needs. The innovation of ideas and applied research in this field has been dictated by the demands of the IDF and broader state strategies to retain battlespace dominance while also attending to the build-up of a prosperous (high)-tech sector. Prime Minister of Israel Benyamin Netanyahu at the Israel Defense Cyber Security Symposium, Tel Aviv, 2014. Photo: Motti Kimschi 195 6.2 Digital enveloping and calculating technologies Surveillance and the digital enveloping of Palestine The reciprocal co-constitution between ruler and ruled in the OPT is increasingly mediated through technology. This technology enables ‘rule from afar’ (Li 2008), combined with the installation of more preventive/pre-emptive measures. Long-term surveillance and knowledge gathering of events and people in the OPT is the centrepiece of Israel’s security practices. In turn, the settler colonial rule entails ideologically informed surveillance procedures. Clarke (1994) identifies this form of proactive surveillance of what the sovereign deems as ‘suspect populations’ as dataveillance. In the context of Israel’s control of the Palestinians, digital control and dataveillance strategies are presented as modes of logical reasoning. The rationalisation of routines of targeted surveillance conceals the ruling system’s settler colonial features while distancing the ruler from the ruled. As a former IDF soldier told me during an interview, ‘In many ways, it is becoming a remote-controlled conflict’ (Interview with former IDF soldier, anonymous, Tel Aviv, June 2013). Historically, the development of calculated technologies has been a consistent feature of Israeli security governance. Since the first waves of immigration occurred, Israeli intelligence agencies have improved their skills in collecting, dissecting, and storing data about risky groups – the Palestinian population as well as the olims (newly arrived Jewish immigrants). From the outset, Israeli agencies have developed digitalised systems to infiltrate Palestinian social and political network: Palestinians have been continuously subjected to a multi-layered system of surveillance and electronic data registration. This full matrix of surveillance has included intervention during the British Mandate and Egyptian and Jordanian rule over Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem (1948–1967) by Zionist pre-state or Israeli state agencies. Today, the colonised people’s experience of being watched is a defining feature of the way the occupation functions. Over time, this surveillance has resulted in an increasingly refined system of (digitalised) recordkeeping. Tracking through data collection and computation is, as Fischbach notes, both a policy and a discursive condition: Data such as population censuses, tax lists, land records, survey maps and so forth do not merely dispassionately represent, in this case a population that the state governs – that is ‘out there’ in the pristine, positivistic sense. The processes of sorting, categorizing and describing help create the very population that is being observed and recorded (Fischback 2011: 298). 196 While presented as risk management, processing data on Palestinians becomes a tool of control and of social shaping. In recent years in Israel-Palestine, this sort of tracking has morphed into a digitised cyber-bureaucracy connecting the physical field to the virtual battlespace, creating a sort of virtual panopticon of the battlespace. Many of Israel’s successful digital inventions are born out these long-term experiences of control and conflict (Leichman 2014). Ideas and practices have grown out of the pervasive digital envelope which as a unified platform for data and screening technologies (Tawil-Souri 2011b, 2012) produces new enclosures that increasingly organises the Palestinians under a new techno-colonial grid. Tawil-Souri describes this process of enveloping as ‘a multifaceted process that combines the territorial and economic dynamics of land and digital enclosures’ …for example, a ’territorially sealed Gaza and a virtually boundless one’ (Tawil-Souri 2011b: 3). This envelope contains technological devices designed to sustain the sovereign’s knowing power. The proliferation of this sort of virtual war, where the battlespace is the place where knowledge is gathered, is increasing. While virtual space is the site of the battle, it has also become securitised as a vulnerable site for states, industry, and economies. In the battlespace of Israel-Palestine, this digital and virtual war has expanded the space that the settler colonial sovereign can control. The expansion of the battlespace to include online cyber activity includes tactics focusing on anticipation/pre-emption and algorithmic calculations that can help outsource decision-making and operational control to machines. Recalling Foucault’s notion of ‘calculated technologies of power’, the realisation of power (to accumulate) hinges on the capacity to retain and advance domination. To understand the effect of this digitalisation, it is essential to understand how methods and techniques have been developed as tools for the production of ‘statistical reasoning’ and consequently, a digital enveloping of the combat zone. As Desrosiéres has eloquently described it, statistical reasoning is shaped by ‘a space of common mental representations’ that are ‘technologically and historically structured and limited’ (Desrosiéres 1998). The linking of knowledge and representations of reality to a certain course of action is key, and represents what Hackings calls the powerful connection between ‘there is’ and ‘we must’, i.e. the link between knowing and choosing a course of action (Hacking 1975). The act of linking analysis with a path of intervention is part the broader idea of developing security strategies where calculation and mitigation of risk are vital tools. As De Goede and Amoore define it, risk-based governing is ‘a means of making an uncertain and unknowable future amenable to intervention and management’ (Amoore and De Goede 2008: 9). The wish to 197 develop future-oriented security technologies while owning the moment is at the heart of Israel’s digitalised security strategy. Controlling the emotional landscape The determination to keep track of developments in the emotional landscape is a key motivation for these forms of control60. A concrete example of the effects of Israel’s efforts to control the emotional landscape of the targeted population surfaced when I interviewed long-time Palestinian (non-violent) activist Muhammad Othman, who is from Qalqilya, a village in the northern part of the West Bank. Othman explained how the Israeli occupation – under which he was born and has lived his whole life – is made up of two systems, one based on technological and online presence, and the other on physical presence or the threat of sudden physical presence. In practice, these are two mutually dependent systems. According to Othman, Israel’s intelligence units have monitored his online activities; he described how he lives under both a virtual and physical siege: If you get angry at the occupation and start complaining on Facebook they [the Israeli authorities] will use your communications and network as evidence during next interrogation. They even make up identities online and extort you during interrogation. If there is a massive demonstration in the West Bank they know everything in advance, and fly their drone balloons over the whole thing, so they don’t need to go into the cities. But sometimes they come to arrest us (Interview with Mohammed Othman, Qalqiliya, 19 September 2012). Even though Othmann’s suspicions are not verifiable, the point here is to identify the plethora of control systems that operate to control the emotional landscape of the colonised. Like Othman, Palestinians under occupation are controlled by their own knowledge and their previous experience of Israeli security installations. While the techniques deployed by Israel have changed over time, there has been a consistent trend of ‘Arab-in-group surveillance’ (Abujidi 2011; Cohen 2011). Palestinian are collectively abnormalised and transformed into legitimate objects of suspicion. The collective is in turn organised under further subcategories and population registering through different systems and filters of population management. The power of these systems lies in its capacity to not only identify a suspect and prevent actions but to discipline broader patterns of behaviour through the threat of violence (Azoulay 2009). These practices mesh well with the idea that 60 198 By emotional landscape, I refer to the effects and control of ‘the mind’, future behaviour, and the intentions of those subjected to control. In the view of Israel’s intelligence and security practitioners, social media and virtual interactions (and other potential risks and threats) from a command centre for terrorism and organised crime. maximum security is obtained by improving the ability to predict the future so as to control it. 6.3 Risk management and digitalised control Predictive software: the case of Athena The Israeli security company Athena specialises in this field. It is a security and intelligence solutions provider founded and now chaired by Shabtay Shavit, who was the former head of the Mossad (Israel’s external security service). In the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Shavit was invited to New York City by then mayor Michael Bloomberg to be an active member of the New York Fire Department Preparedness Task Force61. At the Israeli Pavilion at the Eurosatory defence and security fair in Paris in 2012, under the auspices of the Israeli Ministry of Defense, Athena hosted a booth exhibiting a broad array of ‘predictive software’ or ‘advanced proprietary software-based solutions’ (Athena promotional material). The booth’s displays were designed for a global audience, intelligence communities and security forces in particular. While I was talking with the company’s representative at the booth, he spoke of ‘anticipation as a weapon’ as one of the most important tools ‘to counter threats’ (Conversation with Athena representative, anonymous, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). He also explained how the roots of Israel’s comparative advantages are based on collecting intelligence through various sophisticated channels: ‘We had social network infiltration before anyone else; we had the Mossad even before the state was established’ (Conversation with anonymous Athena representative, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). According to the company’s own description, Athena’s technology relies on proper expert knowledge and experience from the field. One of the company’s best-selling concepts is the Centric Knowledge 2 Insights (CK21). As part of a larger human intelligence system, CK2 works as an‘information exploitation platform’ that functions as a resource for data mining and analysis. As an intelligence collecting system that helps convert raw data to ‘actionable intelligence’ (Athena website), the programme is designed to provide the capability of threats before they materialise. Athena describes the system as ‘a one-stop solution’ for deep web analysis and silent downloads with built-in systems for identity management and ‘camouflage capacities’. According to the representative: ‘Most western states demand 61 In the same time span, Shabtay Shavit also served as an advisor to the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. 199 this sort of expertise of predicting the future by knowing the present’ (Interview with anonymous Athena representative, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). However, the representative also explained that legal barriers in Western Europe, such as privacy laws and the generally higher demands of transparency (which are increasingly challenged by a wide set of anti-terror provisions), create impediments to transplanting methods and software to other apparatus. However, as the Athena staff member made clear to me: ‘there are ways to work around this’, for example, by adjusting the technology or by allying with more clandestine actors (Interview with anonymous Athena representative, Eurosatory, Paris, June 2012). During our conversation, the representative also told me that the Danish National Police (DNP) were at the fair, and was one of the company’s customers. DNP investigative units have learned from Athena’s expertise to infiltrate paedophile online chat rooms through identity construction and tracking of online patterns of behaviour. In more general terms, Athena’s philosophy, or strategy is that the mere prevention of attack is not enough: the goal is to eliminate the very fear and threat of (potential) attacks and keep them secret from the public. Indeed, at the intersection of security and capital accumulation lies the need to ensure/ restore public confidence in the state and its institutions. This works as a stabilising force, and Athena’s sales message clearly markets the company by promising that: Our experience in confronting some of the world’s nastiest, best motivated, and most sophisticated terrorists has taught us that safety isn’t enough. To be successful, a security program must maintain and restore public confidence, at minimal added cost and inconvenience (Athena Promotion/ Israel Trade Commission 2010). Athena is just one example of Israel’s technology to ‘track enemies’, which is well developed and has moved steadily into the field of commercial prediction software. Israel’s excellent reputation for (military) algorithmic applications is another case in point. Algorithms of control: from combat to Waze and Any.do Israel expertise in and long-term tracking of behavioural patterns has provided the IDF with special expertise in the field of algorithms of control. Algorithms can be described briefly as ‘a set of rules that precisely defines a sequence of operations’ (Stone 1973: 4). Intercepted signals and vivid data amps and coordinates enable the identification of rules, trends, and patterns of behaviour. Often these are mapped based on long-term data registration and observations. The system’s data 200 mining requires technologies that can be used to map a particular mind-set and selected behavioural patterns. I suggest that long-term, intimate knowledge of the OPT – its people and the landscape – combined with the highly sophisticated intelligence units of the IDF has led Israel to excel in algorithmic control. In a military rule like the IDF’s, routine practices of accumulating data and its processing into general rules are used to predict the behaviour of risky groups and enemies. The generated knowledge provides the operator with a set of instructions on which decisions to make, i.e. how to respond/act. Algorithmic calculations offer a platform for the production of ‘an accepted field of rationality’ based on the accumulation of quantitative facts and the calculation of risk (Foucault 2009). In the context of war and Zionism’s calculative field of intervention in particular, algorithmic control grows from battlespace knowledge and long-term data registration of patterns of movement, insurgency methods and modes of communication and extends into mechanisms to produce spaces and logics of rationality to sustain control. In fact, because of its long-term work with military algorithms (primarily in the IDF’s Elite intelligence/technical Unit 8200), Israel is now a leader in developing consumer applications based on processing vast amounts of information known as ‘Big Data’. Algorithmic reconfigurations of the battlespace and the military’s modes of intervening and planning have contributed to Israel’s success in transferring these experiences to a variety of algorithm-based consumer applications. A range of Israeli companies – often start-ups – have successfully transferred military algorithmic systems to the civilian/commercial sector, and have often done so in tandem with their own personal journey from military staff to owner/founders of digi-tech companies. Waze is a large data company created by IDF veterans. In 2013, Google purchased Israel’s Waze for more than 1 billion USD; in June 2013, Waze had more than 50 million users. Waze is an algorithmic-based navigation (GPS) application that crowd surfs for accurate traffic information and maps in real time. The company describes one of the benefits of this application: By connecting drivers to one another, we help people create local driving communities that work together to improve the quality of everyone’s daily driving. That might mean helping them avoid the frustration of sitting in traffic, cluing them in to a police trap or shaving five minutes off of their regular commute by showing them new routes they never even knew about (Waze 2015). 201 After ‘receiving a makeover and gaining ground after the 2006 Lebanon war’ (IDF 2012), the IDF is already using a special version of Waze: the Tzayad (Hebrew for ‘Hunter’). As part of its Digital Army Program, the IDF has from the early 1990s experimented with precursors to the current system. Tzayad is the army’s GPS, navigator, and communications system all in one – a crucial aid for IDF forces that helps commanders in the field coordinate their activities. The system works as a platform to share information and is able to collect data from multiple sources simultaneously and interpret the data into a single stream (IDF 2012). According to the IDF, the programme allows units to share information on the location of friendly and hostile units, much like a GPS programme in a car or on a phone enables the locating of restaurants or other businesses. Used mostly by ground forces, all participating units are able to stay updated with the location and movements of other units, and to focus on winning the fight rather than on gathering information. Whereas Waze helps drivers find the best route, Tzayad plans routes for officers in military vehicles and pinpoints hazards along the way. (The GPS can also be used to trace traffic in the air and at sea). On Tzayad’s interactive table screen, enemy positions are highlighted in red, while ‘friendly’ positions are coloured in blue. Waze also maps no-go routes and lists recommended routes. The ‘shared thinking’ of these two systems attests to a reality where soldiers’ methods of analysing movement in the battlespace are transferred to analysis of civilian traffic infrastructure to ensure free traffic flows and smooth mobility. In the same vein, the globally popular application Any.do is based on the IDF’s processing of accumulated knowledge and data. Developed in 2011 by Unit 8200 veterans, this time management system, or predictive algorithms were designed for defence purposes. The system draws from the algorithmic structures developed by the unit to map enemy behavioural patterns. Inspired by the methods deployed by the IDF in developing Any.do, the creators, namely founder Omer Perchik, brought in intelligence methods to create a ‘perfect-to-do-list system’ (Leichman 2014). The goal was to understand and therefore foresee people’s preferences and patterns of action. By the end of 2012, the application was one of the most downloaded worldwide. While Any.do is developed from an algorithm that deduces the preferences of consumers, its initial innovations were derived from the IDF’s algorithmic computing developed to detect and map Palestinians’/suspected terrorists’ movement and behaviour. The use of the algorithm is based on the sovereign’s capacity to estimate/predict an individual’s decisions based on his or her past behaviour and decisions. Thus, algorithmic systematisation of these patterns is made into (tentative) rules of action. Any.do is a progressive planning tool used to organise the calendar based on an individual’s or organization’s previous plans and preferences. Thus, while for ‘the terrorist’ the algorithmic veil is a mode of surveillance, for the Any. 202 do user, it is a customised service. Currently, the application’s time management application is one of the world’s most popular applications for mobile devices. (On a side note, Style.it, the personal stylist Israeli online service application, follows the same philosophy as Any.do. It was originally developed as an algorithm to trace and prevent suicide bombings. However, through its commercial transformation, Style.it tracks the user’s fashion preferences and provides purchase and styling suggestions from a source of retailers.) Even the atmospheric and meteorological sciences have found intersections with algorithmic security practices. At the aforementioned Eurosatory fair, Israeli security giant MER Security and Communications Systems presented a new portable meteorological system. Dr Uri Stein has used his skill in meteorology to bridge the gap between military technology and meteorology. He has also been active in developing a warning system for military technology that takes changing weather conditions into consideration, which can be ‘a decisive factor when preparing surgical attacks’ (Interview with Dr. Uri Stein, Eurosatory, Paris, June, 2012). This system provides meteorological support to artillery units and various modes of attacks, ranging from tanks, the air, snipers, as well as HLS applications such as airport defence, fire fighting, and policing operations. The device’s aerial and on-the-ground- sensors collect and transfer meteorological data from target areas to a central computer unit where algorithms combine this data with those received from the global weather forecasting system. The data is then translated into actionable intelligence by predicting how, based on real-time collection of data and predicted weather forecasts, local weather will develop over the next hours or days. According to Dr Stein, Israel has been a particularly rewarding place in which to develop the system because of its small size and highly differentiated weather conditions from the desert in the south to the cooler inland temperatures hs meant that military responses required a high degree of flexibility of changes in temperature. Dr Stein said the system was developed in a joint effort between the IDF and MER based on specific IDF specifications. The devices are currently placed on IDF tanks and in military bases in Israel and the OPT, but also increasingly in other settings across the globe. Since weather conditions are challenging for most battlespaces, MER’s devices have a universal value: they are relevant not only in military zones but is also at sporting events and other civilian venues. As these examples illustrate, Israeli entrepreneurs have successfully commercialised algorithms for both military and civil applications. By doing so, proactive control has now entered new avenues such as time management, trade strategising and others spaces where calculation of risk is conflated with the calculation of cost (time, energy, and resources for the app user and even society more broadly), which is becoming a dominant concern/motivating engine for global customers. 203 When I interviewed Shaiy Yermiyahu, co-founder of Israeli security company Hydro-Noa, he plainly ascribed the key to the permeation of algorithms to ‘a general sense of laziness’, i.e., the demand for algorithms is based on ‘people’s desire to invest a minimum of input while sustaining or maximizing output…this is clearly a driving force in the proliferation and spread of predictable software’ (Interview with Shaiy Yermiyahu, Tel Aviv, 28 August 2012). Saving time and resources are key for the military, police, consumers, and business owners. Hence, for those developing algorithms of control, there is diminishing difference between tracking down terrorists and consumers. Beyond algorithmic systems but still in the area of predictions, Israeli companies also display skills in the field of lie detection, another capacity developed by the state’s intelligence sector. Selling ‘the truth’ and constructing identities At the Israeli Security and Defense Expo (ISDEF) in Tel Aviv in June 2012, Nemesysco, an Israeli company specialising in voice analysis technology (another term for lie detection) handed out fortune cookies. These cookies carried the same message to the attendees: ‘You are about to reveal the truth – much faster than ever before’ (ISDEF Nemesyco booth, Tel Aviv, June 2013). The company representative at the fair enthusiastically presented the philosophy of the company’s products as a technological breakthrough at the intersection of intelligence, psychology, and software engineering. The company’s core expertise rests on its Layered Voice Analysis (LVA) technology. By analysing key vocal properties in speech and identifying various types of stress, cognitive processes, and emotional reactions, LVA software enables operators to determine a subject’s state of mind. Based on this, Nemesysco creates a so-called ‘emotional signature’ of an individual’s speech at a given moment in order to detect ‘deceptive motivation, criminal intention and general credibility’ (Nemesysco 2014). Through a systematic correlation of real life vocal data and key human emotions, the system detects unreliable testimonies. According to the representative, the technology is used by Israeli intelligence agencies in interrogations and for routine questions at checkpoints; it is also sold to private actors for a variety of purposes. The Nemesysco representative explained that Israel’s long-term reliance on intelligence for security purposes has motivated the company’s work. Recently, the company’s scientists established a joint effort with scientists at Duke and Harvard universities in the US to develop a new algorithm. This device is designed to ‘identify deceptive intentions in real-life scenarios by analysing peoples’ stress levels in specific sequences’ (Nemesysco 2014). The system has been developed in close corporation between psychiatrists, linguistics experts, and software engineers, and fits nicely into Nemesysco’s marketing statement that its products respond to: 204 …the different needs of the security, corporate and financial markets, enabling organisations to enhance crime detection and prevention; expedite investigations; identify and fight fraud more effectively; improve veracity assessment during recruitment processes and provide better services to the public at need (Nemesysco 2014). This system does not directly reveal fraud; it provides automatic warnings in case of imbalances and irregularities in behaviour. The non-liar and the liar can be ‘whoever’. In the export /commercialisation phase of the LVA system’s life cycle, detected deviances are then elevated to speak to more objective parameters. In this way, the technology diffused into the context of business with a differently charged context of ‘honesty maintenance’. The filtering out of suspicious individuals can be applied to a broad array of people groups, from potential criminals to people interviewing for jobs. Nemesysco has sold its products to a range of customers such as the Los Angeles (California) Sheriff’s Office, Boston’s Logan Airport and the Guatemalan Finance Ministry62, which have incorporated LVA technology into their standard security routines. Nemecysco’s technology targets law enforcement and airport security in particular, but it is also used for commercial/corporate purposes According to the company, the Israeli LVA system is currently in use in 87 countries, including the US, Russia, Canada, and the UK. The spread of LVA technology helps disseminate the idea of a verifiable demarcation line between truth telling and lying. The detection of this line is a performance of security that hinges on an operational system, a universal tool for dissecting the ‘risky’ group from the ‘at-risk’ group shaped by the nature of the context-dependent categories. In the same vein, the Israeli intelligence company Terrorgence has made a business out of advanced cyber security, surveillance, and online penetration of social networks. Its staff of more than 60 personnel cultivates and operates virtual entities in online spaces, developing communication lines and forming connections in critical open and deep web sources (Terrorgence 2014). Terrorgence is a private enterprise composed of intelligence veterans: well-trained Arabic speaking Israelis work in Terrorgence’s control room. According to the company representative, most of their staff is not only fluent in Arabic; they have also mastered the use of Arab cultural codes, what the representative referred to as ‘the sharia discourse’ (Interview with Terrorgence representative, ISDEF, Tel Aviv, June 2012). 62 In 2006, Nemesysco’s HR1 was deployed to help the Guatemalan Finance Ministry recruit new employees to avoid counter theft, drug use, fraud, and bribery amongst its staff, and to verify the candidate’s propensity for honesty and loyalty in the workplace (Nemesysco 2006). 205 The company is hired by a public or private client to access and infiltrate by computer a social media platform (most often what Terrorgence refers to as ‘Jihadist peer-to-peer platforms’) in order to intercept and obtain information from communication and interaction. While the access the staffers get, according the Terrorgence representative, ‘is mostly legitimate’, the challenge is to act naturally while engaging in ‘chats and exchanges’ (Terrorgence 2014). The infiltrator/consultant is usually hired to investigate a suspected threat or debates around a new method or product, and uses the same methods of the Mossad and Shin Bet. One Terrorgence staff described a typical example of communicating online: Sometimes I sit flirting with an Arab man all day, playing an Arab women. We are one of the only companies thriving only on human interaction. We do everything legally. We cannot hack – that’s a one-way street and we can never go back then…. (Interview with Terrorgence representative, ISDEF, Tel Aviv, June 2013). Terrorgence works from the philosophy that big data merely provide context to the specific intelligence that can be coaxed from it with a virtual human touch (Interview with Terrorgence representative, ISDEF, Tel Aviv, June 2012). Thus, its methods embody a pro-active human-centric approach as opposed to a techno-centric passive approach. Company representatives’ long-term experience with intelligence and interrogation techniques has been a key motor in the development of Israel’s digital security industry. The Israeli state’s long-term surveillance schemes, which are designed to discipline or prevent interaction between at risk and risky elements, lay at the heart of this. Both Nemesyco and Terrorgence indicate that Israeli security companies have become profitable agents for the translation of military practice to commercialised security, surveillance, and planning schemes. Singling out suspicious behaviour has become a key mode of security; the ability to detect deviancy, irregularities, and lies is a much sought-after capacity. This requires not just technologies, but ideas as to what constitutes normality and its negation deviance. Israel’s policies of differentiation have clearly become a fertile source of innovation. This discussion has demonstrated how an individual’s space for action is shaped, disciplined, and controlled through cyber and virtual technological innovations. The next section unfolds this perspective further by addressing the ways in which security technologies codify and subject (colonial) bodies. 206 6.4 Coding bodies: Biometrical tracking The technology of corporal management is a key element in the governing of Israel’s occupation of Palestine. The Israeli Ministry of Defense export unit SIBAT lists companies ready to export this segment of security under the following categories: facial recognition, fingerprint technology, fraud/lie detection, hand geometry sensors, iris recognition, retinal scanning, signature verification, speech analysis and voice recognition, and deconstructing most body parts into measurable units (SIBAT 2012). This might be termed the biometrical part of the digital envelope. In the biopolitical battlespace of Israel-Palestine, the body is both the target and the source of violence. To understand how this trend operates, and in turn how it is commercialised, the chapter proposes some ways in which Israel’s digitalised control in the OPT has come to mark, codify, categorise, and ultimately control the colonised body. Appaduria’s work on colonial India is a useful illustration of such control. Appadurai looks at how the bodies (of the Indian population) were disciplined though the production of zones of calculation and management. He identifies this process as a creation of ‘boundaries around homogenous bodies’ (Appadurai 1996: 133), which both constructs cleavages of differences between the people categorised into different groups and in turn flattens the differences among people within a given category or zone (Amoore 2006). Because the zoning and codification of the colonised body is a central feature of Israel’s rule, it makes sense to examine the link between technologies of control and the corporal dimension of the settler colonial project, where the body itself becomes the object of control and at the same time a carrier of information for the sovereign to use. Biometrical access control is a case in point. In this way the racializationis not based on any sort of biological detection, rather it is in the targeting that race is made. Biometrical access General (ret.) Aharoni Zeevi Farkash was once head of what is commonly referred to as Israel’s and perhaps the world’s best tech school, the IDF’s Unit 8200. In late 2013, Farkash visited New York City, where his Israeli biometrical security company FST21 has its US office63. He made this visit to promote and implement the company’s new newest innovation, SafeRise. The security system has been installed in the lower Manhattan housing complex of Knickerbocker Village, a 1,600-unit apartment building. After FST21 installed its security system, 63 In addition to working in Unit 8200, Farkash was the Head of the Israeli Security Directorate (Aman) from 2002–2006, and is the commander of the IDF’s technological and logistical unit. 207 the problem of access (in the form of bottlenecks and long queues) has decreased and money to pay the human security guard/doorman has been saved. The SafeRise system is a biometrical access system that works as follows: Photographs of each resident’s face are taken and stored in a database. When a resident approaches the door, a high-tech scanner checks his/hers face, which is either recognised by the system, whereby access is granted, or rejected as unverifiable (SafeRise website). Security personnel are needed only if a person trying to enter is unidentifiable. The system is based on a composite of facial and body structures created by combining scores of photographs taken from various angles. FST21 has developed the SafeRise technological platform based on biometrical technology that grants the body the role as ‘a unique unit’ (FST21 website). In this way, access is managed based on the storage of data on those features. Thus, the body is the key to security. Farkash emphasised the effectiveness of SafeRise in an interview with the New York Times: ‘Access should not interfere with the pace of life, SafeRise is marketed on the logic that security could be convenient…for the good people’ (Aharoni Zeevi Farkash, in Singer, 2014). This technological security solution is Farkash’s brainchild. As Farkash has stated in an interview, at the Israeli checkpoint the ‘difference between life and death’ can be boiled down to ‘depicting the one terrorist among the 30,000’ (Aharoni Zeevi Farkash in Singer 2014). SafeRise promises to detect and depict this danger. Once SafeRise’s technology is installed, whether in an airport (where the technology is currently being tested), a government building, a private office, or at a checkpoint, ‘all the individual has to do is to be him/herself ’ (SafeRise promotional material). In the same vein, the Israeli security start-up SDS (Suspect Detection System) has developed a technology called Gogito (which means ‘I Think’ in Latin), which detects hostile intentions. The system can be deployed at borders, checkpoints, and in airports and other sensitive spots. It checks various parameters such as skin conductivity, blood pressure, changes in facial temperatures, and pupil dilation. According to SDS promotional material, pupil analysis is more accurate than fingerprint analysis because the pupil is harder to fake and its form varies from person to person (i-HLS 2014). The subject’s fingerprints and vocal imprints are also recorded. These physiological parameters may indicate stress, and stress raises suspicion. The system can identify criminal intent, membership in shady organisations and even temporary criminal service on behalf of a third party. Subjects asked whether they’re members of a (specific) criminal or terrorist organisation will show some uncontrollable physiological reactions if they do actually belong to the group (i-HLS 2014). 208 The above cases are a few examples of the ‘bodification’ of digital security, where the creation of boundaries is distilled into a process of rationalised codification while also serving the broader purpose of boundary making along ethnic, racial, or class lines. The ideas behind these technologies and their effects illustrate how digitalised practices of control emanating from experiments and practices of surveillance and control of Palestinians are extracted and distributed globally. This extraction indicates how ways of controlling the Palestinian body are transferred to commercialised products. This digital security trend taps into a broader techno-moral shift towards the digitalisation of corporal control. In the push to digitalise the body, there is a broader shift towards a reality where bodies are controlled through codification. This trend provides the sovereign, i.e. the holder of the control system, with the power to inscribe ‘race’, class and other political logics into the system’s operational core. While in Palestine this code is often rooted in pre-existing categories of identity constructed by the sovereign, the systems can easily be retrofitted to other purposes. Within this new topography of digitalised power relations, through biometrics or other technological systems, the body – the individual – becomes a source of information in and of itself and thus an object of codification and disciplining. The attachment of codes of access and exclusion to bodies enables these advanced modes of control. DNA mapping and profiling has also begun to penetrate the security field as another way to create and build knowledge about a population (Parsons 2011). The securitisation of DNA reifies the function of the body as a carrier of information selected and processed by the sovereign. The body as the carrier of information for the purposes of bodily control needs to be seen as part of a broader reconfiguration of identity management. An increasing number news pieces have been published in recent years that the state of Israel has included DNA registration as part of its intelligence gathering and mapping of Palestinian demographics64. However, companies have also started to experiment with DNA as a commercial product. 64 In 2012, the Palestinian National Authority Detainees Ministry announced that it considers Israel’s use of DNA tests on Palestinian prisoners as a violation of international law. Palestinian National Authority lawyers have filed a complaint with Israel’s Supreme Court to demand the end of forced DNA tests for Palestinians jailed by Israel (Maan 2012). In 2012, it was reported that a wave of hunger strikes protesting forced DNA tests occurred among Palestinian political prisoners (in Israel’s Nafha, Majiddo, Galbor, and Ramon prisons). 209 For example, the Israeli start-up GeneQ, developed in the Shomron laboratory of Tel Aviv University by university scientists, has developed a sophisticated software application that can help identify individuals’ ‘genomic DNA’. This testing system can be operated through a smartphone and is intended to be used for medical purposes (such as genetic disorders), and as a tool for the police to recognise, identify, and generate data on targeted individuals (GeneG 2014). 6.5 Conclusion This chapter has served as a brief look at how Israel’s digital, biometrical, software-based security systems and technologies work as a means of power control and extended warfare. Israel’s practices of digitalised risk management are hard to limit to one avenue of technological innovation or reduce to one trend alone. Within the context of Israel’s security industry’s cyber security, digital surveillance and biometrical systems take many forms and shapes. However, from the view of the sovereign, what they have in common is the ability to predict and thus prevent unwanted events. They can minimise risk, filter access, and sanction movement based on the codification and categorisation of people. The proliferation of this sort of control in the OPT underscores the claim that technology when deployed by humans to control humans is a complex synergised interface. The deployment of cyber, digital, and biometric control techniques provides an image of clean control, but in reality it is messy. One ffect might be that it helps conceal the structural violence inherent to the permanent siege of the OPT. Taken together, the shift towards virtual and digitalised warfare alters and reconfigures the notion of both time and space in the practice of security, providing Israel’s techno-nationalism with a contradictory ethos of both being tied to territory while effectively expanding the space for battle. The digitalisation and biometrification of the topography of control, along with the development of digital data archives, incorporates spaces where people interact virtually. The refined frontiers of battle and disciplining come to create the conditions for a reconfigured nexus of virtual and real. To summarise: the permeation of control though digital systems and the surveillance of online spaces extend the battlespace into a real space without borders and reifies the notion of an invisible enemy where the criteria of success, i.e. the absence of threats, are close to impossible to estimate and verify. The chapter has discussed how bodies, feelings, behaviour, and other human attributes and qualities are securitised and made into objects to be managed. This happens through the production of a digital image of ‘reality’, or the construction of a rational field of 210 action which can help serve the interests of the sovereign. As the Israeli journalist Amira Hass puts it: ‘You exist if the Israeli computer says so’ (Hass 2005)65. In this way, Israel’s frontiers of battle and control are reconfigured. While they may now be less visible, these frontiers are nonetheless powerful political boundaries that provide new space in which to pose the question of who is controlled by whom. The following chapters unfold the digitalised features of control in more detail in the context of urban control and warfare and in relation to border security and management. 65 Hass’s quote refers to Israel’s policies and practices of controlling the population through differentiated data registration (Hass 2005). 211 212 CHAPTER SEVEN 7.0‘SMART CITIES’, ISRAELI URBANISATION, AND URBAN CONTROL ‘If I wish to substitute a new building for an old one, I must demolish before I construct’ (Herzl [1902] quoted in Wolfe 2006: 388). 7.1Introduction Israel’s real time surveillance capacities and urban insurgency practices have become important ‘weapons’ in the country’s export of technologies and techniques that are proliferating under the much-celebrated and catch-all concept of ‘smart’ or ‘safe’ cities. These concepts are often promoted as large-scale projects of urban digital upgrading solutions66. On the dark side of this innovative shift toward smart solutions, techniques of urban control, and even warfare, are increasingly penetrated urban spaces globally that are concealed under the ‘smart label’. The smart city idea has become a key component of the portfolios of the Israeli security industry. While aimed at exports, smart city solutions are rooted in the dual experiences of settler colonial control warfare and the concomitant urbanisation of Jewish life in Israel-Palestine. By analysing a range of sites of this duality, this chapter argues that Israel’s security companies have a central and (due to its rapid process of urbanisation, high-tech economy and colonial structure) a particular role in the globalising phenomenon of the smart city. Through a range of mini-cases, the following chapter unfolds how the alleged ‘smartness’ is a product or a contemporary culmination of the experiences of the national security state operating in varying spaces, through different methods, and across locations in the colonial sites of the OPT and inside Israel proper. The chapter introduces the celebrated concept of ‘the smart city’ and dissects some of the key debates around the concept as it has been discussed in academic and semi-academic deliberations. The analysis introduces some ideas as to how its 66 On a global scale in 2012 it was estamited that private and government investors spent USD 8.1 billion USD on smart city technologies. However by 2016, according to industry estimates, that number is projected to reach USD 39.5 billion USD. Currently Europe is estimated to host 38 self-proclaimed smart cities, North America 35, Asia Pacific 21, the Middle East and Africa six and Latin America two. 213 Israeli versions can be situated within a settler colonial framework by pointing to the ‘dark side’ of urban planning. The latter includes the management of slums, peripheries, and segregated spaces through schemes inspired by counter-insurgency etchniques and colonial (urban) planning. The chapter inserts the concept of the smart city into the broader history of Israeli urbanisation and proposes some ideas as to how a fertile link between settler colonial practices, urban control, and the smart city has surfaced through the construction of the Israeli versions of the smart city67. 7.2 Welcome to the ‘smart city’ The ‘smart city’ is as an ecosystem of digital urban services and control. Globally, the smart city has become the buzzword in holistic urban governance systems deemed ‘smart’. The smart city combines computing with technologised urban management systems. It is characterised by a mix of pervasive wireless networks and distributed sensor platforms (from video surveillance to meteorological stations) that monitor flows from traffic to sewage and provides information in real-time or in the anticipation of risks. The term is usually used to label entire cities, smart homes, smart buildings, and larger smart ensembles like airports, hospitals, or university campuses equipped with a multitude of mobile terminals, embedded devices, and connected sensors and actuators that are installed with sophisticated surveillance, zoning, and digitalisation systems. Smart cities combine video surveillance, fire detection and crowd flow monitoring. They also include customer tracking and larger but temporary initiatives like command and control systems established for sports mega-events. Nam and Pardo stress how a smarter city should be treated as an organic whole – as a network or as an interlinked system (Nam and Pardo 2011). Tailor-made smart city solutions are designed to target a range of niche purposes and interconnected issues such as energy savings, anti-terrorism, crime-prevention, public service delivery, and traffic management based on the embedding of smart technology sensors, CCTV, and drone technology into the urban fabric. In the broadest terms, the entrenchment of smart city thinking attests to a broad shift from the deployment of digital devices (the digital city or the intelligent city) to the utilisation of networked infrastructure to both to increase economic 67 214 In the Israeli smart city discourse, the ‘safe’ city is often used synonymously with ‘smart’ to underline the emphasis on public security and an improved quality of life. This speaks to Israeli discourses on homeland security as well as to the branding of municipal smart solutions in cities and towns in Israel. and social mobility and control it. As a techno-utopian vision and as concrete strategies of digital upgrades of urban zones, the smart city vision is unfolding in rapidly growing numbers of urban zones around the globe, including to megacities in the global south, thanks to omnipresent internet connectivity and the miniaturisation of electronics. According to most smart city practitioners – consultants and engineers – the smart trend is leading municipal and other levels of urban planning into a digital age where the conditions for ecosystem management are optimised through technology and new collaborative efforts between tech companies, the public, security agencies, and state and municipal authorities. The smart city label is eagerly deployed by companies and policy makers and is intended to carry positive connotations of public security, progress, and resource optimisation. The term is often used in very generic terms, and referred to as the next stage in the process of urbanisation (and securitisation) of urban space. However, on a more conceptual level, it remains vaguely defined (Hollands 2008; Vanolo 2014). There have been lively discussions in academic circles as to what constitutes this ‘smartness’, how to define it and its intents and effects. In its most celebratory versions, the smart city brings to the forefront the idea of a ‘wired city’68, as the main developmental model and of connectivity as the source of growth based on previous academic debates on ‘smart growth’ and ‘intelligent cities’ (Vanolo 2014). Hollands demonstrates how debates about the future of urban development are increasingly influenced by discussions of smart cities. According to Hollands, the smart city is a category of urban labelling whose meaning and content remain fuzzy and inconsistent, but in very large terms relate to the ways in which technology, people, and communities are connected and interact in the city: ‘Despite numerous examples of this “urban labelling” phenomenon, we know surprisingly little about so-called smart cities, particularly in terms of what the label ideologically reveals as well as hides’ (Hollands 2008: 3). The smart urban labelling separates out the hype and use of such terms for marketing purposes, as opposed to referring to actual infrastructural change and its socio-economic effects (Begg 2002; Harvey 2000; Hollands 2008). In the hands of private companies, the smart city is most commonly presented in positive terms as an innovative approach to optimise the digitalisation of and mobility in urban spaces. Komninos suggests four key points to quantify the minimum that is necessary to define an urban entity as smart: 68 The literature on innovative environments and entrepreneurship and planning of digital or intelligent cities is often known under the banner of ‘wired-cities’ (Komninos 2002). 215 1. 2. 3. 4. Application of a wide range of electronic and digital technologies to communities and cities; Use of information technologies to life and work within a region; Embedding of ICTs in the city; and Territorialisation of such practices in a way that brings ICTs and people together in a community of learning (Komninos 2002). A foundation of a smart or intelligent city is based on a digital city infrastructure that connects a local community and drives growth, efficiency, productivity, and competitiveness (Yovanof and Hazapis 2009). Essentially, the smart city is a system control linked to transportation, communication, energy flows, and logistics in the urban space for people to learn and adapt to on an ad hoc basis. A key critique of the smart city is its unfulfilled promise of emancipation, service, and improved mobility to all inhabitants of a given urban space. It is also criticised for paying little or no attention to the ‘losers’ in social polarisation, i.e. those deemed immobile, the urban poor, the unwanted, and criminalised (Hill 2013; Klauser, Paasche and Söderström 2014; Wood 2007). In the context of the growing demand for smartness, a new consortium of interests is increasingly attached to the regulation and control of urban life. Hill characterises the novelty of the smart city as part of a permeating ‘urban-industrial-intelligence-complex’ (Hill 2013), i.e. a ruling complex that is made up of and produces data that is processed into statistics on trends and events, whether they be routine or specific events in a given urban space. However, the trend to smartness poses a larger critical question: in a given society, which people do these technologies benefit and who comes to suffer from exclusion or intensified control? Indeed, while smart technologies reduce the need for traditional governance mechanisms, urban governance (policing, or mundane urban planning schemes) becomes more pervasive, even militarised. It is vital to undertand that Israel’s smart city systems are part and parcel of the broader context of Israeli urbanisation, destruction, control, and war that began with the urbanisation of Jewish immigrants in Mandate Palestine and culminated in Israel’s major urban security schemes. 216 7.3 Zionism and urbanisation In September 2012, Tom Rosamilia, Senior Vice President of IBM, spoke at a high-tech conference in Jerusalem. In front of an enthusiastic crowd of people, Rosamilia unfolded how IBM is pursuing the goal of becoming a world leader in smart city systems. IBM, he said, plans to ‘turn the entire planet into a web of smart cities using Israel as a showroom’ (Tom Rosamilia, presentation on IBM’s engagement in Israel, High-tech Israel Association, Jerusalem, September 2012). In June 2013, communications giant Cisco announced its plans to transform Israel into the world’s first fully digital country with a fibre-optic network69. Like IBM, Cisco aims to use Israel as a showcase of innovation; its network will eventually serve as the backbone for electricity, television, healthcare, and even military infrastructure in Israel. Thus, these huge corporations, each their own way, intend to establish Israel as one big smart and wired city, and to benefit from it. These moves towards smartness are only the latest stage in a long-term process of urbanisation of Jewish communities in Israel-Palestine. Urbanisation has been at the heart of Zionist capital accumulation and territorial expansion from the beginning of Jewish immigration to Palestine (Davis 1977; Masalha 2007; Nitzan and Bichler 2002). From the outset of Jewish immigration to Mandatory Palestine, the very project of Jewish settlement had an urban core that prompted the development of urban control tactics that had deep ramifications for Palestinian urban life. As Zionist scientist Elazaro-Volcani stated at the time of Israeli state formation: The stream of modern life draws the countryman to the town. To exchange the town for the country is to swim against the tide after 2000 years of exile and of life in town…an effort of quite unusual intensity is required to overcome the obstacles (Elazaro-Volcani in Troen 1988: 7). Since the first waves of Aliyah in the 1880s, cities in Israel-Palestine have been zones of counterinsurgency and violent clashes. Over time, cities in Israel- 69 Cisco is building the network for the Israel Electric Corporation and the Israeli telecommunications corporation Beteq. According to the agreement between Cisco and Beteq, Cisco is providing vendor financing of about 140 million USD; the cost of the entire venture has been estimated at USD 1.39 million. 217 Palestine have developed into sites of intense segregation and class division taking the form of archipelagos of security, capital circuits, and centres of potential warfare. M ainstream Zionist versions of the movement’s creeping Jewish urbanisation of Palestine tend to either focus on making virgin territory bloom or rejuvenating urban space lost to the past. Indeed, ‘Zionist urbanism’ has been expressed in both Zionist architectural visions and programmes, including the Arieh Sharon Plan, an ambitious construction program launched in 1950. This was Israel’s first urban master plan for the replacement of the vision of the Jewish peasant with a vision of a modern urban (Jewish) society. The project was shaped by very rapid progress from a development axis of rural-land frontiers to a burgeoning urban-industrialisation frontier sweeping into a developing metropolitan frontier. While in pre-1948 Palestine the Zionist urban planners activated the most modern(ist) architectural and town-planning discourses available in Europe, the actual process of Zionist urbanisation in the Yishuv was not a simple transplant of European ideas (LeVine 2005). Consistently, through interaction with other colonial forces, transnational urban designs have been woven into the settler colonial fabric. The Israeli growth economy has moved consistently forward through core-area-oriented domestic and foreign capital investments (Kipnis 1998). Israel has steadily advanced, expanded, and has now digitalised its technological-metropolitan frontiers. According to (Zionist) planning expert Daniel Elazar, Israel’s process of ‘Jewish’ urbanisation has been the most advanced stage of the continuing frontier process – for the sake of its Jewish citizens (Elazar 1992). Israel’s infrastructure intersects with a built-in structural segregation architecture rooted in the concept of the kibbutz, which served both as an economic motor and a tool to create politically homogenous communities (Rosen and Razin 2009)70. 70 218 Between 1882–1947 Israel’s agricultural settlements were in large part led by young people who had emigrated from Russia and Eastern Europe. Approximately 550,000 Jews arrived in Palestine in that period. By contrast, the Yishuv focused its energies on building communal agricultural settlements which intended to enable the return to the land practically as well as symbolically. Numbering 12 in 1918, these collective settlements grew to 19 in 1921, and to 25 in 1925. By 1945, they totalled 179 (Aaronsohn 1995). Most of the Kibbutzim were built in the periphery of the north and south as frontiers. They have experienced increased privatisation and depopulation; however, their crime rates are low compared to the rest of the country. In 2004, 2.1 per cent of the Israeli population (around 116,000 people) lived in a kibbutz (Pavin 2006). It is possible that the fundamental ideas of the kibbutz as a calm, safe space, and as a gated community have been a source of inspiration to the Israeli version of a smart city utopia. Israel has sought to re-create the experience of communal homogeneity nationwide through the combination of planning through segregation but also in the production of wired urban space that connects people virtually. The gates of the kibbutz are now being replaced by new, gated communities for the wealthy and a broader tendency of (more digital) ways of policing and ‘gating in’ so as to preserve the feeling of homogeneity71. In 2007, Israel had 38 official gated communities that totalled more than 10,000 residential units (Rosen and Razin 2009). Unlike the Moshav, the kibbutz settlements were suburban/urban spaces composed mainly of middle class aesthetics of architectural uniformity. This helped merge the needs of sprawling suburbia communities with visions of national security and political ambitions of expanding territory into the West Bank (Weizman 2004a, 2007). The philosophy of the settlements reflects the Zionist architect Richard Kaufmann’s planning, which focused on taking the settlers’ needs into consideration (Popkin 1971). Along with urbanising the newly conquered territory, the challenge for Israel was to steadily develop additional urban control grids to optimise the control and development of territory (Shamir 2013). This constant remake and remediation of the urban frontiers, i.e. the steady planning of new settlements, reflect the fact that expansion of urban space is not only the object of Israel’s war but also its fabric, its ammunition. In this way, as Weizman notes, ‘the struggle over land and habitat redefines the act of living, settling, extracting, harvesting, or trading as violence itself ’ (Weizman 2006: 90-91). Since the time of state formation, life and industrial production have come to revolve around urban hubs and industrial zones. Around 750,000 Israelis live in Jerusalem and 400,000 thousand in Tel Aviv; more than 1.6 million people live in the country’s metropolitan suburban area and some 91 per cent of all Israelis live in urban settlements (Israeli Ministry of Tourism 2014). The smart city thinking is a component of this development, which has only grown in recent years. The smartness takes on many forms and expressions across the geographical space of Israel-Palestine. 71 Over the last 20 years, industries owned by the state and the Histadrut have been privatised – as have two-thirds of the kibbutzim (collective farms) – and capital deregulation has allowed Israeli firms to attract foreign investments (Shafir and Peled 2000). 219 7.4 Policing and ‘cities without violence’ Recently, Israel’s policy of zero tolerance for violence resulted in a national effort to design policing interventions to eliminate violence in order to enhance stability and growth. Together with the Prime Minister’s Office and the Ministry of Finance, former Police Commissioner Assaf Hefetz spearheads the government-funded project ‘City Without Violence’ that operates in 84 (out of 255) local police councils. The project is conducted in concert with the Mezila (Division of Community and Crime Prevention) and works with local communities to reduce crime and fear with a special focus on deploying advanced technology. (Mezila is operated under the auspices of the Ministry of Public Security and operates in approximately 76 communities and villages throughout Israel). According to its informational material, the programme is based on the understanding that violence is not just a personal problem but also a social one that requires systematic intervention that includes an understanding of the causes as well as identification of solutions (Israeli Ministry of Public Security 2013). In the discourse of zero violence, the Israel National Police (INP) emphasises its dedication to ‘quality of life’ policing by targeting ‘quality of life crimes’. The project is marketed to promote safe cities inside Israel and is: …designed to confront and deal with issues of all violence occurring in a specific city by focusing on all municipal variables affecting violence in the city such as education and enforcement (Israeli Ministry of Public Security 2013). The City Without Violence project was first established in in 2004 in the tourist city of Eilat in the south. Since then, many Israeli cities, including Rehovot, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Hadra, and Rishon LeZion, have invested in the project. Smart city techniques have been incorporated in the project. Reuven Ben Sachar, the Mayor of Givatayim, explained in a government PR publication that his municipality has followed smart city logic by installing city call centres as sophisticated command, control, and operation centres. In addition to monitoring patrols, the call centre controls the security camera system installed in public parks in the city, which has proved to be effective in preventing and documenting incidents (and in preventing consumption of alcohol and vandalism in public spaces) (Israel Gateway 2009). In the future, the project is slated to actively involve some 250 influential private and public organisations at the municipal level. Community stakeholders 220 will be asked to sign a pact of no violence, which will be implemented through sub-initiatives to promote self-policing and even to encourage citizen volunteers to promise to report on other people. The overarching goal of the project is to refine the systematic and intelligence-based management of a city. As Kilcullen notes, how the development of collaborative and information-sharing tools for modern counterinsurgency is key: the ‘common diagnosis of the problem, and enablers for collaboration may matter more than formal unity of efforts across multiple agencies’ (Kilcullen 2006: 122). The methods and technologies at hand in the City Without Violence project are described as a toolbox. What the counter-insurgency models and the zero violence policy share is the amalgamation of both peace and pacification. In a settler colonial state like Israel, the pursuit of zero violence is based on a utopian image of controlled stability amid encompassing threats. The reality is much messier. In practice, the cleared urban spaces operate as geopolitical sites of interlinked Palestinian urban enclaves marked by Israeli efforts to ethnically gentrify the sites. The steady spread of smart city ideas often occurs in conjunction with a reconfiguration of policing missions. In Israel, the benefits of these security and public service-oriented initiatives have been reserved for Israel’s dominant ethnic group: Jewish-Israelis (around 20 per cent of Israeli citizens are Arabs/Palestinians)72. Denes describes this paradox as a situation where the ideal of (ethnic) closure is mapped against the reality of the settler-colonial condition of heterogeneity fashioned as a vision of national rescue that relies on purifying violence (Denes 2011a: 9). In the smart city, the image of a city without violence is the fantasy locus; the Israeli vision of national rescue lies beneath the vision of zero violence. This is not to imply a violent disposition among community members, but to highlight how the utopian dream of no violence paradoxically develops out of this context of segregation. This organised type of engineering through smart city policing does not necessarily conform to Zionist nationhood ideals, but provides a multitude of designs of subordination and reinvention promoting new urban geometries. Israeli companies are exporting and selling similar ideas of the zero violence vision as a core component in their promise of security. They often draw on Israel’s own experiences of staying safe despite hostile surroundings. Mid-size security and 72 As Hasisi and Weitzer argue: ‘In divided societies citizen’s relations with the police are shaped in large part by their allegiance to or alienation from the state…’ (Hasisi and Weitzer 2007: 728). Accordingly, policing in Israel has become an agent of state repression (Shalhoub-Kevorkian 2004). The seemingly permanent tension between Jews and Arabs has turned the police into a militarised/central state security apparatus (Shalhoub-Kevorkian 2004). 221 smart city company Runcom has its headquarters in Rishon LeZion. The company was founded by Dr Zion Haddad with ‘extensive experience in the development of military and commercial communication systems from the Israeli military’ and provides ‘4G End-to-End Mobile Solutions’ supporting city administrators and law enforcers in the prevention of crime and overcome terrorism and vandalism (Runcom). When I met with Ronen Shapira, Runcom’s Strategic Projects and Projects and Business Development Manager, at the ISDEF security fair in June 2013, he explained how the company’s testing grounds are located in numerous typical Israeli cities and in sites outside the country. A recent Runcom’s customer is the City of David in the heart of the Old City in Jerusalem. Runcom installs surveillance systems in (crowded) Palestinian residential areas, and markets itself as a provider of security that can help increase the flow of both Jewish immigration and tourism to Israel. This project is slowly penetrating and undermining Palestinian neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem with settlements and the building of Jewish heritage tourist attractions, archaeological excavations, and ‘rediscovered’ underground water systems. Together with the conglomerate Brightstar, Runcom has delivered a comprehensive safe city solution to the Argentinean capital of Buenos Aires. Marketing employee Yair Shapira of Runcom explained to me at ISDEF security fair in Tel Aviv in June 2012 that this contract was landed through the Israeli government’s connections with the mayor of Buenos Aires, who, according to Shapiro, is Jewish. The mayor was very much in favour of bringing in Israeli expertise to fight high crime rates and the fear caused by the threat of such crimes. Much like the deployment of other variations of the system in many other Latin American cities, the security system in Buenos Aires is directly connected to Runcom’s control rooms in Israel. In Buenos Aires, operators in the field or in the city’s police stations can contact Israeli experts (even Spanish speaking ones) at this call centre (Interview with Ronen Shapira of Runcom, ISDEF Israel, Tel Aviv, 6 June 2013). This means that everyday security governance can be influenced by decisions made from Israel. For Runcom, the deployment of safe city programmes is about regaining control of the city in favour of law-abiding citizens. Two elements are key here: the ability to prevent violations of law by reacting instantly and to ‘provide deterrent measures without affecting routine life’ (Interview with Ronen Shapira of Runcom, ISDEF Israel, Tel Aviv, 6 June 2013). Runcom’s urban security systems allow the detection of suspicious events in real-time based on a system of command and control tailored to the unique requirements of each city, and on a core technology of differentiating between routine activity and suspicious activity. 222 According to Shapira, Israeli companies secure contracts to implement safe city projects globally through government-to-government projects73. To accomplish this, Israeli embassies first set up meetings with relevant in-country authorities through networking and often informal channels. After a deal is made, Israeli authorities then contact the relevant Israeli company or system integrator, which then installs the appropriate smart city systems. We have here a successful business venture writ large: An Israeli security systems company provides a high-tech solution to the problem of violence, either in Israel or abroad. These systems are praised by both residents and policy makers. However, it can also be said that these no violence security systems can be used as an invasive method to target those who live in the social periphery of a given population. The Israeli National Police debate ‘smart’ policing and violence prevention with private industry representatives. HLS 2nd Israel Homeland Security Conference, Tel Aviv, November 2012. Photo: Author. 73 For example, Shapira highlighted how Runcom’s cooperation with authorities in Azerbaijan provided new ideas and experiences based on the country’s highly volatile environment marked by low legal barriers. 223 7.5 Smart wars and frontier settlements From kibbutzim to outpost to smart city Israeli settlements in Israel-Palestine have consistently served as the primary frontiers for Jewish colonisation (Shafir 1996). Colonisation through its urbanisation strategy embodies revolutionary elements such as settlers’ habitation constructed on the urban frontier. In the context of the West Bank settlement, this urban expansion is a (often violent) process, which takes place at the expense of the Palestinian residents. Israel’s conquest of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967 did not produce an exodus of Palestinians similar to that in 1948; the vast majority of the Palestinian population remained in the occupied territories (Segev 2007). By 1985, over 50 per cent of Palestinian land in the OPT had been confiscated for settlement construction or otherwise appropriated by the Israeli government (Benvenisti 1984). Since 1967, large parts of Palestinian in the OPT space has been refashioned as Jewish through the planned transfer of some 500,000 Israeli Jewish citizens into the Palestinian enclave of the West Bank (and East Jerusalem). In the same time span, Israel destroyed more than 28,000 Palestinian homes, businesses, and livestock in the OPT. The most vivid example of Israel’s destruction of Palestinian urban life is the deliberate destruction of Palestinian homes by drone attacks, bulldozing, or shootings (Schaeffer, Halper and Epshtain 2012). Today in the OPT, Israel conducts three concurrent modes of governance: connecting and disconnecting land from land, land from people, and people from people. Much like the smart city logic of a holistic control grid, the Israeli military regime in the OPT relies on connectivity, or what Weizmann calls a ‘network of points in depth’, a system with intelligent concentration points that creates an interlocking surface, or matrix of control (Weizman 2004a). The system is based on a matrix of interlocking strong points connected by physical and electromagnetic links, i.e. roads and electronic communication. Despite its civilised features, the settlements have an overt war-prone function, hosting watchtowers and providing secured space for viewing the landscape from various hilltops. In his seminal frontier thesis of settler colonialism in North America, Turner finds in settler colonialism an entrenched ‘logic of exceptionalism’, where the settlers are presented as a ‘chosen people regularly constructing powerful ideological concepts and manifestos to demonstrate their unique mission in the world’ (Turner 1921). Fortified by the religious or spiritual values given to the territory, such as the notion of settler ‘emancipatorism’, or liberation is also prevalent in the 224 Israeli settler mentality(Turner 1921; see also Collins 2011; Obenzinger 2008). While ideological settlers need the sense of individual heroism, as Weizman points out, settlements must form continuity with the ‘holy landscape’. While these settlements are closed in for self-protection, Palestinian urban space is enclosed from the outside to prevent security threats from leaking out (Weizman 2004a). In this way, the creation of settlements as secure spaces in enemy territory walls in and seals-off the surrounding Palestinian villages. Thus the settlers’ call for the freedom to move freely is echoed in the demands made by privileged citizens in the smart city. Sagi Laron of the smart fence company El-Far explained to me that the company’s agreement with the Israeli Ministry of Defense has made it difficult to install their technology in some of the settlements because the settlers think that ‘god is their protector’ and therefore resist the deployment of security infrastructure. According to Laron, providers of security infrastructure to the OPT have had to be creative and innovative: ‘You have to mix until you find the right solution without an actual fence but with sensors and cameras’ (Interview with Sagi Laron, Tel Aviv, 23 September 2012). Like the urban Israeli resident, the settler prefers protection that is not too pervasive in their daily routine – a privilege that is not available in the warehoused slum or the Palestinian ghettos. In the OPT, the dominant prevailing logic is that it is the Palestinians, the natives, who need to be fenced in. The ‘smart city’ as applied to the OPT is about pursuing normal space for the settler in the actual battlespace, which amounts to the production of isolated islands of calm in a sea of Palestinian hostility. The case of the Ariel settlement and the security system installed around the adjacent village of Qalqiliya are cases in point. The Ariel-Qalqilya binary Ariel Settlement is a territorial ‘finger’ designed to stretch into a long thin form: it reaches far into the heart of the West Bank. The Jewish community of Ariel was established in 1978 on Palestinian farm and grazing land. After a major influx of new Russian immigrants in the 1990s, Ariel today has around 19,000 residents and effectively cuts off the Palestinian city of Salfit from its regional hinterland economy (Lein and Weizman 2002; Weizman 2004a). In 2002, Ron Nachman, then Mayor of Ariel (who at that time also chaired the Smart City Panel at the Israel Conference of Mayors) began to work intensively towards realising Ariel as a smart city (Israel Conference 2003). In 2006, Ariel embarked on a smart city pilot programme to turn the frontier into a hypermodern, attractive, and safe living space for Israeli citizens (Ariel Municipality website). When the programme began 225 implementation, it celebrated itself as the first of its kind in Israel. Since then, the digital infrastructure of Ariel has been steadily upgraded in a cooperation between the municipality and private tech-companies. In fact, in 2002, the Israeli subsidiary of US software and communications giant Nortel won the bid to make Ariel a wired city by deploying wireless mesh access points for high-speed, wireless coverage along the city’s pedestrian mall, at municipal offices, and on the campus of the College of Judea and Samaria (Ariel University). In addition, in the programme’s pilot phase, multinational tech giant Hewlett Packard contributed to making Ariel smart by providing a software-based storage system to the municipality. Today, Ariel’s networked-topography is based on the coordination of radio nodes and a plethora of devices installed to collect data on abnormal events that deviate from standard data. Among other features, this service gives residents, students, and visitors high-speed wireless access free of charge as a service provision from the municipality. According to Nortel, the network provides the city with wireless monitoring of water-meter readings, surveillance cameras, parking, and traffic inspection, and provides wireless video and voice communications for municipal and university employees (Haddas 2006). Ariel residents can then use their personal digital devices as urban portals, a technology also used by soldiers on smart military portals in the field. In addition, the settler presence is linked to intensified communications infrastructure such as antennas linking settlers and soldiers, which are wired and connected to both their military bases and to communications systems inside Israel proper. Altogether, the settlement now constitutes a security fortress made attractive and modern through streamlined suburbia style architecture and digitalised public service delivery. All of these technological systems serve the aim of concealing the violent nature of the enterprise installed: the smart city systems simultaneously conceal and reinforce the colonial war in the OPT by easing life for ‘civilian’ settlers in a highly militarized space while expanding the state’s territorial control. Moreover, the creation of settlements as safe or smart cities is crucial to the colonial enterprise because it upholds normalcy, flows of energy, communications, and access to the world outside while downplaying the system’s militarised nature. Despite the presence of soldiers and armed settlers, the settlement frontier can operate with an air of normalcy because the security architecture is the very foundation of the frontier. The settlements’ smart city installations, like those in Ariel, embed the very core function of the neo-colonial metropolitan frontier as a 226 hyper version of its more mundane variations elsewhere. The urban architecture of settlements is an excellent example of the interweaving of settler colonial frontierism and Israeli smart city thinking. Indeed, settlements are smart cities by default because of their function as metropolitan technological frontiers with a maximum level of security and high quality of technological service delivery. As the Ariel case demonstrates, the smart city grid in the OPT consists of integrated projects designed to improve daily life, provide security for settlers, and work to sustain a conjectural (Jewish) civilised public sphere represented through discourses of public security. However, the same cannot be said of the smart systems installed around the adjacent Palestinian city of Qalqilya. The walled-off Palestinian Qalqilya is situated at the foot of the hilltops of Ariel. In the aftermath of the 1967-war, the IDF ‘trimmed the edges of the West Bank and nearly half of Qalqilya was destroyed’ (Li 2006: 38). Today, smart technology and crude infrastructural installations are used to encircle the village. The urban enclave is strangled by the Israeli construction of an eight metre high bulletproof concrete wall with watchtowers equipped with firing posts every hundred meters. (In non-urban Palestinian zones, the wall is a three metre high touch-sensitive electronic fence with deep concrete foundations and barbwire on the top). These wall structures are equipped with cameras and sensors to detect movement in the buffer zones on both sides, and a total of eight turnstiles. The intelligent concrete structure is surveilled from a guard tower. The control system, which constitutes both a physical axis of counterinsurgency and a practice ground for new techniques and technology, prevents the village from expanding and being modernised. In 2006, it became possible for workers to leave the village and access their land. However, this access consists of the villagers moving through a terminal operated by the military that consists of metal corridors where people wait and wait some more, and then move like cattle moving through a cattle chute through the barbed wire fencing. Li describes the enclave as the West Bank’s ‘first Gaza Strip’ (Li 2006). The control system in place is a form of ‘infrastructure war’ that works to warehouse and seal off undesired groups. The contrast between Ariel’s privileged life and Qalqiliya’s limited life reflects Israel’s capacity to both operate Jewish settlements in the OPT and govern Palestinian life, and the duality of Israel’s differentiated urban regimes. To summarise: this Ariel-Qalqilya binary illustrates well the differentiated logics of rule in the OPT and the smart city dichotomy of mobility and immobility. Such polarisation or segregation of urban life is not just an effect, but also a matter of intent. The notion of preparing and making space open to intervention 227 so key to smart city thinking shares its features with the early urbanisation of Jewish settler communities. This long-term engagement has provided a useful experience for Israel about how to make urban space open to management and intervention. As Israel provides services and security to the suburbia-like wired frontier, communities of settlements in the OPT differently Palestinians in the surrounding areas are subjected to extensive control, surveillance, and enjoy less, if any mobility. It is possible that the fundamental ideas of the kibbutz as a calm, safe space, and as a gated community have been a source of inspiration to the Israeli version of the smart city utopia. Certainly, Israel has sought to re-create the experience of communal homogeneity nationwide through the combination of planning through segregation but also in the production of wired urban space that connects people virtually. 7.6 Israeli smart city spaces and projects The Digi-Tel-Jaffa binary The Tel Aviv-Jaffa binary is one of the starkest examples of the duality (construction-deconstruction) of the Zionist pioneers’ urban planning schemes. Today, Tel Aviv is dubbed by some experts as the world’s smartest city, and is often referred to as ‘Digi-Tel’ to underline the city’s role as the high-tech heartland and creative hub of Israel. Arguably, the trajectory of Tel Aviv illustrates the path of Israel’s mode of frontierism. In recent years, it has gone well beyond simple e-government schemes. A few years back, Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai launched an ambitious plan to put Israel’s second largest city at the forefront of the move to digital government. Today, Tel Aviv’s Digi-Tel smart city initiative allows residents to perform all municipal business online, from paying real estate taxes to filing requests for permits. Under the project banner ‘The Digi-Tel Residents Club’, members are offered a personalised web and communication platform functioning as a ‘direct and holistic connection between the city and its residents’ (Smart City Tel Aviv 2013), with services spanning from license applications and renewals. The system also connects to a comprehensive system of surveillance and data collection, including 200 interconnected cameras installed in public spaces and around critical city infrastructure that are controlled from a control and command centre ‘equipped with analytical devices that automatically identify irregular incidents’ (Smart City Tel Aviv 2013). The project is implemented in cooperation with Motorola, which provides the information gathering, command and control and the analytical infrastructure, and with Microsoft’s CityNext program, which contrib- 228 utes a secure consumer-to-business software platform (Smart City Tel Aviv 2013). In 2014, Tel Aviv’s high-tech ecosystem, the Digi-Tel Platform, was awarded the World Smart City Award at the Smart City Expo and World Congress. While the project is a huge investment for the city, the thinking behind the project is that increased efficiency and resource optimisation will justify its costs. However, while Tel-Aviv represents the epitome of the ‘hypermodern High-Tech Nation’, Israel’s celebration of techno-national projects such as this conceals the deeper scars of past and present colonial struggles. Under the banner of Digi-Tel lies a long process of gentrification of the urban space. While Tel Aviv has long been the epitome of modernity – an Israeli city that expresses an enlightened global ethos – its urban life is structured and controlled through reasoning based on internal colonisation. This logic revolves around the distinction between ethnic, social, and religious groups, the Jewish-Arab binary being the prime one. Levine’s work on Jaffa and Tel Aviv describes an ontological (and historical dichotomy) of erasure and re-inscription between Jaffa and Tel Aviv. As LeVine recounts, while the metropolis of Tel Aviv is a major theme in the Israeli-Western imagination of cities, its surroundings are ‘made of sand’ or ‘oriental’ features which, according to LeVine, ‘testifies to the breadth of an Israeli national culture’: As in globalization at large, the purported absence of troublesome ‘others’ – in this case Arabs – on the land on which Tel Aviv was built is an important reason why the city has long been simultaneously considered a quintessentially national and utopian space (LeVine 2007: 183). Since the early days of the settlement of Tel Aviv, as land became available, it was sold on the stringent conditions that only the wealthy could meet. In his discussion of the Tel-Aviv-Jaffa-binary, LeVine argues that this led to a systematic erasure of Arab identity in Jaffa (LeVine 2007: 185; Mazawi 1998). LeVine’s comparison of Jaffa with Tel Aviv demonstrates how the evolution of architectural styles ranging from garden suburbs to contemporary/international building complexes reflects an increasing focus on defining ‘modern’ as opposed to the (apparently non-modern) ‘other’ (LeVine 2007: 183). This architectural focus on modernity makes clear the break with the past and the need for separation from Arab-Palestinians. According to LeVine, Tel Aviv was developed not as ‘just another neighbourhood’, but as part of an urbanisation process based on new, ‘imported rules of aesthetics and modern hygiene’ (LeVine 2007: 177). Based on the logic of preferring a ‘clean slate’, these urban reconfigurations also entailed the concurrent de-modernisation of traditional Palestinian Jaffa nearby. 229 Today, Jaffa is celebrated as ethnically ‘mixed town’; however, in practice it is a deeply segregated community – its unprecedented number of recently constructed gated communities bear witness to this. In recent years, the binary has also become internal in Jaffa. The old oriental structures have gone through an intense process of gentrification, or further internal colonisation, as Israelis’ purchase of Palestinian property has turned Jaffa into a contested space. This is what Monterescu calls a ‘neo-orientalist simulacrum, which subverts, spatially and semiotically, the standard logic of urban representation and modernistic notions of segregation’ ( Monterescu 2009: 40). The emergence of gated communities in Jaffa and in Israel/Palestine generally signals a new mode of urban exclusion, which reshapes previous forms of spatial distinction. The case of Digi-Tel-Jaffa demonstrates how urban development and modernisation are not evaporating colonial lines and features. Rather, these features and transplanted into new urban transformation projects. While the Tel-Aviv-Jaffa binary of modernisation and erasure is a key example of Israel’s settler colonialism, the case of Jerusalem illustrates another facet of this colonialism through its urbanisation processes. In Jerusalem (both East and West), efforts continue to annex territory and upgrade security in this deeply divided city. Fortress Jerusalem and the case of Mer The stony walls and iron gates of Jerusalem was not enough’. In order to be safe, the entire city of Jerusalem needed a technological infrastructure that the municipality and police could not provide. So they put Mer in charge (Telephone interview with Mr. Frisner of Mer Security, Jerusalem, 19 September 2012). Israeli security company Mer has installed an all-in-one security system called Secure-M in Jerusalem. Marketed as a ‘smart city’ system, Secure-M includes a precise command centre under hierarchical supervision that is suitable for remote management and control of urban space. According to Frisner, Mer kicked off its success as a smart-safe city provider in collaboration with the Israeli National Police in Jerusalem in preparation for a visit from Pope John Paul II in 1999. The smart city system in Jerusalem is based on digital zoning systems and software algorithms to predict movement patterns and systems of access such as coding, scanning, and identity control systems. Combined with the belligerent military infrastructure of the occupation of Palestinian East Jerusalem, Mer has transplanted Israel’s traditional logics of separation and the (quiet, slow) transfer of Palestinian residents into a digitalised geography of exclusion based on software-based systems of access and control. Among its latest updates is 3-D imaging 230 which according to Mer, ‘assists in forecasting the damage caused by an event to a specific location and its surrounding areas’ (Mer Security 2010). Amid Jerusalem’s crude infrastructure of tower and walls, this system works as a unified platform for physical security based on CCTVs, licence plate readers, perimeter security platforms, fibre optic sensors, and video management systems. The unified data collection system includes biometric recognition, sensor-activated camera, and video surveillance feeds. This refined system does not replace the military infrastructure of control already in place; rather, it is designed to target areas of Palestinian concentration specifically, where potential threats are expected to occur. In a broader perspective, the joint efforts to fortify the city’s structures of control need to be seen against the backdrop of Israel’s colonial practices in Jerusalem (Abowd 2014; Rotbard 2006; Weizman 2006). The organisation of urban life in Jerusalem can be described as an ongoing effort to transform the physical and demographic landscape of Jerusalem to correspond with the Zionist vision of a united and fundamentally Jewish Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty. According to Zink, much of this was accomplished through the violent expulsion of Arab residents during the wars of 1948 and 1967. However, this Judaisation of Jerusalem also relied on measures taken during times of ‘peace’ that were marked by ‘the strategic extension of ‘Jerusalem’s municipal boundaries, bureaucratic and legal restrictions on Palestinian land use, disenfranchisement of [Palestinian] Jerusalem residents, the expansion of settlements in “Greater Jerusalem”, and the construction of the separation wall’ (Zink 2009: 122). In this way, Smart security installations can conceal from the public this crude military control of movement and activity in urban spaces, thereby allowing the city to be transformed into a ‘hub for religious co-existence, thousands of tourists and high-level official visits’. By 2000, according to Frisner, Jerusalem could be declared a ’safe and smart city’, thanks to Mer (Telephone interview with Mr. Frisner, Jerusalem, 19 September 2012). Mer has installed its Secure-M system at mega and high-risk events and in cities across the globe. Among the company’s successful international projects are the security management systems installed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. Here, Mer monitored 63 connected and disconnected sites in real time with the same security platform that is installed in Jerusalem. A similar system was installed in Trinidad in 2009 in cooperation with the government to prepare for another high-risk event, the Fifth Summit of the Americas (Mer Security 2010b). While these are just a few examples of Mer’s international engagement, they reflect the tendency of the surveillance and control of urban spaces and the security around mega-events to be one and the same. 231 Magal: From Ramat Ha’sharon to Mombasa Israeli Security Company Magal is actively forming bridges between local security designs produced in Israel-Palestine and the refinement of global security assemblages. Amos Magoz, Director of Magal’s Command and Control Center, explained how the company’s control rooms in Israel have become: …pilgrimage sites for delegations around the world interested in building similar solutions to protect their citizens. [Customers abroad] are eager to learn how to derive the most out of technology to improve local security and citizen welfare (Amos Magoz, Magal Promotional Material 2010). Magal’s special involvement in the production of smart technologies led me to interview Mr. Katz, Magal’s head of marketing, at the company’s headquarters in Tel Aviv74. Katz explained how the smart city concept is: ‘an entire market by itself that needs to be nourished and developed in which Israel should take the lead’ (Interview with Mr. Katz, Head of Marketing, Magal Headquarters, Yehud, 21 September 2012). According to Katz, Magal’s solutions have become popular beyond Israel’s borders because of their success in Israel, and because of what Mr Katz views as Magal’s unique approach of ‘doing both products and projects’ (Interview with Mr. Katz, Head of Marketing, Magal Headquarter, Yehud, 21 September 2012). In the Israeli security industry, products are intrinsically linked to larger projects of an inherently political nature. For Katz, both Israel’s experience in developing smart devices in local urban space and its cutting edge security technologies are a comparative advantage in the global market. In other words, Magal enjoys the benefits gained from being part of the local security experience. The company has an extensive R&D department and benefits from buying up small start-ups to acquire the newest technology that fits into their technological niche. In addition, the company’s close collaboration with local actors, such as municipalities and industrial entrepreneurs, is key to Magal’s business strategy. Its cooperation and service delivery to the IDF and the Israeli National Police is a valuable business asset. While its participation in international projects receives much attention, agal’s intervention at the municipal level is a regular source of business. For M example, in 2013, Magal supplied an integrated solution for a safe city project in the city of Ramat Ha’sharon. This included an around-the-clock primary control centre, a backup control room, dozens of cameras (the number of which is ex74 232 Magal also has offices in Beijing and Madrid. pected to increase significantly in the future), free public wireless access points, public address systems, and panic buttons for kindergartens and in public areas. In order to realise the goal of improving the quality of life in Ramat Ha’sharon, Magal extended the municipality’s fibre-optic network to cover 80 per cent of the municipality and expanded the safe-city applications for routine and emergency uses. In this context, Perach Melec, the CEO of the municipality, explained how Magal’s intervention provides the city with a solid infrastructure of communications, and is the cornerstone of added value services in both routine and crisis situations: In fact, over four thousand participants have already made use of the free internet services at the last City Carnival and we successfully dealt with over 500 simultaneous users at peak time (Perach Melec in Magal Smart City promotional material 2014). During our conversation, Katz explained Israel’s technological progression in urban security, from barbwire used in the country’s first generation to perimeter intrusion protection systems to the more holistic smart city systems. He identified the intensifying immigration pressure stemming from ‘the Arab Spring and problems in Africa’ as a key motivator to refine the systems ‘to prevent unwanted penetration’. He continued: People grow up in a world where security requirements are extreme, where security is mitigation but never a full insurance against threats (Interview with Mr. Katz, Head of Marketing, Magal Headquarters, Yehud, 21 September 2012). Katz explained that in Israel ‘there is no distinction between military and security’. In his view, this poses some challenges for companies like Magal, but it also represents opportunities, especially within the realm of urban security. The Israeli security terrain is a place ‘where all kinds of security is a state matter’, he said. What is more, the conventional division between military and police often reflected in the product portfolios of law enforcement and military applications on websites and in sales material does not apply in Israel. Consequently, there is no point in differentiating between the two. Katz’s views reflect Neocleous’s critique of narrow readings of military and security interventions, and support the argument that security should be broadened to include looking at the rationale and mentality behind liberal governance and planning strategies. It is in this fertile overlay of military and civilian security demands that companies like Magal thrive. 233 By 2014, Magal was active in 80 countries; it is only one of many so-called security integrator exporting security systems (including smart solutions) that export these systems. In 2010, Magal won a bid to provide the gigantic industrial port of Mombassa in Kenya with a new security solution, including surveillance, innovative locating sensors, intercom and radio communication, and kilometres of perimeter fencing – in other words, smart city solutions. This open bid for a USD 21.4 million contract was managed by the donor, the World Bank, together with Kenya’s port authorities. Katz noted that the internationalisation of security is not always easy. Cultural clashes and lack of contextual knowledge can challenge the relationship between the buyer and seller and disturb the traditions of each. He used Magal’s involvement in the 2012 mega-event, the Africa Cup of Nations in Gabon, as an example: ‘the Gabonese are very slow, everything was like “manana”’ (Interview with Mr. Katz, Head of Marketing, Magal Headquarters, Yehud, 21 September 2012). However in Katz’s view, Israeli business and security entrepreneurs have great intercultural skills and are rarely shy of making themselves heard. And, he said, the Israeli national tradition and culture is highly adaptable: Unlike many other nationalities Israelis can easily adapt to life in Africa, in places where an American wouldn’t live. We can live in a dirty place. We had the project in Gabon, and people just moved there even though they couldn’t find hotels. Israelis have always been good at adapting (Interview with Mr. Katz, Head of Marketing, Magal Headquarters, Yehud, 21 September 2012). Magal’s promotional video of their Gabon project contains pictures showing the security systems in place at the Olympic village; they are very similar to the security systems in place around the Israel’s West Bank settlements and gated communities. Elbit’s Public Security Deployment Scope When I visited Israel’s biannual homeland security fair HLS in 2012, Elbit, Israel’s largest private defence and security company, addressed concerns about how to penetrate informal structures in war zones as well as in urban settings. The company demonstrated its smart city model by displaying a huge interactive, three-dimensional generic map of a mega-city. While there was an actual war reported to be occurring in the urban space depicted on the map, the sky was nevertheless filled with UAVs, some in motion on a mission and some hanging low over the city in order to control a delineated area on a more permanent basis. 234 This urban scenario was unfolded as a unified concept with the title ‘Elbit’s Public Security Deployment Scope’; it illustrated how Elbit’s smart city devices and systems penetrate the urban space through CCTV cameras, surveillance cameras, SIGINT systems (intelligence gathered by interception of signals), call centres, alert buttons, sensors, several local control centres, and one centralised (national) control centre. In Elbit’s presentation of the capacities of the Public Security Deployment scope, the details on how to reveal hidden threats were laid out under the slogan ‘Elbit’s New Tools for New Rules’ (Elbit Presentation, HLS Israel 2012, Tel Aviv, November 2012). The presenter illustrated the system’s dual-use capacities by showing slides of a generic gentrified urban setting and the deployment of UAVs in a generic warzone. The Public Security Deployment scope included an array of AUV systems used for surveillance, tracking, and monitoring of movement and events in crowded urban spaces, refugee camps, and regular combat zones. The same technologies deployed in this smart city toolbox are also key devices in the drone systems that hover over the Gaza Strip. According to Elbit sources, the drone systems deployed in and around Gaza are matched with new cyber security software that helps reduce the time it takes to detect and neutralise agents intruding on military networks and cloud systems. This protective system is developed to simulate real operational networks by recreating what happened and injecting new scenarios and threats to the training. These devices can be used to take preventive measures to avoid friction around critical settings such as mega events, critical infrastructure, and political summits with high-level visitors (Elbit Presentation, HLS Israel 2012, Tel Aviv, November 2012). The culmination of Elbit’s field-proven by the IDF capacities has ‘gone urban’ in its all-in-one Command and Control system, Torch2H System, to be used by all units. Elbit developed its systems initially to assist in the IDF’s detection of the ‘hidden unknown’ in the OPT, and to collect intelligence around the Separation Barrier in the West Bank and the wall/fence around Gaza. According to its marketing material, Elbit’s systems rely on the arguably illusory idea of complete transparency, which is a vision shared with the smart city prophecies. While in practice it is impossible to obtain complete transparency of information about such matters, Israel’s efforts to innovate around man-made enclaves of chaos have required an intense merger of cutting-edge science and practical military experience. In its security systems, Elbit targets the city from its sub-terrain (with sensors and cameras in tunnels), the air (with drones), supersurface (from roof tops) and at street level (with cameras, passage access and mobile units). In this way, the IDF’s desire to attain subsurface transparency has created new power geometries where methods of bypassing materials, walls and other 235 structures through surveillance and detection are shared with the entrepreneurial smart city agents. In this context, Elbit offers an ecosystem for urban control that reflects its portfolio of products used by the IDF in the OPT75. Elbit’s smart Gaza logic is emblematic of Israel’s Gaza strategy. Lori Allen demonstrates how scales – density, distance, time, and level – have produced the current state of the Gaza Strip as part of the Israeli strategy to keep the Strip separate from other zones and subject to a separate, special treatment (Allen 2012). The deployment of a language of special requirements or the need for special approaches and tools are often echoed in debates on ghettoisation and management of urban slums to invoke a sense of emergency (Allen 2012). Here there is a clear link between the social backlashes of urban policies globally and settler colonial practices of control. 75 236 Through Israel’s three latest wars, Elbit’s exports of UAVs and integrated security systems have experienced significant growth. In Israel’s Cast Lead offensive on Gaza (2008–2009), the IDF deployed two of Elbit’s UAV systems – the Hermes and the Heron – in their aerial operations for surveillance and targeted killings (Journal of Palestine Studies 2009). In fact, after Israel’s three major operations in Gaza: Cast Lead (2008–9), Pillar of Cloud (2012) and Protective Edge (2014), this trend of intensified sales has only accelerated (Sadeh 2014). In July 2011, Elbit reported the first sale of its Hermes 900 UAV to the Chilean Air Force. In January 2012, Elbit announced a 50 million USD contract to supply two Hermes 900 systems to the Mexican Federal Police, and in October 2013, the Chilean Navy began evaluating the Hermes 900 for maritime patrol tasks (Egozi 2013). In December 2012, IAF selected the Hermes 900 as the next generation MALE (Medium Altitude Long Endurance) for the IDF, and signed a second sales contract for a significant but unknown number of UAVs. Denmark’s Ministry of Defence is also considering adding Elbit’s technology to its portfolio of war technology, and in December 2013, Saab, the Swedish auto and arms producer, announced its decision to collaborate with Elbit on technological innovation of aerial defence systems (ASDNews 2013). Elbit Systems’ Public Security Development Scope presentation (Smart City) at HLS 2012-2nd Israel International Homeland Security Conference, Tel Aviv, November 2012. Photo: Author. 237 Compression of time and space The technology designed to control urban space also includes technology to perform time and space contractions. The Israeli company BriefCam seeks to occupy this this niche with time-surveillance software, or video synopsis systems, which are deployed in urban spaces and other locations with high human concentration. This software allows a camera to perform a total video review as part of a daily security routine by browsing large quantities of footage in very short time. It does this by a creative and simultaneous display of events that happen at different times. In 2013, BriefCam helped identify the Boston bombers, which led the eventual capture of the suspects. This ability to control time corresponds to Virilio’s discussion of how military space revolves around the development of new technologies. The production and hierarchies of speed (the distribution of different time regimes to different social categories of people) is equivalent to what Virilio describes as a ‘hierarchy of wealth’ (Virilio 2006: 50). In essence, this means that the power to control mobility becomes a source of wealth. Time contraction becomes another aspect of the smart grid. With BriefCam’s technology, time, as in many video hours, is condensed to only a few sequences of detected events as a way to bridge the gap between the many hours of video captured from a given urban space per day and the shortage of available ‘eyes’ to scan it. BriefCam’s promotional material includes a case where video recordings of events from an entire day in Stuttgart Airport in Germany are scanned and analysed in just one minute. Summarising hours of events into a brief ‘video minute’ allows security employees to browse through events frame-by-frame whether in a real-time feed or archival footage and draw statistical data from the video analysis. BriefCam has offices in China and the US and has provided its services to the Chicago Housing Authority and the US Department of Justice among others. Altogether the system is part of a trend in security where the notion of (contracted) time is altered and reconfigured into calculable units of menaingsful/ dangerous events. 238 In much the same way, Nice Systems’s smart (safe) city system hinges upon methods of gathering ‘intelligent insights’ from multiple sources of data from the city space76. This happens through installation of cameras, movement sensors, and real-time alerts under the three P’s: ‘Prepare, Predict, Prevent’. In its promotional video, Nice describes how you ‘can own the decisive moment’ by ‘impacting every interaction’. Using the slogan ‘The right people, at the right time’, Nice’s promotional material highlights Israeli’s expertise of preventing crime through complex data collection and processing, clearly connecting the country’s homefront experience with the implied promise that Nice’s products are worth purchasing. The basic philosophy in Nice’s visions of urban control is to view, analyse, and intervene (only if necessary and in crowded complex areas) without disturbing the daily routines of the city. The gap between managing routine and crisis is particularly important to ensuring balance and stability. In its promotional material and at its promotion booths at security fairs, Nice presents how its technologies are able to surveil and detect deviant or risky incidents (deviancy from what is statistically ‘normal’) and organise the data obtained into statistical resources as periodical reports and crowd trends and timelines demonstrating the sequences of events. Nice specialises in producing an urban interface by aggregating all data into one situational awareness report and an interactive timeline based on a select data that is assessed by the control room controllers of the chain of command. Israel Livnat, CEO of Nice, explained how the system distributes ears and eyes into the city’ and demonstrates how it is possible through the use of a software-based processing of data to divide the view of city into several layers projected to the observer as visual interfaces. These are categorised into different types of incidents with different workflows attached. The presentation’ s illustrations show visuals of the urban space presented in both vertical and horizontal slices combined with audio recordings and data on human concentration, trends in levels of pace, and direction of movement. According to Nice, in larger cities the system might have 20–50 incident reports taking place concurrently (Israel Gateway 2009). At the end of an operation, the data of the entire process, from the situational awareness report to an incident, is compiled 76 Neptune Intelligence Computer Engineering (Nice) was founded in 1986 by seven Israeli ex-army colleagues. It is one of Israel’s largest private security companies and specialises in risk control security solutions. The company initially focused on developing solutions for security and defence applications, but soon refocused their efforts on civilian applications mainly for contact centres, financial services, and business intelligence markets. In July 2009, Ze’ev Bregman was appointed as CEO of Nice, replacing Haim Shani, who stepped down to become the General Manager of the Ministry of Finance of the State of Israel. As of 2010, the company employed more than 2,700 worldwide. Nice serves over 25,000 organisations in enterprise and security sectors in more than 150 countries, including over 80 Fortune 100 companies. 239 on a CD with the data and event sequences recoded. Livnat said that Nice’s data collection system as an asset that ‘can be used in court’ (Israel Gateway 2009). These few examples illustrate the systemic approach to urban control that occurs under the smart label. These installations exemplify how private and stateowned Israeli companies integrate their security technology into complete systems of urban control. The systems mask the geopolitical context in which they operate by reframing the management of political frontiers as technical challenges to be solved through policing, counter-insurgency, social intervention, or urban reconfiguration through planning. The cases of Magal, Mer, Elbit, Nice and Briefcam demonstrate that it has become routine for private security companies to play a central role in shaping urban space as zones of counter-insurgency and urban control. In this way, private capital interests are mixed into urban reconfigurations that produce a variety of models for making urban space open to control and new modes of intervention. 7.7 Conclusion: the smart city revisited The Israeli smart city is the fruit and instrument of Israel’s land capture and population control. It is a long-term project of social engineering. At the same time, it is the culmination of the successful digitalising and upgrading of urban life for the select group. The smart city imagery seeks to project the imagery of a stabile Israel Nice’s showroom at HLS Israel, the Second International Israel Homeland Security Conference, Tel Aviv, November 2012. Photo: author. 240 outward while at the same time benefitting from the contradictions and simultaneous state of order and chaos that reigns in the urban terrains of Israel-Palestine. The promotion of Israel as a high-tech nation, in combination with the IDF’s modes of urban modernisation, warfare, and control of Palestinians, has made the diversified Israeli control logics already in use ready to fit under the banner of the smart city concept. The smart model is deeply rooted in Israel’s settler colonial features that developed from a mix of historical and contemporary sources and revolve around two major axes of planning: the establishing of new urban centres and the Judaising and modernising of existing ones at the expense of Palestinian livelihoods. For the Palestinians, Israeli urbanism has become the site of dislocation and dispossession that results in a constant source of fear of the erection of more new frontiers, more surveillance, and perhaps death. The smart city constitutes a repackaging of the Israel state’s colonisation through a complex process of urbanisation. Inside Israel proper, the smart city works as a both a publicly embraced and a commercialised banner for a variation of ‘neoliberal urbanism’ bound up in ethnic segregation (Peck and Tickell 2002). Just like the fantasy that national purity is utopia, the prototype accounts of the smart city put forward by security companies would never happen in a real city. Nevertheless, this quest for perfection is the driving force of the security industry. This analysis has demonstrated that it is the imperfection of the urban terrain in Israel – ruptures of violence and a permanent sense of withheld violence – that allows the security industry to harvest techniques that implement its smart city v isions. The expertise extracted from the accumulated experiences of Israel’s response to felt threats meets the demands of many decision makers and businessmen seeking to reconcile the contradictions between routine and crisis management in the metropolises globally. The Israeli conversion of military/security systems to smart city systems has given Israel a role in controlling urban locations and providing infrastructure to smart projects around the globe. While they are sold as neutral agents of improvement, the function of smart city systems cannot be detached from the ways in which urbanisation and warfare have come to intersect in the global south and the world’s megacities. In this way, the violent politics of the street and neighbourhoods in Israel-Palestine, the real battlespace of daily life, are reinserted into global assemblages of urban warfare and security through Israel’s contraction of its experiences into the smart city concept. 241 242 CHAPTER EIGHT BORDER SECURITY PART I: 8.0 ‘THE HOMELAND BEGINS AT THE BORDER’77 8.1 Introduction ‘The European dream of open borders everywhere will never happen’, a public- relations representative of a major Israeli homeland security company told me at a security fair in Tel Aviv in November 2012. According to the salesperson, since Israel’s nascent stages, the securing of borders has been a central challenge: Israel has since its birth been experiencing the same permeating and diffuse threats which are now and especially after 9/11 felt everywhere at borders today, especially in the west, but also on a global scale, whether it is the effects of migration, rapid urbanisation, terrorism, drug wars, or a rise in mundane forms of crime (Interview with Mer public-relations representative, Tel Aviv, November, 2012). The representative continued to explain how Israel’s sense of being ‘under threat from all sides’ has provided it with an opportunity to develop significant expertise in border security: Israel’s borders are not just Jewish, they are some of the most secure in the world…. Through wars and fighting terrorism, Israel has learned its lessons the hard way (Interview with Mer public-relations representative, Tel Aviv, November 2012). Across the globe, the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US left government agencies struggling to come up with new methods to contain threats of violence. As a result, the development of technologies to fortify and refine systems of control for borders, walls, and passages has now grown to become a global industry. Based on its long-term experiences, Israel’s expertise in border management is in high demand. This chapter examines how the Zionist techno-national mechanisms of exclusion /inclusion have provided the Israeli security industry with an advantageous 77 Interview with Moty Cohen, the Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute, Tel Aviv, August, 2012. 243 position in the global industry of border construction and control. It argues that the discriminative practices and special conditions of racialised border making and control of the Israeli state have become a component of a lucrative business that provides access for some while denying it to others. The chapter analyses the genesis of border thinking and border security practices in Israel’s settler colonial project by addressing the border control between Israel and the OPT as well as some intra-Zionist debates as to what constitutes the nation’s ‘mental’ or ‘human’ borders78. Instead of merely focusing on official gateways and infrastructure, this discussion includes historical as well as contemporary cases to show how Israel’s borders have been imagined, constructed, and managed over time, and operated on a 360° front. The chapter is divided into two main sections: background and conceptual analysis, and the practice and technologies deployed by security companies in the field. 8.2 Borders of national belonging ‘To be born is to be born in a place, to be “assigned to residence”’ (Augé 1995: 53). If borders are about more than the demarcation of lines between national territorial units, which is the case in Israel-Palestine, how are we to make sense of them? Border making and border control are crucial tools that help construct the nation physically and ideationally. As Sparke argues, borders are ‘condensation points where wider changes in state making are worked out’ (Sparke 2006: 152). In this sense, techniques of border security embody the epitome of what technological nationalism means. Technologies carry the meaning of the nation and also enable its realisation. Multiple systems of control at borders lay the foundations for the exercise of power (Gazit 2009). Borders are hard and material. But they are also organic instruments used to integrate and collect data and manage the dispersion of people. Israel has constructed borders as markers of Jewish entitlement to the land, as Coleman notes, rather than as a coherent ‘sovereign script’ (a definite formalised territorial lines); its borders have become places of forceful contention (Coleman 2005). They are not just a function for the division of space, but are replete with geo-economic and geopolitical ‘storylines’ that reflect the social and geopolitical struggles involved in 78 244 As explained in section earlier the chapter refrains from analysing Israel’s borders with Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. the process of nation making. The chapter’s sections explore borders as: –– Practices of sovereignty and exception that affect the territory that they conquer and divide. –– Sites for computerised surveillance and sorting (a refinement of biopolitics). –– Places for disciplining human bodies as they are affected by such measures and as carriers of identities to be managed. Because borders mark the homeland, Walters’s notion of domopolitics captures how the state is managed as a ‘household’. The nurturing of borders takes a central position in this household. As Walters writes: ‘Domopolitics implies a reconfiguring of the relations between citizenship, state, and territory. At its heart is a fateful conjunction of home, land and security. It rationalises a series of security measures in the name of a particular conception of home’ (Walters 2004: 241). This metaphor resonates with the ways in which the Jewish nation has been and is nurtured through the practices of the selected household, where security is about safeguarding the community and its place of belonging, and borders act as a nodal point. Borders represent the ‘external dimension of internal security’ (Bigo 2014). When domopolitics is played out at the border, it serves the process of nation making by providing a platform for bioregulative measures that rests on deeper biopolitical forces (Crampton and Elden 2012; Foucault 2003). The drawing of the nation’s human borders then comes to mark the lines between the internal and external not just in terms of territory but in terms of human fabric. These lines determine how the sovereign’s claims to security and liberty and circulation and containment are negotiated (Walker 2006). As Zionist mobilisation for nationhood displays a combination of bioregulatory desires and colonialist impulses, there is a close correlation between border making and tropes of biopolitics. Israel’s tight yet unfinished/broken borders attest to the unfinished nature of Israel’s ethnocratic nation building; its national vision of ethnic purity is, in reality, reflected in messy and undefined borders. Minimising friction and messiness by homogenising spheres of power (ideally) requires a constant nurturing of Israel’s many borders. In this perspective, the linking of the state’s bioregulation to border practices helps explain how the imagination and construction of borders have worked to serve the higher purpose of making the racial state of Israel. This link also provides the basis for a rationalisation of border security that has resulted in the production of a given product or systems in order to define, uphold, expand, and retract the borders. Thus it is that the settler colonial reality of dual rule in one space – one for the settler population and one for the occupied or marginalised people – is defined and rearticulated at the border. 245 Concomitant to the national defining motifs of border making, the border performs as a security-economy nexus. States need to retain open borders to participate in the flow of the global economy; borders regulate the movement of capital and goods. In Harvey’s spirit it makes sense to analyse how the contradictions arising from the intersection of territorial and capitalist logics produce a border site where these forces come together and are managed and reproduced. The differentiation in flows creates spaces of uneven development. For Harvey, the dynamics of uneven geographic development are shaped by different geographical flows or mixed mobility between categories of people and across time according to policies and regulations (Harvey 2006). At the same time, because states in contested regions in particular need to find a balance between remaining open and ensuring security, border security entails a political economy of insecurity bound up with themes of (im)mobility to ensure and delimit the circulation of people’s and goods (Andreas 2009; Frowd 2014; Sparke 2006). Cresswell defines mobility as corporal practices of relative mobility of different groups and individuals (Cresswell 2006), i.e. social practices of routinised movement and the effect of these processes. As the ability to control mobility means power, within the project of Zionist settler colonialism, the body of the individual itself becomes an identity marker that the borders are supposed to manage through physical limitation or deterrence. Clearly, the logics of territory, mobility, and capital are not interchangeable, but constitute mutually dependent elements in capital accumulation. Rather, their intertwinement is made explicit at the border. Borders, then, are to be considered concentration points where the politics of access and denied access act as a mechanism to make the economic and social stratification work. As part of Israel’s settler colonial rule, this is made manifest by the state’s concrete practise of sanctioning borders. To understand the implications of this, it is necessary to relate the history of the Israeli border experience in more detail. 8.3 Israel-Palestine’s ‘human’ borders Within the context of the Israeli settler colonial project, two parameters of successful border demarcation and security seem to prevail: stability and social calm on the periphery of the nation’s outer boundaries and the nurturing of the ‘new Jew’, i.e. the Israeli citizen, which is facilitated by a process of isolation and separation from the native ‘other’. Essentially, the continual ‘othering’ of Arab, or the Palestinian entails a multidimensional process of material and ideological border construction. 246 It comes as no surprise that protecting the border is central to the work of the security industry. This was confirmed when I interviewed Moty Cohen, the head of the HLS section at the Israel Export Institute. He briskly told me: ‘Securing the homeland begins at the border’ (Interview with Moty Cohen, the Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute, Tel Aviv August 2012). Cohen’s comment echoes the official approach of the Export Institute’s homeland security unit, which identifies border protection as one of the most pressing security challenges. Connecting homeland security to border control has made the relationship between demarcated territory and the protection of the Israeli nation clear. Thus, defining the homeland depends on the basic systems installed to demarcate the boundaries and space but also on the human fabric of the homeland. As in Israel’s broader vision for homeland security, border protection is imperative in order to ‘protect our way of life’, as the Export Institute’s motto puts it (Israel Export Institute 2013). The notion of guarding life worth protecting and ensuring its quality is the pivot around which the security industry revolves. This displays an almost ontological difference between those in need of protection and those who need to be kept out or in, and those wanting to cross and penetrate new territory. This connection reflects the normative basis of the racial state and its techno-national strategies. Israel’s comparative advantages in border control are rooted in Israel’s condition as a ‘de-bordered’ state (Tawil-Souri 2012), i.e. a state with no defined and formalised borders. Indeed, since its Declaration of Independence – both in times of war and low-intensity conflict between wars – Israel has consistently expanded its territory. The OPT and Israel have no formalised border system, but are divided by a complex of external and internal lines and points that criss-cross the landscape79. The construction of borders in a territory with undefined territorial borders requires tools with which to construct the nation – the state’s human fabric, if you will, which has its origins in the very thinking behind the Jewish state. Nevertheless, few countries have been as assertive as Israel in enforcing its de facto borders by restricting movement and denying access. Historically, three politico-historical dynamics or aspects of Israel’s border storyline have been central to the Israeli border experience: 1. 79 Major historical ruptures, particularly the changes brought about in 1948 and 1967, and the effects of the drawing of ‘Oslo map’ in the 1990s. The only time Israel has shrunk its territory was when it withdrew from the Sinai from 1973–1982. 247 2. 3. Israeli strategies and actions to counter and manage the Palestinian ‘demographic threat’80 and its deep association with territorial divides. Everyday military practices at OPT border crossings and checkpoints. These storylines are rooted in the visions and practices of the state’s territorial logics and its strategies of human engineering. Rather than understanding borders as stable, defensive mechanisms, we must Israel’s borders as instruments intended to realise Israel’s changing racialised interventions vis-à-vis the Palestinians, which has been hardened through the erection of exclusionary militarised lines and borders. I characterise this process here as a simultaneous process of (being granted) ‘access’ and (being) ‘denied access’. The inclusion of the ‘select’ members of the nation into the political project of Zionism – what I refer to as ‘access’– displays the first signs of human border demarcation. ‘Denied access’ refers to the mechanism that excludes the (native) ‘other’ from the lines of mobility offered to the members of the nation. Indeed, the question of guarding Israel’s human and territorial borders by using an array of selection procedures has involved both inter-Jewish and Jewish-Arab lines of demarcation. Access Since 1950, the state of Israel has by law opened its borders to world Jewry by encoding the granting of Israeli citizenship to all Jews. The codification of the Right of Return stipulated: 1) ‘Every Jew has the right to come to his country as an oleh’81, and 2) ‘Aliah shall be the oleh’s visa (Knesset, Law of Return 1950). While the law articulates the Zionist vision of Jewish return, the reality of installing Jewish access and Zionism’s human border construction has been messy. The Zionist project has been consistently conflicted by struggles over national membership and how to consolidate those within the newly founded state. As part of the Zionist mobilisation for nationhood, the colonial power and its population have been the objects of ingathering, filtering, and socialisation. Since before the state’s inception, the demarcating of the nation’s borders fluctuated around two 80 81 248 The Palestinian demographic threat to Israel is conceived of on three levels. In the domestic sphere, the Israeli population in early 2003 was close to 6.6 million, 1.25 million of whom were Palestinian Arabs. Given the 3.4 per cent annual growth among Israeli Palestinian citizens, the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics predicts that by 2020, Israel’s population will grow by 21–24 per cent, notwithstanding massive immigration from the former USSR and Russia (Shafir 2005). The political positions on the demographic threat can very roughly be seen as separated into two camps. One camp focuses on the consequence of Jewish majority being undermined because of the birthrate of Palestinians with Israeli citizenship, while the other camp is more concerned with the overall demographic projections of Palestinian-Arab majority (when the territory of Israel-Palestine is considered as one) as a fundamental threat to the Jewish state. Aliyah means immigration of Jews, and oleh (plural olim) means a Jew immigrating to Israel. vectors: in the terrain of scientific debates over who is a Jew (Bloom 2008; Denes 2011a) and by extension around the practices established to produce a priori categories of citizenship as part of realising the ideological and geo-political goals of Zionist settlement (Abu El-Haj; 2012; Weiss 2004). This has been informed by the production of a difference between the New Hebrew and the diaspora Jew, a debate that is still present in discussions of Zionism and post-Zionism (Campos 2007; Shohat 2006). As a state structure founded on a strategy of gathering in and managing ‘exiled’ global Jewry, access to Israel-Palestine from the diaspora has come to play a central role in the creation of the Zionist state formation as a melting pot for Jews with different backgrounds. One of the Zionist movement’s first border ‘tasks’ was to socially engineer the human borders of Zionism (Weiss 2004; Bloom 2008; Denes 2011) by determining the rules and practices of access to the new territory. In fact, in the pre-state days and at the time of state formation, the immigrant body itself became a site for negotiating and demarcating borders (Seidelman, Troen, and Shvarts 2010). As Weiss notes in her account of the bodily aspects of Zionist mobilisation: ‘Israeli society (like the pre-state community before it) has always moulded and regulated bodies as part of the ongoing reconstruction of its collective identity’ (Weiss 2004). For example, between 1948 and 1951, waves of mass migration hit the newly established state of Israel. These flows prompted discussion among Zionist elites about whether the newly arrived olims should enjoy unrestricted entrance or be subjugated to a selection process based on medical criteria (Davidovitch, Shvarts, and Seidelman 2007). Inflows of settlers were the subject of managerial discourses about how to forge a prosperous Jewish nation82. For example, during this time more than half of the 700,000 Jewish immigrants who passed through Sha’ar Ha’aliyah83 (an immigration processing camp near Haifa) were subjected to medical examinations (Davidovitch 2004). Based on social and medical classifications, medical screening of immigrants was required before they were allowed to leave the camp84. While access regulation in the camps is only one example, this construction of (human) borders was based on Zionism’s biopolitics of differentiated 82 83 84 The Law of Return alludes to the condition that the Jew is not likely to endanger public health and is not engaged in activity directed against the Jewish people (Knesset 1950). This term means ‘gateway to immigration’. Zionist archives of card catalogues and personal files of accepted immigrants and candidates for immigration from 1920–1964 contain more than 650,000 cards of those who applied for entry. A considerable number of these applicants were rejected for more than medical grounds. In the Zionist project, the nation had be gathered and constructed into its territorial base in a short period of time through this vigilant ingathering. These practices helped give birth to the Jewish nation’s borders 249 engineering of a people in conquered and divided territory. These practices are reflected somewhat in Foucault’s evaluation of population engineering, which suggests that: A population is constantly accessible to agents and techniques of transformation, on condition that these agents and techniques are at once enlightened, reflected analytical and calculating (Foucault 2009: 71). Israel’s regulations of access to the desired territory based on visions of racialised state building and ontological homeland security rationales have operated on several levels. This has been limited for the most part to Arab-Jewish dichotomies, but has also been deeply influenced by inter-Jewish struggles and inter-ethnic strife about who is an Israeli and who is a Jew, which has been a field of political contention when deciding kinship borders of the Zionist projects. Shenhav (2009) theorises that Zionism’s conceptual rupture between nationalism and ethnicity has caused it to imagine and erect its borders through the simultaneous creation and negation of its ethnic groups. This even involved asking Mizrachim Jews to cancel their ‘ethnic otherness’ in order to be mobilised for the national project, and detach themselves from everything ‘Arab’ (Campos 2007; Shenhav 2009). The Zionist’s and subsequent Israeli state’s regulation of its nationalised human border was fraught by ambivalence about the ideological and demographic fixation on Jewish kinship boundaries. This has haunted Israeli debates on citizenship and Jewish national identity, aided by state-led efforts to assimilate its Jewish populations into the container of the state. To summarise: Israel’s/Zionism’s borders have remained fluid because they depend on the political envisioning of an ethnic, national community. In a settler colonial context, the denial of movement and access is a core vector of governance. Denied access The notion of ‘denied access’ involves the exclusion, control, and containment of Palestinians from territory and the privileges enjoyed by Israeli citizens. These mechanisms are developed and deployed to control, inhibit, and regulate (Palestinian) movement inside the OPT and between the OPT and Israel proper. Historically, in Israel-Palestine, and today in the OPT, frontiers have been and are erected in a variety of ways so as to create dividing mechanisms based on ethnic fault lines. Today, this skeleton of border systems has culminated in the installation of the aforementioned smart techniques deployed to manage populations and control territories. 250 In 1923, the Zionist revisionist Jabotinsky wrote in his much-quoted ‘Iron Wall’: Zionist colonization must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native population. Which means that it can proceed and develop only under the protection of a power that is independent of the native population – behind an iron wall, which the native population cannot breach (Jabotinsky 1923). Jabotinsky’s ‘Iron Wall’ vision has often been invoked to illustrate the rationale by which Israel has sought to separate Palestinians/Arabs from its Jewish population. During the time between the first Zionist settlement and the watershed year of 1967, the state’s efforts were focused on creating space for Jews in Mandatory Palestine and on shaping and defining the economic and social contours of the Jewish nation at the borders. When the time came in 1949 to draw an international border between the nascent Israeli state and the Arab states around it, the border was constructed not only as a line that separates physical communities, but also as a fetishised entity and a demarcation of cultural differences between Israel and Palestine/the Arab world. Borders were constructed in order for the nation to define and defend itself against the ‘Arab other’, who was/is perceived as a malicious, faceless mass of people conspiring against Israel (Rabinowitz 2003). In 1955, then Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan wrote in an article in Foreign Affairs that the term ‘frontier security’ had ‘little meaning in the context of Israeli geography’: Scarcely anywhere in Israel can a man live or work beyond the easy range of enemy fire. Indeed except in the Negev, no settlement is at a distance of more than 20 miles from an Arab frontier (Dayan 1955). While Dayan was focused on proximity as a cursor of a potential threat, he also warned that simple territorial border protection was not enough to protect the young Jewish nation. Following this fear or paranoia about its proximity to its enemies, Israel’s obsession with border insecurity only grew after 1967; this unwillingness to accept any division of land has been a salient feature of Israel’s border practice. After 1967, the borders were hardened and militarised. Only twelve years later, in the wake of Israel’s conquering of the West Bank, Gaza, Sinai, and the Golan Heights during the Six-Day War, Israel’s Foreign Minister Abba Eban defied the status quo ante by referring to the new 1967 borders as ‘Auschwitz Borders’: I have openly said that the map will never again be the same as on June 4, 1967. For us, this is a matter of security and of principles. The June map is for us equivalent to insecurity and danger. I do not exaggerate when I say 251 that it has for us something of a memory of Auschwitz. We shudder when we think of what would have awaited us in the circumstances of June 1967 if we had been defeated; with Syrians on the mountain and we in the valley, with the Jordanian army in sight of the sea, with the Egyptians who hold our throat in their hands in Gaza. This is a situation, which will never be repeated in history (Eban [1969] quoted in Dimant 2014). The late 1960s signalled the imposition of Israeli military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, but did little to clarify the borders of the Israeli state. Since then, Israel’s borders have been ripped up and constructed into a network of structures and lines to sustain the occupation while taking more land (Lein and Weizman 2002; Gordon 2008). This contradiction between non-division and de facto separation has been a key feature of Israel’s security strategy and narrative. A crucial shift took place after the Six-day War in 1967. Israel went from fighting conventional wars in 1948, 1956, and 1967 to controlling and managing the Palestinian population under occupation. Israel’s border control has now been militarised and is focused on keeping the OPT and its people separate from Israel proper for the purpose of minimising friction. The essential difference between the 1967 occupation and previous and subsequent occupations is the large civilian population that came under Israeli control without being considered citizens of the state. This difference has turned the control and repression of a civilian population into the central activity of the Israeli military. The Israeli military, police, and the intelligence community have been tasked with establishing a regime of classification to differentiate between different kinds of Israeli citizens and different kinds of Palestinian subjects. To establish this regime, the main strategy employed by the Israeli army has been the control of space (Halper 2009: 47–56, 2000). In other words, Israel’s post-1967 strategy of military self-sufficiency begun in the 1960s became one of a new geography of control. In order to better understand the current political geography that makes the OPT open to control, the political and geographical changes brought about by the Oslo Accords is a fitting place to start. Accordingly, the post-1967 development of new human categories to use in border control that were based on the new geopolitical reality were advanced, diffused, and refined by the policies of the Oslo Accords. 252 8.4 The borders of the Oslo Accords Israel now operates with a number of types of international borders: seaports, airports, and territorial land crossings. The country’s territorial land borders include its northern border crossings with Syria and Lebanon (intended for use only by military and UN staff), the three Jordan River crossings on its eastern flank (Sheikh Hussein for Israelis and foreigners, Allenby Bridge for internationals, Israelis and Palestinians, the Rabin crossing for Israelis only), the Taba crossing for foreigners and Israelis, and the Nitzana Border crossing with Egypt intended for goods and diplomats. Currently, only two of Israel’s territorial border crossings (Egypt and Jordan) are internationally recognised. Israeli airport authorities operate three ‘full service’ international airports: Ben-Gurion (Tel Aviv), Haifa and Eilat; Nevatim Airport is used only for international military flights. Israel has three seaports with international access in Ashdod, Hadera, and Haifa. Perhaps the most debated border is the post-1967 ‘Green Line’, which is a territorial border in principle, but is not enforced as such legally (even though it is recognized as such by the international community) and symbolically. This symbolic line is the official point of reference for the international community; in principle, it ‘prepares’ the geopolitical basis for the (eventual) division of the land into two states (according to UN resolutions and international political consensus). In practice, however, the post-1967 Green Line has never held the status of an international border and remains in place simply as a ceasefire line between Israel proper and the West Bank and indicates the position of military forces at the conclusion of the war in 1948. The above list constitutes Israel’s official crossings, checkpoints, terminals, walls, and fences, along with sophisticated data registers and ID and biometrical systems now installed at the borders. This system ensures that individuals become carriers of information through which the sovereign controls and sanctions access. Instead of conventional border control activity that includes clearly demarcated lines and practices of ID checks, movement and exit from the OPT is governed by a matrix of control systems enabled by a much more complex system of border technologies and infrastructure. This complex mix of systems is linked to the broader anatomy of Israel’s occupation that is built on a technology that includes layers of separation mechanisms geared to manage individuals through human in- 253 teraction with technological objects. This network formation has occurred through the dialectic of political decisions and technological possibilities. The no-contact rule and managing the threat of violence The political geography brought about by the Oslo Accords (1993 and 1995) helped spur an advanced matrix of border control in the OPT. The Oslo borders reconfigured and to some extent digitalised the binary between insurgency and counterinsurgency, occupier and occupied. Covering all of the OPT, checkpoints, settler roads, zoning and ID systems as they stand today are both relics and functions of the 1992–1993 US-backed interim agreement between the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) and Israel. In the official military and political discourse, the Oslo rules regarding borders installed by both the IDF and the quasi-autonomous Palestinian National Authority were proposed as a scheme to improve public security (for Israelis) through means of separation and isolation from the Palestinians. While one effect of these ‘Oslo borders’ was an opening of Israel’s external borders to international trade and increased flows of exports, they also created conditions that enabled the compartmentalisation of Palestinians into enclaves to be guarded as if they were surrounded by conventional borders. In fact, the Oslo Accords drew no actual borders but sanctioned zones and institutionalised rules of passage. Gordon has argued that Oslo represented for Israel a shift away from administering the lives of the Palestinians to a strategy of separation through division and outsourcing of security tasks to private companies while still exploiting the resources of the OPT (Gordon 2008; Klein 2010). Israel was effectively left with the power to check all Palestinian passage and engage with the population on a case-by-case basis through the access-denied system. In other words, Israel controlled the permit determining the individual’s legal identity. This practice reflected a desire to control the movement of each individual as part of a broader strategy of allotting fractured groups, clans and families of Palestinians to different territories. By 1991, Israel had cancelled the general exit permit that had allowed Palestinians to move freely between Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem. In 1993, it began to demand that individuals obtain specific permits in order to leave Gaza and the West Bank (Bashi 2013: 251). At the same time, settlers’ movement in the OPT was systematically facilitated and improved, which eased their movement between the dotted Palestinian ‘islands’ in the sea of Israeli terrain control and gated communities (Handel 2009). Taking into account the demographic 254 Map of the West Bank after the Oslo Accords and the route of the ‘Separation Barrier’ (UNOCHA 2014) 255 distribution of Jewish Israelis (settlers in the OPT) and Palestinian life in Israel proper, it becomes clear that the ideal of ethnic separation is impossible to realise. Weizman describes the post-Oslo OPT terrain in the following way: The dynamic morphology of the frontier resembles an incessant sea dotted with multiplying archipelagos of externally alienated and internally homogenous ethno-national enclaves – under a blanket of aerial Israeli surveillance (Weizman 2007: 7). Clearly, Oslo’s physical manifestation of restrictions on movement and separation has not led to the installation of a Westphalian border system. Rather, Oslo brought about a decentralisation and proliferation of contact points between occupier and occupied (and between Palestinians across hundreds of barriers), and paved the way for Israel to minimise and concentrate contact to border lines between the side of the lines installed Gordon’s argument that Israel is interested in resources but not the people is confirmed in the security architecture installed by Oslo has also allowed Israel to test technological infrastructure such as walls, fences, checkpoints, and identity registration systems. However to supplement Gordon’s analysis it also holds that Oslo has allowed Israel to develop and test technologised and deeply anthropological methods of ID checks at crossings through which, as the next section demonstrates, Israel can monitor and control the population without boots on the ground. 8.5 Conclusion In a settler colonial context, demographic considerations and policies of demographic change are closely tied to the ideas and practices of Israeli border making. The intellectual and military/strategic discourses on borders as tools to separate and shield Israeli Jews from the native ‘other’ are important components of Israel’s border practices. The extreme separatism installed in the OPT has been realised as part of a broader calculative politics of demographic strategising, which has been key to the shaping of the Jewish presence and the extending of Jewish land in Palestine during the last century. (See, for example, the ideas of Israeli demo grapher Soffer 1989). Military strategising rests on a mix of narrow security concerns, larger aspirations of expansion, and the broader aim of controlling demographic balance. Taken together, these forces work as a form of intervention to realise its bioregulatory aims. While the process of ingathering of new Jewish citizens of Israel has involved a struggle to define or demarcate the boundaries of the Jewish nation, it has 256 also been formed by and shaped the notion of the negated ‘other’ – the P alestinian. Border systems that came into place as a result of the political geography determined by Oslo have brought about (once again) a reality where Palestinians are bordered and governed objects. Oslo represents the recipe of how to construct and manage multifaceted borders through the strategy of ghettoisation and separation. The second portion of the border analysis examine how an array of technologies and systems of border control and security have been developed and deployed through the technologies of separation, surveillance, and transit systems. 257 258 CHAPTER NINE 9.0 BORDER SECURITY PART II: SEPARATION, SURVEILLANCE, AND TRANSIT 9.1 Introduction: Walls, barriers, and fences Perhaps one of the most vivid examples of Israel’s border security expertise is the erection of (border) architectures of separation: walls, barriers, and fences. The life and the territory of the OPT have come to be governed through a network of both crude and ‘intelligent’ barriers and fences. This chapter examines how these border control mechanisms reflect a range of distinct logics of broader control embedded in Zionism’s techno-nationalist efforts of population engineering. It also explores the role of companies in developing and exporting a variety of Israel’s logics of border security and analyses the nature and effects of the practices emanating from these logics. The chapter begins with a critical inquiry into the border conditions and security companies’ involvement in guarding the Gaza Strip. 9.2 Gaza’s frictionless borders: transfer and ruling from afar The walling off of the Gaza Strip is the most extreme example of Israel’s border security. Gaza’s virtual, naval, territorial, and aerial borders are controlled by Israel, and produce a multi-dimensional geography of separation and repression of the 1.7 million people residing in the tiny strip of land. Israel’s strategy of control of Gaza depends on tightly sealed borders, and in many ways represents a hyper version of Israeli border management, i.e. the strategy of abandoned control i.e tight control but without physical presence to minimise friction between occupied and occupier. The political geography of Gaza’s hermetically closed borders reflects an experiment of maximum securitisation of an entire urban space; or to use Weizman’s description of the West Bank, ‘a laboratory of the extreme’ (Weizman 2004b: 83). The logics guiding the control regime of the Gaza Strip can be seen as the complex effect of the Zionist remaking of Palestine. Today, this has materialised as a sort of ‘end point’ of people transfer, where transfer of people has been replaced by ghettoisation and enclavement85. 85 According to Masalha’s extensive work on the concept of transfer in Zionist thinking and practice, the organised removal of the indigenous population has been an ongoing practice that links the ideology and concrete policies of territorial conquest (Masalha 1992b, 2000). 259 In its current form, the separationist enclosure of the Gaza Strip is the culmination of what Shafir in his history of Zionist practice has termed ‘the maximalist aim of Jewish territorial supremacy in Palestine’ (Shafir 1996: xiii). As is the case of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Gaza came under Israeli occupation in 1967 and has remained so ever since. (From 1948–1967, it was under Egyptian rule). Before and after Israel became a state in 1948, Gaza has been a refuge for displaced Palestinians, in particular those from the fertile coastland of ‘historic Palestine’ (Allen 2012; Roy 1991, 2007). By far the largest part of the population is made up of refugees living often within an hour’s drive from their place of origin inside Israel. While Israel’s colonial frontiers are constantly shifting in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the process of active transfer of Palestinians and the annexation of their land is still in motion, the borders of Gaza seem fixed. Israel’s acclaimed abandoning of the Gaza Strip in the 1990s and the 2005 unilateral disengagement from settlements in Gaza can be seen as part of a strategy of ensuring a reduced responsibility for administering the Palestinian population in the Strip (Azoulay and Ophir 2013). However, Israel has still maintained its iron fist of control of the territory, which is often referred to in populist discourses as ‘Hamastan’ (referring to the ruling Islamist group Hamas) or more plainly ‘enemy territory’ or ‘Islamist entity’. Today, the confined people are held behind lethal fences and walls with no means of escape. (The chapter’s section on separation architecture below deals with the separation wall in Gaza in more depth.) The goal of separation has been reached in Gaza. The Strip is, Li argues, is (re)produced into an ‘animal pen’ or ‘internment camp’ based on a strategy that he calls ‘controlled abandonment’ (Li 2008). As a consequence, the controlled abandonment regime determines that contact between Israelis and Gazans is reduced to the realm of security realised in large part by high-tech/digitalised systems. Under the pretext of disengagement86, according to the official Israeli strategy, these systems ensure minimum friction 86 260 In reference to the unilateral decision to pull settlers out of the Gaza Strip in 2005, the Disengagement Plan stated: ‘The relocation from the Gaza Strip…will reduce friction with the Palestinian population’, ‘The process of disengagement will serve to dispel claims regarding Israel’s responsibility for the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip’, and ‘Israel will guard and monitor the external land perimeter of the Gaza Strip, will continue to maintain exclusive authority in Gaza air space, and will continue to exercise security activity in the sea off the coast of the Gaza Strip’ (The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2004). between the soldier and the Palestinian87. As a consequence of this controlled abandonment strategy, Israeli control of Gaza includes multifaceted modes of containment entailing zoning systems, restricted access, and buffer zones88, and statistical and logistical control and domination that serve the Israeli geopolitical goal of frictionless separation. As Tawil-Souri argues, the Gaza Strip is ‘a kaleidoscope of bordering mechanisms and containment devices, in which multiple points and overlapping zones of control are juxtaposed, some diffused, some centralised, some contradictory’ (Tawil‐Souri 2011b: 12)89. As a former IDF soldier explained during an interview, this strategy has altered the way the IDF operates: Since Cast Lead, there have hardly been any incursions. The military is only going into the strip in the areas close to the fence. Very rarely units go inside. If they do, it usually means war. In some ways the control over the military equipment around the strip is becoming automatized. If you have women soldiers standing in offices, they control with remote controlled machine guns, and then they have ability and the responsibility to prevent any kind of infiltration into the country (Interview with former IDF solder, Tel Aviv, 26 June 2013). Israel’s military rule over Gaza has been marked by rare but large-scale coordinated incursions and a concentration of confrontations around the border zones As Graham notes, the increasingly militarised borders of Gaza are ‘shoot to kill zones’ (Graham 2011: 243). A number of technological security innovations have grown out of these attempts to realise the ideal of absolute separation. 87 88 89 The Gaza rule has even led Israeli officials to claim that Gaza is not occupied but sui generis administered territory. However, Hajjar argues that this claim is ‘sui generis nonsense’: rather than providing self-determination for the Palestinians, the current set-up provides Israel with a self-instituted ‘license to kill’ in defiance of international law (Hajjar 2012). The buffer zones absorb 14 per cent of Gaza’s land and almost 50 per cent of all arable land (Roy 2012). As a result of these conditions, even the cracks (i.e. pockets of resistance such as infrastructure-like tunnels and holes) have become modes of governing. Gaza’s tunnels are key transportation lines for goods from the outside. The mix arms and goods smuggling makes the economy a military target. 261 Frictionless patrolling: the robot servant Israel’s experience of counterinsurgency and separation in Gaza in particular has led to debates on the ‘Israelisation’ of urban counterinsurgencies on a global scale (Graham 2010b). The abandoned control regime has morphed into a sort of conceptual formula of how to conduct frictionless border control such as unmanned border patrolling, which has become a successful export commodity. When Silicon Valley high-tech giant Google recently launched its new driver less car, the news went around the world. It was presented as a revolutionary leap into the future, and for many, a dream come true. Meanwhile, the IDF has since 2008 started to test and deploy unmanned jeeps known as the Guardium and produced by the company G-Nius to guard the borders surrounding Gaza Strip. Today, these vehicles, controlled with a joystick and mouse from a nearby control room, roam around the Strip along the intelligence smart fence. While all of G-Nius’s models are made for ‘autonomous mission execution’, the Guardium MKIII carries a remote-controlled lethal weapons system with a rapid sensor-toshooter-loop operating around the clock. These circulating robots match the aerial surveillance and potentially lethal drones patrolling the enclave’s airspace leaving the people in Gaza under tight, potentially deadly surveillance. The technology enabling these innovations grew out of the desire to retain tight control over the Gaza Strip with as few soldiers on the ground as possible in order to prevent loss of soldiers’ lives and to avoid friction. The Guardium system was developed in a joint venture by two of Israeli security giants, the privately owned Elbit and state-owned IAI. Under the slogan ‘driven by innovation’, the G-Nius venture is now planning to release a new generation of the jeep. This includes ‘The Loyal Partner’, an unmanned ground vehicle to be used to inspect the interior of houses from within and to transport ammunition and measure of protection to soldiers in combat90. Such systems of control in Gaza signify both the historical legacies of colonial control in Palestine, the present state of siege, the strategy of ruling Gaza from afar, and possibly a window into future trends of war, policing, and border control. The Guardium is among many innovations emblematic of the link between Israel’s logic of rule and technological innovation. 90 262 Border patrolling robots have also been deployed along the borders of Lebanon and Egypt, but at the time of this writing, it was unconfirmed whether the Guardium is now operating there. Guardium UAV in the southern part of the Gaza-Israel Border. Photo: Zev Marmorstein: IDF Spokesperson Unit. Guardium UAV in the southern part of the Gaza-Israel Border. Photo: Zev Marmorstein: IDF Spokesperson Unit. 263 During my aforementioned visit to the Institute of Homeland Security Research at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Dan Blumberg said that the centre supports American and Israeli manufacturers in developing UAV technology for driverless vehicles. A major starting point for the centre’s research is to make security platforms autonomous: We need to find a way to give the robot human skills, like when it picks up a tomato, we need to teach it not to crush it. The same goes for intelligent combat’ (Interview with Dan Blumberg, Ben-Gurion University, the Negev, 17 August 2012). Blumberg explained that the idea is to create systems of control to be at the forefront in military capacity and technological innovation. He emphasised that it is important for his research centre as well as for the MoD to follow ‘the laws of the robot’, essentially preventing robots from taking charge away from humans, as in the case of the Guardium. While borders are digitalised, human judgement is still essential to connect event detection to a specific course of action. In a broadly disseminated defence publication, Cen Vidal, First Sgt. and chief mechanic of Guardium, explained why the vehicle is so powerful: ‘To the Palestinians it’s largely an unknown quantity, they have no idea what it’s capable of ’ (Army Recognition 2012). The autonomous systems are also a key component in the psychological warfare that takes place along Gaza’s border in times of war that generates spectacular violence. The borders of Gaza act not just as impenetrable barriers but also as potentially lethal constructions. Other UAVs have been deployed along the border buffers, and are closely integrated into the broader control and command system. A salesperson from Rafael, the IDF’s prime security manufacturer branch, told me at a security fair: The robot is just the waiter, a collector of information and an executer of our commanders’ decisions (Interview with anonymous Rafael representative, ISDEF, Tel Aviv, June 2013). Along with a range of other military and border control agencies, the US Border Control Agency has shown interest in embarking on the next generation of Guardiums to learn from Israel’s Gaza experience. The case of Gaza’s border control is a peek into the future of digitalised border 264 control. The Guardium case illustrates the attempt to project the idea of Israel’s borders as being not just ‘smart’, but impenetrable91. To link the division of space to the ideological tenets of separation in the broader Zionist national project, it is fruitful to examine Israel’s ‘hafrada’ architectures (Hebrew for separation or separateness) that are deeply rooted in the Zionist schemes of territorial control. 9.3 Borders of separation: Hafrada logics At the time of the Arab revolts in 1936–1939, the British had already experimented with watchtowers and walls to contain dissent and violent revolts. In the 1970s, the Israeli state began to construct settlements inside Gaza that included the building of walls with the familiar turnstile gates and barbwire around Gaza’s refugee camps (This would be replicated later in other parts of the OPT) (KeithRoach 1994 in Khalili 2013). In 1994, as per the Interim Agreement between Israel and the Palestinian National Authority under the Oslo Accords, Israel built what it called a ‘security fence’ around Gaza. Officially, the fence was not intended to constitute the border, as Palestinian movement between the West Bank and Gaza was a condition of the agreement. However, although the fence was meant as a temporary measure attached to the open-ended nature of the agreement, it has become a permanent instrument of complete siege, which has effectively been imposed on the Strip since 200792. After the 2005 unilateral Disengagement Plan, when the Israeli government withdrew its settlers from Gaza and ended its permanent military presence inside the Strip, the security zone system is now based on a core distinction between inside and outside Gaza that revolves around the walled security system. 91 92 Another pivotal innovation to sustain the status quo while reducing Israeli casualties is Rafael’s ‘Iron Dome’. In collaboration with the US and the IDF, this system was developed in the aftermath of the 2006 Second Lebanon War with Hezbollah. The system was developed to intercept and destroy rockets and curb military attacks without military intervention. The ‘Iron Dome’ and the related ‘David’s Sling’ can be deployed as shields from cross-border attacks in other zones. South Korea has expressed an interest in deploying the system along its border with North Korea. According to the official agreement to which the PLO has consented and with a multilateral dimension through the formalisation of both Jordan and Egypt’s responsibilities in enforcing this (as well as the EU and US) corresponded to a zoning and internal structuring of the Gaza Strip according to lines ascribed with different colour codes: blue lines for Israeli areas (as around settlements and their road network), green (broken and unbroken) to demarcate the provisional borders and a shaded pink to demark the border with Egypt. Certain areas were carved yellow as special Israeli security areas. 265 Ten years after the Disengagement Plan, the Israeli government decided to construct what is perhaps the crudest manifestation of the prohibition of movement and the separation of land in Palestine: the West Bank wall, which is officially called the ‘Separation Barrier’93 by the UN and other international agencies. The structure consists of an eight metre-high concrete barrier in some stretches and three meter-high in others, an electrified fence with additional barriers on either side constructed of razor wire, trenches, and 30 to 100 metre-wide military roads that are connected to multiple surveillance systems. The 723 kilometer-long structure interval separation system is built with disruptions for identity check and watchtowers from which the surrounding areas can be controlled and managed. In Hebrew, the structure is termed ‘Mikhsol ha-hafrada’, which refers to its most obvious effect – separation – and carries with it a number of measures, including state strategies used to prevent penetration, annex land, and preserve a solid Jewish majority inside Israel. The hafrada structure is based on a two-pronged logic: it entails both the act of separation or isolation of one ethnic group from another and the establishment of an institutionalised regime of domination94. The Separation Barrier and its control devices are not only instruments of geopolitical division, but also of observation and control. The Barrier is, as Weizmann says, a sensitive linear sensor directed at Palestinian towns and cities, with a political architecture shaped by various forces in Israel (Weizman 2007: 162–165). Needless to say, the hafrada logic has devastating effects on the lives of the Palestinian population and the landscape95. The Barrier affects each individual in different ways. As Azoulay and Ophir put it: 93 94 95 266 The construction of the West Bank wall was announced by Israel’s Ministry of Defense in 2002; its construction began in 2004. The estimated price of the project has mounted to a staggering 3 billion USD, not including the annual maintenance cost of approximately 260 million USD. The project has been a lucrative deal for the countries involved. The involvement of the private security companies followed the decision to cut the route of the planned wall/fence into smaller subdivisions and put them out for tender separately to one of 22 private contractors selected by the MoD. Whereas the costs are covered by the public budget, the security industry and multinational companies are acquiring larger shares of the benefits (Hever, 2010; Cronin, 2010). In the case of the Separation Barrier, the project was devised and sequenced under The Department of Regional and Strategic Planning of the IDF’s Central Command, and staffed by engineers with expertise in security design (Weizman 2007). Currently Israeli companies, in collaboration with the MoD, are replicating the hafrada architecture along the country’s border with Egypt and at the northern border with Lebanon. Thus, while the walled systems produce geopolitical divisions as calculative fields, for the industry, the projects have also helped build a network and an experience that expands beyond the space of the OPT. It is estimated that the Barrier affects the livelihood of 250,000 Palestinians (UN OCHA 2010). The rising concrete, in view everywhere, means that total separation is imminent, that the very existence of bare life is at stake, that every passage is temporary, and that everything gained at the checkpoint is ephemeral and has to be regained through the another tortuous round of negotiations (Azoulay and Ophir 2005). This practice of walling off territory has been woven steadily into demographic and geopolitical strategies of division of the post-Oslo political geography. In the West Bank, soldiers operate on both sides of the Barrier, while in Gaza the walled system is more complete and based on a more consistent strategy of ruling from afar through robotically managed borders96. Both structures combine the long-term strategy of intelligence gathering based on human intelligence (HUMINT) and signal intelligence (SIGINT), which is why the construction is both a separation mechanism and a counter-insurgency effort. Accordingly, Jabotinsky’s aforementioned plea for an ‘Iron Wall’ is echoed in the Israeli security industry’s rationale for the Separation Barrier. Some of the companies that have been granted tenders for the Separation Barrier by the Ministry of Defense were already involved in Gaza in the 1990s. In this way, the Gaza and West Bank systems are variants of the same ideological and geopolitical tropes of hafrada architecture, but with different technological attributes. 96 For some of the most instructive accounts of the nature of Israel’s rule in Gaza, see Bhungalia (2010); Li (2006, 2008); and Tawil-Souri (2011b). 267 Hafrada as an operational concept The Israeli MoD has deemed the West Bank Separation Barrier ‘an operational concept…conceived by the Israeli Defense Establishment in order to reduce the number of attacks on Israel’ (Israeli Ministry of Defense 2007). The Barrier demonstrates how the OPT is approached as a biopolitical field or a field of calculation (of people and space) demarcated and managed by internal lines and borders. The effects of the Separation Barrier are often framed to demonstrate the success of the hafrada algorithm; the calculation of how to optimise separation is closely linked to how the success of the project can be measured by a reduction in terrorist attacks and undesired infiltration. As Weizman demonstrates, the algorithm from which the route is designed, ‘seeks to compare, measure and evaluate different bad consequences’ (Weizman 2007: 163). Writ large, industry actors praise the project as a major R&D effort, where ‘intervention through innovation’ thinking led to measurable success. It has come to exemplify the conversion of a lab prototype to a real world solution and an extreme prototype version of border/ separation architecture. West Bank “Separation Barrier”, Ramallah/Qalandia, 2012. Photo: Peter Hove Olesen 268 Among security practitioners I have interviewed, the political motive to retain demographic control is framed less blatantly: the architecture is seen to serve narrower security purposes. The building of separation structures is typically articulated more as a necessary unilateral move to curb terrorism and infiltration. During my fieldwork, I met representatives of a number of companies that have contributed to the building of the Separation Barrier. These actors believe that while their company’s contribution to the Barrier might not be their most sophisticated technological performance, it was the best product placement one could ask for. Israel’s controversial security infrastructure has become a business opportunity for them; their companies use their contributions to the Barrier to give the hafrada architecture a universal ‘flair’ that makes them flexible and marketable to other countries. In 2002, Israeli security giant Magal won 80 per cent of the bids issued for the installation of the intrusion detection systems along the seam line of the Separation Barrier in the West Bank. At an international security fair, one of the company’s representatives explained to me how Magal had developed its high-tech fortification contribution to the Barrier, which includes intelligent sensor and surveillance systems to prevent infiltration and detect irregularities around the structure: No one can escape our system. We will detect them all and catch them. They know that, so we have less business to take care of, but we still need to be there with soldiers and guards. Just in case and also, it looks better (Conversation with Magal marketing representative, HLS Israel 2012, Tel Aviv, November 2012). The Magal representative, who requested anonymity, said that based on its experiences working with the IDF and the MoD, the company is seeking to market its capacities to foreign border control markets. The representative was proud that Magal’s perimeter security devices have become a steady feature of Israel’s image of maximum security: the Separation Barrier. The hafrada logic has become part of the security industry’s portfolios. How ever, clearly, the concept of hafrada architecture is developed both as a unique system fitted to the extraordinary context of the OPT, and also as a concept from which to extract experiences for replication elsewhere. There is no doubt that the Separation Barrier has become known worldwide as a cornerstone of Israel’ reputation as a successful security nation; Israeli security actors are acutely aware of the rising demand for advanced hafrada technology. While remaining central to Israel’s regime of control in the OPT and beyond, the practices of erecting 269 walls and defensive and offensive fences have become a fertile export niche. In fact, Khalili argues, the Separation Barrier has become a generic urban feature of modern control of space that normalises kinetic and population-centric counterinsurgency (Khalili 2013). The key question centres not only on whether a system is installed along national-territorial borders, but also on the logics of sanctioning access/denied access. Across the scale in the industry, the prevailing message is that walls and fences serve the function as an outpost against barbarism in its most abstract, yet real sense, not just as a shield from violent Palestinians, but as symbol and measure of safeguarding in the abstract global War on Terror. As Israel’s Ministry of Economy wrote in their promotion of Israeli security: ‘In defense against terrorism or criminal activity the first line of protection remains good fencing’ (Israeli Ministry of Economy, n.d.). In this way, the hafrada rationale has broad relevance elsewhere, and has come represent a module or technical device of necessary intervention that can be customised to fit other calculative fields. Imperfect hafrada and indigenous resistance The reality of hafrada remains messy. Despite calls for total separation, clearly the Separation Barrier is not only a ready-to-go object, but an organic concept driven by events at its edge and developments elsewhere that affect border practice (such as attacks inside Israel, a religious holiday, or simply bad weather). Daily encounters with Palestinians remain a burden and a blessing. They are a burden because they require resources and manpower, and a blessing because they provide grounds for testing new methods and technology. Despite the hardship imposed on them, the Palestinians’ mere insistence on organising life around the structure justifies the need for constant regulation. Attempts to breach the barrier, i.e. finding ways of going around it or non-violent public protests in villages are severely affected by the Barrier. They both reinforce the strength of the arguments supporting the project, and create new forms of friction between occupier and occupied that activate the broader spectrum of security systems. Rather than being seen as a manifestation of opposition, the continued Palestinian presence, reactions and (sometimes) actual resistance to the project come to be a part of the material theatre of hafrada. An action of the ‘other’ – even something as simple as pushing for alternative traffic routes around the structure – reaffirms the necessity of the structure among defence actors and Israeli citizens. The products of the security industry are tools to fight the resisting natives – the ‘indigenous resistance’. In fact, resistance on the ground is an important 270 part of the hafrada production cycle. Once an order for a given security solution has been placed by the IDF in response to an impending threat and after initial deployment of the product in the field, the companies’ technical departments are often contacted with requests for product refinement. At times, the IDF is given a prototype to test in the field. What is crucial here is that the trials of security technologies such as barriers in the field play back into the refinement and adjustment of techniques and technology. Thus, for the security company, any engagement in constructing hafrada installations is about generating new ideas, fine-tuning, and refinement of its product line. The structural nature of state violence implicates the human fabric of Palestine as part of the security innovation and production cycle. In export situations, the targeted population’s responses to a given security product are of great interest to buyers, who are then able to anticipate the responses from targeted populations in other battlespaces. Consequently, the border becomes an experimental site on which the indigenous resistance of the Palestinians is integrated – albeit not voluntarily – into the refinement process. In a settler colonial context, the resistance to differentiation is not just a negative side effect, but also a source of innovation. 9.4 Borders and surveillance Surveillance systems along Israel’s borders have created a permanent condition of panopticonism informed by Israel’s politics of differentiation. This condition rests on Israel’s practices of controlling inflows of immigration, and pushing for the migration of others that together constitute the steady nurturing of the Jewish settler community. Border control entails a dimension of increasingly advanced surveillance. Surveillance can be defined as the ‘focused, systematic and routine attention to personal details for purpose of influence, management, protection or direction’ (Lyon 2007: 14). Marx’s seminal account refers to this form of segmentation as ‘categorical suspicion’, while Gandy has referred to a similar idea as ‘panoptic sorting’ (Gandy 1993; Marx 1988). Panoptic sorting works to increase the precision with which individuals are classified according to their perceived value (in the marketplace) and their susceptibility. Hence, surveillance is not only a passive, defensive act. Lyon discusses the term ‘phonetic surveillance fix’, a practice of surveillance sorting that requires an understanding of how pre-emptive surveillance is not just a key technique but an ideological construct informed with meaning so as to 271 realise the separation and expansion along the shifting colonial frontiers (Lyon 2011). In the context of Israel, border control is intimately linked to surveillance, which functions as a form of techno-nationalism tying territorial aspirations to the national dream of prosperity and security for the national group realised through technological innovation (Charland 1986). To put it differently, just as in the case of the critique of security as a self-fulfilling mechanism in the world of border management, surveillance becomes a key ingredient of its maintenance (Zureik and Salter 2005). The case of Controp In the summer of 2012, I interviewed a staff member of the private security company Controp in its company offices in the Hod Hasharon industrial quarter outside Tel Aviv. The company representative, who was of Russian origin but requested to have his name left out had previous experience with the Israeli security giant Elbit Systems, explained to me how he enjoys the more informal atmosphere of a smaller company, where science, instead of ‘big business’, was the focus. As we drove in his car from his home in a bourgeois Tel-Aviv quarter towards the high-tech industrial zone, he explained to me how Israel’s open borders (for Jews at least) was the prime explanation for his company’s ‘vibrant state’ and his personal success (Interview with Deputy Director of Development, Controp, Hod Hasharon, 27 August 2012). He explicitly praised the Law of Return (for Jews) as his personal saviour because it rescued him from the hardships of being a Jew in the USSR in the 1970s. He described his life in Israel as a practical and even natural way of securing his own situation, which he saw as a matter of survival, and as a practical way for Israel to use his and other Russians’ technical competences. The company representative also explained how Controp had developed the ‘Panoramic Scan’, which is used to secure high-value facilities, while showing me pictures of the Separation Barrier and the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem. He was clearly proud when described how Controp had made this ancient Western Wall stone-plateau intelligent. Surveillance and the prohibition of access, he said, are the first steps to avoid unwanted infiltration: We had an open border with the Arabs and they started to come in by foot. If you don’t lock your door you can’t sleep at night. It’s the same everywhere. We need to lock our doors (Interview with Deputy Director of Development, Controp, Hod Hasharon, 27 August 2012). 272 He proudly showed me his company’s contribution to fortifying the Separation Barrier with surveillance equipment. In fact, based on its successes at the home front, Controp has successfully expanded to markets abroad, especially in Europe through Controp’s collaboration with larger Israeli companies such as Elbit Systems and Rafael. (The latter has bought substantial shares in Controp’s holdings). Currently, the Panoramic Scan is sold to a range of foreign state and non-state clients, among them the Canadian army. Currently, most of Controp’s export products secure critical infrastructure such as oilrigs, airports, and maritime borders. The US Coast Guard and several European airports have installed Controp’s two bestselling scanning, detection and recognition systems: the SPIDER and the CEDAR, which are also used by the IDF and Israeli Airforce (IAF). The borders with the Arabs have served as an excellent driver of innovation for Controp, the representative said, which in effect helps the Israeli state create ‘new borders’. Accordingly as Controp’s portfolio attests, its border control products are not limited to line-based divisions but also entails interactive devices such as sensors and mobile event detectors. Controp’s products at display, showroom at HLS Israel the Second International Israel Homeland Security Conference, Tel Aviv, November 2012. Photo: author. 273 Sensors, treasures and pearls Infrastructures of separation are steadily fortified with high-tech/software based accessories for control and surveillance that can be customised to fit a specific mission. The technologies ensure that the contact with a penetrator is transmitted and interpreted in the event of a vibration, a rise in temperature, or a magnetic reaction. In the management of events, the technology provided to fit a given barrier works as a sort of accessory system where different sorts of event detection can be customised from companies’ product portfolios. To develop the field of border protection, Martin Cowen, a former South frican national now an Israeli citizen and owner of the small Israeli company GM A Systems, has developed the detection system ‘V-Alert Sensor’. In August 2012, I visited Cowen in his office in his villa in a Tel Aviv suburb, where he demonstrated his digital fencing technology. Each sensor in the product prototype has its own ID, so the operator knows exactly which sensor sends an alarm to the central command unit. Each calibrator, which is made in accordance with the kind of fence it is installed on, displays a large range of capabilities. Currently, the many products offered by GM are all unified in a so-called DUAL COMM system that enables communication between locations and the control room through wireless transmission. According to Cowen, the algorithm- and software-based V-Alert system can be installed on all types of solid structures and perimeter fences. Today, varieties of the V-Alert system are installed on the Separation Barrier in the West Bank and around settlements as part of an intelligent fencing system. Interestingly, the first versions of the V-Alert sensor was not developed to guard the Palestinians and prevent their infiltration into Israel and across barriers inside the OPT. Cowen and GM first developed fences and technological accessories for the agricultural industry to keep in and manage animals in both Israel and South Africa. This was a successful business in Israel especially because of the Kibbutzim’s agricultural-based architecture. As Cowen described it: During the First Intifada, we got a request from the settlements in Gaza. We took technology and fashioned it for settlements – a very simple transfer. The message was: Keep people out and deter with electric shock. Then in the mid-1990s, we established GM – we wanted to expand. We developed technology based on a need and the demands of users (Interview with Martin Cowen, Tel Aviv, 8 September 2012). 274 With the steady disassembly of the Kibbutz economy and the tightened security measures following the outbreak of the First Intifada in 1987, the basis of Cowen’s business changed. Its centre of gravity shifted towards the OPT and the managing of Palestinians and settlers rather than cattle and sheep. In cooperation with the MoD, Cowen and his team became involved in perimeter fencing. Cowen explained the company’s trajectory: After the First Intifada, we became very successful in the local market of electrical fencing. We deployed 400 kilometres of fencing in the Gaza strip around the settlements. Today these are destroyed. Today we are present all along the green line, on the barrier and in towns or villages, in strategic military areas. Once we had success in the settlement we could go on to the Jordan Valley and so on (Interview with Martin Cowen, Tel Aviv, 8 September 2012). This multipurpose system, which integrates both psychological and physical deterrents, is installed in a range of settings such as the West Bank Barrier, oilrigs, and around critical infrastructure such as government buildings and diplomatic missions. Today, 50 per cent of GM’s sales are from abroad and 50 per cent from Israeli customers. According to Cowen, the company is particularly successful exporting to industrial sites overseas, especially to Latin American and Asian markets. These markets are in flux because of ‘rapid industrialisation and a general rise in lawlessness’ (Interview with Martin Cowen, Tel Aviv, 8 September 2012). However, Cowen said that while international clients ‘generally like Israeli technology’, when taking Israeli technology abroad to overseas and non-western settings, it is strategically wise to be discreet about the origin of the products, as the Israeli brand in some places is unpopular. GM System’s trajectory is by no means unique; rather, it reflects a shift in the security economy where border and fence technologies have come to increasingly target the division between population groups inside the OPT and between Israel and the OPT. The Israeli company Sabrafence (the word Sabra generally refers to the ideal type of the rejuvenated ‘muscular’ Jew, ‘the Sabra’) specialises in the evolving field of event detectors, which includes smart gates such as ‘beam barriers’ (crash arm barriers), crash barricades (road blockers), and the so called ‘crash gates’ (an iron swing door), all of which have been sold to the Israeli government, the IDF, the Palestinian National Authority, and government agencies in Jordan, Egypt, Greece, and the UN. 275 Moreover, this shift between securing people and objects is a common feature of perimeter security. On a much bigger scale, security giant Elbit is also busy in the field of event detection. Along the Israel-Egypt border at the Sinai Peninsula, the MoD has installed a customised version of Elbit’s ‘tactical reconnaissance and surveillance enhanced system’. This is a new system made up of unattended ground sensors (UGS) developed for this specific purpose and used for intelligence gathering and enhanced awareness of borders to, as Elbit states ‘localize suspected activity’ (Elbit 2014b). Elbit’s UGS system, which ‘enables continuous border and facility protection’, was first launched globally at the Singapore Airshow in 2014 and is now exhibited and sold at fairs worldwide. The system can both detect and classify human and vehicular targets in real-time and is made up of a cluster of intelligent communication devices, sensing technology, and data analysis tools. The Pearl is an unattended ground application with an ultra-low power design. It is deployed as one component of Elbit’s unified system that is distributed into border areas as information collectors and an unmanned alarm system that detects movement. The Pearl takes the form of small orbs and roam the ground to detect and classify the nature of intruder. The US Army and a range of undisclosed buyers have recently purchased the sensors. It is just one of a treasure trove of small gadgets that reduce the need for foot soldiers on the border. Another of these small gadgets is the Chameleon 2, a covert day/night imaging software system that enables video surveillance of wide areas, which the device is able to transmit back to the command centre. These systems reconfigure the border terrain into a potentially dangerous, even lethal terrain for unwanted intruders, and serve to demonstrate how non-sanctioned human encounters with border/hafrada architecture are increasingly reduced to the management of friction. A key feature of automatised border control is that attacks, infiltration, and resistance are managed and pacified through the detection and prevention of events. In practice, this means that not only is prohibited border crossing prevented and deterred, technologies and crude structures mean that life on the other side or outside the border is hidden and reduced to a sequence of events. Once a separation structure is erected, (border) security management is in principle reduced to the detection and elimination of ‘events’. Elbit – from Palestine to Mexico Hafrada architecture helps condense a space of protracted conflict into a space of low-intensity war in border zones. As I have demonstrated, this is the case in Gaza, but it is also a global trend, for example, in militarised zones such as the US-Mexico border (Dunn 1996). 276 Elbit’s involvement in designing the US-Mexico Border has been in the pipeline for more than eight years, expanding in concert with Israel’s own shifts in the occupation on the home front. In 2003, Elbit sold its Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) Hermes 450 to the US Department of Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to deploy along Arizona’s southern border as part of the Arizona Border Control Initiative. In 2004, these were supplied with the UAS, reported to be the first of its kind in operational use for border patrol. Elbit’s international engagement provides one of the clearest examples of Israel’s border-to-border exports that highlight Israel’s involvement in border projects on a much larger scale. Elbit has provided security products in the past to the US Department of Homeland Security including those for border control activities. In late 2013, a US government website for federal investment posted a call for companies to bid on a new ‘Integrated Fixed Towers’ project (IFT). With 2011–2015 as its expected time frame of investment, the project is estimated to cost 86.82 million USD. In 2014, Israel’s Elbit Systems won the 145 million USD contract to contribute to the IFT project over the next year, which added one more year to a guaranteed eight years of infrastructural support from Elbit. The IFT project is to be implemented along the border between Arizona and Mexico as part of a large-scale push to upgrade US border protection with high-tech fences97 that can provide ‘automated and persistent wide-area surveillance to detect, track, identify and classify illegal entries’ (IT Dashboard 2014). This system will establish high-tech security along the US-Mexican border, including connecting surveillance towers and expanded perimeter buffer zones where an intruder can be identified and caught in a matter of minutes. The underlying premise of the system is to detect movement deemed illegitimate and risky while facilitating the desired movement of tourists, business, and goods to keep the transnational circulation of capital moving, as specified in the US-Mexico economic cooperation agreement of 1994 (NAFTA). During the same week as the US border control tender was announced, Elbit America showcased the Peregrine system at the Border Security Expo in Austin, Texas. The system is integral to Israel’s intelligence apparatus installed around the Separation Barrier and its connected smart fence, as a: …field proven border security solution that assesses items of interest with speed and accuracy…the system is capable of assisting border patrol agents 97 At this stage, Elbit is to provide one tower with more to be ordered on an ad hoc basis. The idea is to deploy a series of networked, integrated fixed towers equipped with radar and cameras that will be able to detect a single, average-sized adult who is walking at a range of 8 kilometres to 12 kilometres during the day or night, while sending real-time video footage back to agents manning a command post. 277 in detecting, classifying and tracking items of interest including human and vehicular targets, on any terrain, at any time (Elbit 2014b). Accordingly, whether it is fighting drugs, illegal immigration, or terrorism, any kind of infiltration will be detected by Elbit’s system, which connects decentralised, tracking devices with the control tower even when miles away. Like Israel, the US is concerned about establishing a stable balance in their economic/security nexus. 9.5 Border control: passage and strategies of concentration Limits and liminal transit: Checkpoints and terminals Today, borders are becoming smart, which makes the crossing process easy and effective for desired groups and denies access to those who are not wanted. At the same time, management of the borders is often structured around concentration points where wider changes in state making are worked out (Hyndman 2005; Newman 1998, 1999; Sparke 2006). This working out process is heavily informed by notions of citizenship, the creation of ethnic fault lines, and a range of subcategories of (denied) identity attached to data-registration system that codifies (the lack of ) rights. This takes place at crossings points such as air terminals and checkpoints. Bigo has examined this process in his work on European border control, and argues that borders are neither purely fluid nor solid, but ‘gaseous’, i.e. constituted by networks of policy, border agents’ interpretations, and computerised databases that constantly exchange information (Bigo 2014). Accordingly, installation of digitalised checkpoints transforms the border into a series of disconnected geographical points that connect speed to data information sharing. In this way, the meticulous organisation of the concentration points produces a fictive ‘image of smooth channelling’ (Bigo 2014) that contradicts the messy reality of militarised suppression. During the first decades of the occupation of the OPT, decentralisation of decision making to low-ranking soldiers and officers was the modus operandi of the IDF. This decision-making was often arbitrary. By contrast, the current architecture of occupation today is organised around crossings and control posts. In 2006, the Israeli government established the Defense Ministry’s Crossing Administration, and designated 48 checkpoints to be ‘civilianised’, which means that they will 278 become terminals similar to border crossings (Rapoport 2007)98. In September 2011, there were 522 Israeli roadblocks and checkpoints in the West Bank (not including a growing number of flying or mobile checkpoints which the IDF can move from place to place99), which reported an average of 494 incidents in 2011. In 2013, there was an estimated 99 fixed checkpoints spread across the OPT; as of February 2014, 59 of these were reported to be located well within occupied Palestinian territory100. Automated technological solutions to facilitate and sanction movement at the crossings rely increasingly on a certain level of predictability (Berda 2012). The crossings represent an overlay of technological sophistication and a ‘conjectural style of reasoning’ (Bigo 2014) based on a mix of group sorting and picking, screening, and interrogation practices to filter the mixed mobility flows installed to curb Palestinian movement while facilitating Jewish-Israeli movement. These different time regimes are underpinned by the institutionalisation of a dependency economy as specified in the Paris Protocol101. The border crossings are constructed and refined as a technologised platform. When people are in transit, loudspeakers enable the operator to give orders to them without hearing any reaction or requests for explanation (Havkin 2011). The crossings and concentration points are under the control of the Israeli Crossing Authorities, an administrative unit operating under the Ministry of Defense. The Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) administers 98 99 100 101 Increased privatisation is another feature of the checkpoint industry (Havkin 2011; Hever 2010). For example, in 2010, there were 99 fixed checkpoints in the West Bank along the Green Line and inside Palestinian territory. By 2013, only five of those remaining were operated by the military (Khalili 2013). The maintenance and patrolling of separation architecture is also managed by transnational companies, which serves to standardise policing. British-Danish security provider G4S is both a key subcontractor of the Israeli MoD to guard crossings along the Separation Barrier and an active subcontractor in Iraq, where it guards the multiple checkpoints around Baghdad’s Green Zone. As the unified platform of data and screening technologies, the border has become portable, which is the case with the so-called ‘flying checkpoints’ and the growing spectra of mobile identity verification systems installed in the OPT. In effect, the portable border is a biometric border par excellence, where the carriers of information are the mobile bodies. Often, checkpoints are erected in the middle of a Palestinian town or areas as an internal checkpoint that serves to control or prevent Palestinians from moving freely even within their own territory. The mobile border is a bureaucratised network of technology, data access, and human intervention. The checkpoints include 17 in Area H2 in Hebron, where there are Israeli settlement enclaves. A total of 33 of all internal checkpoints are regularly staffed (B’Tselem 2011). An appendix of the Oslo Accords sought to govern the economic relationship between the Palestinian National Authority and Israel in what Arnon has called a space between ‘imposed integration and volunteer segregation’ (Arnon 1997). The Protocol stipulates the rule of import and export of capital and goods to and from the OPT, and formalises a tax envelope that allows Israel to extract revenues from the structure, while solely governing all external (Arnon 1994). 279 the sites and reports on incidents and changes in procedures and produces weekly statistics on crossings. This data is divided into categories of commercial, workers, or medical humanitarian, as well as those of holy worshippers and extended-family visitors. Computer software and data registration on the population sustain and unify the border regime. COGAT’s functions and modes of operation act as a sort of service portal for its users (security agencies and soldiers), whereby the checkpoint’s digital features make it a militarised feature of modern public governance. The lines of the borders guide and funnel humans to the organised crossings to have their identity checked and evaluated. Whether mobile or fixed, the long list of internal and external border crossings divides Palestinians into smaller groups where special requirements are needed, or as a means to deny passage collectively102. At the checkpoint, status and recognition are reflected in an individual’s mobility. These borders, which differentiate the mobility of Palestinians and non- Palestinians, create a layered variation of the speed of checkpoint processes. Indeed, Virilio’s politics of speed the ability to accelerate, move and produce in a relatively high pace sees the technologically superior party as the one with the power to move (Virilio 2006). Consequently, technological speed creates politically charged flows that are bound up in a structure of violence which brings to the fore the micro-practices of how movement from A to B is designed, changed, and prohibited. Thus, speed is a political parameter, which, as Virilio tells us in his account of the nature of ‘pure war’ movement, is less exposed but just as bound up in violence, as is the case of wealth and the violent features of capitalism (Virilio 1983). The Palestinians’ waste of time becomes the anathema to speeding up or smoothness in transit. While the annihilation of time i.e. the ability to control ones own pace and movevemtn - stands as a symbol of modern progress and productivity, the mixed mobility management of time supports a process of uneven geographical development that gives meaning to the borders’ sanctioning systems. Amoore’s account of the biometrical borders points to how border control as risk management is concerned with controlling two types of mobility: the legitimate and illegitimate (Amoore 2006). In a situation where crossing and movement is sanctioned, this filtering translates into a systemic differentiation between the blacklisted (data-prevented or data-banned) versus the pre-cleared, or the blue versus the green cards. (The blacklisted/banned category is based on predictions of future behaviour.) In Israel’s border crossing control, the main line of division between the Palestinian (depending on his ID category, data, permits, 102 280 Needless to say, Israelis and internationals are granted passage. records, etc.) and the foreigner, the Israeli (settler), is profoundly expressed. In the part of the Israeli identity management system sanctioned by the Oslo Accords, even the architectural features of the terminals installed between the West Bank and Palestinian East Jerusalem (and in effect Israel) involve color-coded lanes and sub-lanes, dividing passengers according to the geography produced by the Oslo Accords (Weizman 2007) The settlers’ passages are made easy: their journeys are rarely delayed. Moreover, they are rarely challenged when they cross from occupied territory to Israel proper, which emphasises that the West Bank settlements are natural extensions and an integral part of ‘the homeland’. The broader function of the occupation’s border regime serves to facilitate the movement of what Adey has called the ‘kinetic elite (Adey 2004), i.e. citizens whose welfare and mobility are advantageous to the state and the economy. While the increasingly automated non-spaces are meant to express efficient management of the borders, they also embody Zionism’s schemes of structural violence. As Handel argues, the techno-physical structure of control in the OPT cannot sustain itself: it needs an implicit structure of violence, a threat of violence, to enact its purposes (Handel 2009). The checkpoints and structures of control are not (only) about regulating movement. They are part of what a former Israeli solider serving in the OPT refers to as: The concept of showing your presence, a core component of the system of control. The system is clear in the West Bank, where Israel expresses de facto Israeli control of the ground, and therefore constantly uses those missions to constantly deter the civilian population (Interview with former soldier, anonymous, Tel Aviv, June 26, 2013). Checkpoints routinely filter and interrogate people in a regime of mixed/ differentiated mobilities (the notion of a different capacity of mobility granted to different people groups) or what Bigo calls ‘institutionalised racism in border security’ (Bigo 2006). The pragmatic reasons stated for the use of checkpoints only serve to disguise the discriminatory practices at play. Whereas for the kinetic elite, passage is most often a ‘mere’ formality, for the Palestinian as for the immigrant or the criminal, the transit takes on an existential character that comes to represent the individual’s legal (or non-legal) status. Common to most routinised crossings, whether at airport control or other transport portals, is the notion of pre-clearance of certain groups, for example, in the application to be granted a visa. The notion of pre-clearing is implicit in Israel’s differentiated rule, which has also become a 281 routine aspect of much airport processing of groups of people. Just as checkpoints filter people based on identity, ethnicity, and ID category, airport body and luggage scanners and data registration software facilitate the speeding up and slowing down of movement. The enforcement of immigration control is a field where border control is in high demand. In Israel’s border security industry, the Palestinian is transformed into a sort of prototype of the unwanted, the infiltrator. Border crossing is a shaper of political identity. For the Palestinians, their rite of passage is embedded in a set of categories (that are subject to change) fixed in the bureaucracy of administering the occupied population according to a set of political tools and categories. As Hanafi writes, the Israeli military bureaucracy uses the most sophisticated anthropological (high-tech) tools to divide Palestinians into categories. The Palestinian population has become a ‘purely objective matter to be administered, rather than potential subjects of historical or social action’ (Hanafi 2009). In this way, the sovereign attempts to reduce the subjective trajectories of individuals to bodies (Pandolfi 2002). The checkpoint then helps form corporal identity in order to exclude and restrict selected individuals or groups, or what Nikolas Rose has called ‘the securitisation of identity’ (Rose 1999). This securitisation happens, of course, at the expense of the ‘kinetic underclass’, which is often portrayed as organised criminal, but much more often as the illegal immigrant or the ‘non-citizen’. This trickles down to the shape and form of the physical frames, or the architecture where these levels of kinetics materialise as different lanes for different categories or even pre-cleared categories that do not need verification. In this way, the control systems induce a reality that cohabits two types of spaces: fluid Israeli spaces and truncated, fragmented Palestinians spaces. Handel describes how this has reorganised the conflict’s territorial premises to be structured around the use of space, reorganising subjects’ trajectories, and submitting the two populations to differing time regimes of mobility (Handel 2009). At the same time, the crossings force people to come to the authorities and disclose the ‘truth’ about themselves, which allows the sovereign to update data in the system and optimise the conditions under which Palestinian self-policing can be promoted. The crossing point thus becomes a disciplinary site and constitutes concentrated locations of violence or the threat thereof in a combination of human intervention and a portfolio of technological solutions. Crossing points and ‘non-places’ The crossing itself is a special place – a ‘non-place’, perhaps, but still a significant place. The notion of a non-place was introduced by Marc Augé as a power-loaded space of transit, for example, a network of airport lounges, border 282 terminals, gas stations, oil-rigs, and more. These are nodal portions of the global travel complex in which the mobile elite and the excluded/unwanted spend time. ‘ If a place can be defined as relational, historical and concerned with identity, then a space which cannot be defined as relational, or historical, or concerned with identity will be a non-place’ (Augé 1995: 77). Increased tourism and transnational exchanges on the global level have produced a myriad of non-places to check, register, detain, reject, and sanction people as they seek to cross boundaries. Intriguingly, in many ways Israel’s checkpoints and terminals constitute power-loaded non-places. Augé continues: ‘Clearly the word ‘non-place’ designates two complimentary but distinct realities: spaces formed in relation to certain ends (transport, transit, commerce, leisure), and the relations the individuals have with these spaces’ (Augé 1995: 94). Inspired by Tawil-Souri (2011) I here argue that the concept of a non-place carries great resonance to Israel’s production of space at terminals and checkpoints. Nobody lives in the non-place; the checkpoint or the terminal is a non-place in the OPT, sites of temporary dwelling, of coming and going, of interrogation and incarceration. Border crossings are autonomous zones with their own rules and logics detached from but deeply affecting the rest of the individual’s journey. Naturally, these are not neutral zones. In the OPT, the passage and the broader question of mobility controls and border management are intrinsically conditioned by the documentation and certification of life activities, such as high school diplomas, birth certificates, and driver’s licenses upon which much deployment depends. The checkpoints are critical to Israel’s occupation regime and aim to create frictionless movement, regulate and sort passage, and by extension, to collect data for the system’s demographic database (Braverman 2011). When making a border crossing, the individual is in a state of liminality, an ambiguous, sometimes disorienting place one occupies before re-entering ‘normal’ life and movement. Each life is evaluated and confirmed by the sovereign at the checkpoint. While the crossings naturally regulate movement and serve to distinguish between illegitimate and legitimate movement, they also serve as a platform for the collection of data about those passing through them. The act of crossing is a phenomenon that both reflects its broader political context and constitutes a particular space and the experience of passage. Israel’s border rule can be altered in a moment by a distant event such as terror or a celebration103. 103 Israel usually closes all its crossings into the West Bank for Palestinians in the event of a military confrontation or attack, just as it does at the height of its national holidays such as Independence (Nakba Day), Passover, and Memorial Day. 283 To summarise: in a settler colonial context, the rite of passage functions as a tool to differentiate the social process of access and mobility; it is a way of organising mobility into a hierarchical governance system. Israel’s management of mixed mobilities can serve the broader purpose of class making. As part of the racial state’s governing of its subjects, the rite of passage reflects a larger concern with population engineering according to principles of separation that are rooted in the vision of the nation and the potential of technologies. These logics travel well to other sites and borders. Automated checkpoint guarded by the IDF in the old city of Hebron (H1). Photo: Peter Hove Olesen. 284 Transfer of illegitimacy and the ‘Palestinianisation’ of the border Bigo argues that security is a continuum that creates new domains where asylum rights, migration flows, terrorism, and responses to criminal activity come together in one governance system as part of a larger quest to contain citizenship – often in a static version when confronted with politico-cultural alternatives (Bigo 2002; Walters 2004). This is certainly true in the case of Israel’s export of systems to check identities in passage. At a security fair in Israel in 2012, I talked to a representative of Mer Security about the branding of Israel as a leading force in border security. He explained to me that while the European immigration control agency FRONTEX104 seems to have accepted that ‘…freedom and welfare for its own citizens comes at a price for others’, there is still a need for the West ‘to learn from Israel’. As a consequence of the current influx of refugees from Africa and Syria, Europe is experiencing the need to control movement and access of certain groups ‘the hard way’, the PR staffer said. (Interview with anonymous PR representative of Mer, Tel Aviv, November 2012). The technologies of crossings points are far from restricted to the OPT. Israeli companies have lent and sold its systems of control to a global space where the division of bodies is desired: at international boundaries, airports, railway stations, on subways or city streets, in the office or the neighbourhood. Indeed, the systems of control in the field of Israel-Palestine is extracted and distributed to other sites of control over borders and critical infrastructure, where allotting of people to categories of immobility and mobility is sought. Still, despite its globalisation, the techno-national dream of emancipation through innovation lies at the heart of the venture. Israeli companies promote and sell an ideologically informed technological capacity to draw lines around particular groups of people, sorting the suspicious from the normal, and the risky from the at-risk. This export dynamic of systems to control mobility rests not only on the capacity of each technological artefact, but also on a narrative of enduring despite existential threats. Recalling Shimon Peres’s vision of a borderless world, which was presented at HLS Israel 2012, Israeli companies are selling the utopian dream of safe, smart borders as a shield against the ‘barbaric east’, which is an ‘orientalisa- 104 Frontex is a European legal and political agency responsible for conducting border protection missions and routine border patrolling. The agency has also been granted the responsibility to keep European Union member states informed about new technological developments in the field of border control. 285 tion’ , or ‘Palestinianisation’ of border protection as a universal condition. While Israel’s framing of social realities at the borders as a threat, an unlimited danger, companies also sell the (illusory) vision and promise of complete control. At security fairs, the promotion of border technologies is projected through an image where Israel’s defence of its borders is weighed against a barbaric, abstract ‘other’. In this image, the more calculated demographic threat (of the Palestinians) is translated into more universal categories of fears of penetration and threats of terror. Israel’s civility is played out through disassociation from the ‘primitive’ and threatening Arab or Islamic East. This narrative goes back to early Zionist thought which is not replicated in the rationalisation strategies of the Israeli security industry. Tom Segev highlights the deep-seated fear and alienation that Zionist leaders felt and perpetuated vis-à-vis the Arab East. For example, Theodore Herzl, who founded political Zionism in 1897, asserted that Zionism should provide the vanguard of (European) culture against (Eastern) barbarism and Zionist leader and physician Max Nordau told the first Zionist congress that Zionism must attempt to do to Western Asia what the British did to India, ‘coming to the land of Israel as envoys of culture, with the aim of widening the moral boundaries of Europe as far the Euphrates’ (quoted in Segev 1999: 125). These convictions thus became the substrate against which Zionist identity was shaped, which have been central components of the conceptualisation of border security. The technological utopia of stable and secure borders as promoted by the security industry is a powerful discourse. However, the reality underneath the technological mediation of reality mirrors a widespread culture of border panic that has become a source of income. In Israel, this is manifest in the fear of infiltration (from within), while in more universal framing the fear is manifested in the fears attached to immigration. Control plays upon fear in order to legitimise itself. Border technologies travel from different sites and purposes to new sites of demand. In his study of the immigration-security nexus, Walters discusses ‘transferring illegitimacy’, which is the shifting of discursive targeting and imposition of nodes of illegitimacy upon different people groups deemed dangerous to and excluded from the community (Walters 2008). The notion of transferral is very instructive in the case Israel’s export of border security, as the motor of export lies within the capacity to demonstrate the flexibility and adaptability of the technology. When, as in Mexico, the system focuses on facilitating access for those desired inside and preventing access for those unwanted, then ‘race’ becomes the marker of insecurity. In other words, the Palestinian or the Mexican become the proto- 286 typical illegal alien (Ibrahim 2005; Walters 2008). Here, technology becomes the medium through which the transferal of illegitimacy takes place. What is more, as the process occurs in a collaborative effort between state agencies, private security companies, and technology innovators, the transferal happens within fluid transactions between the state and market forces. What arises from the exchange of technology and practice is a potent linking of ‘the Palestinian’ and ‘the immigrant’ who share the destiny of denied political agency and rights. As Bakan and Abu-Laban have suggested in the context of the War on Terror (in liberal democracies), Israel’s social sorting has become a normalised practice in Western liberal democracies (Abu-Laban and Barkan 2011). They term this a ‘Palestinianisation’ of what Mills has called ‘the racial contract’, which rests on an ideologically informed violence where the contract between the authority and people includes only ‘people who count’ (Mills 1997). While in the Israeli case the rationale of border security is attached to the fear of infiltration from within (and without) on a global scale, these ideas and capacities speak to the widespread fears attached to immigration. Through its commodification of border technology, Israeli security companies help conceal the structural violence embedded in Israel’s governing of the OPT. 9.6 Conclusion The engineering of border construction and its associated technologies represents the epitome of techno-nationalism. These are technological ensembles used to define and realise the nation into a state. The material and discursive dynamics of access and denied access have drawn the contours of Israel’s ideologically informed border engineering as a long-term, open-ended process of demographic reversal. This process has been invoked by the state as part of building an Israel that reflects the state’s nationalist features, and to facilitate economic development and circulation. Israel’s pre-eminence in border control is based on Zionism’s hierarchical system of racialisation, which is an advantage in the production of globally attractive technology for border construction, management, and warfare. Through militarisation and digitalisation of its borders, Zionism’s nurturing of its values and norms has over time been translated through militarisation into concrete, diverse network of geopolitical division and risk management. The production of borders, while based on a political imagery, has over time become a mix of border governmentalities, crude infrastructure, and sophisticated technology resting upon pervasive 287 narratives of (in)security that have been reinforced through border enforcement. The immense and intense process of ingathering of Jews from the global diaspora and excluding people deemed outsiders in the Jewish nation has been a core tenet in securing a Jewish nation behind new nationalising borders. The chapter concludes that the case of Israel border construction has been integral to settlement and sustained territorial expansion that has included and still includes a wide-ranging set of ideological and practical assemblages of border production and management tools. Today, the border security industry thrives on the dual condition of extremely tight border control and the use of ‘indigenous resistance’ to fine-tune the systems in place. Ethnic differentiation and racist practices have been essential to and necessary for the sovereign to retain power. The production of security technology is both a symptom of the contradictions of the experiences of Zionist nationhood – the pursuit of an ethnic state with a large native non-Jewish population in it – and a remedy to alleviate the effects of these contradictions. State officials, soldiers, private security contractors, and technicians are bound up in a messy reality where military involvement in a civilian environment creates new logics of political authority. 288 289 290 CHAPTER TEN 10.0 CONCLUSION Earlier in the research I asked: what is the politics of artifacts? This answer to this comprehesive question can now be unfolded. Israel’s technologies of control have been developed and deployed as part of realising the Zionist dream and vision of stable Jewish, ethnic nationhood. To achieve this, the Israeli state has, in collaboration with a growing number of security companies, developed a range of security practices that contribute to a thriving security economy. Advanced technologies of security fundamentally alter the dispositions of those dominating and those subjected to domination. New realities of security are moulded and created through a complex intertwining of settler colonial warfare, techno-nationalism, and innovation structures developed through the mediation between state and nation. In the Israeli case, the duality of ontological insecurity; the obsession with security and military might combined with (Jewish) existential crisis has driven Israeli security practices and modes production. As a core force behind the growth of the Israeli security industry, Zionism as a national and social movement involves a dual structure of settler colonial ideas of Jewish emancipation in Mandate Palestine and the attendant formation and nurturing of a kinship-based capitalist structure driven by a strong tech-based economy. By performing a colonial genealogy of modernity, this thesis argues that these binaries of progression and regression so key to Zionist settler colonialism have been engines of security innovation and profit accumulation. Consequently, security works as a label for much grander schemes of settlement, control, and expansion and liberal governance performed in a state of permanent settler colonial warfare and policing. The Israeli security sector has been decisive in integrating Zionism into a condition of permanent war as a necessary modality of national success (and survival). The technologies and techniques produced by the industry serve to protect and improve the permanent war condition as a way to achieve the ideal of the ethnic nation and to mould and nurture the homogenising features of the racial state (Goldberg 2006). 291 Organised under the label of security, the entire complex of Israel-Palestine has been shaped and is constantly reconfigured in a triangular motion between the forces of the state, private security companies, and the natives’ resistance. This has occurred as a settler colonial variant of techno-nationalism, where technological breakthroughs have both informed the national project and been directed and shaped by the national-territorial visions of Jewish nationhood. The battlefield complex of Israel-Palestine is a biopolitical field of differentiated calculations and a hierarchy of categorisations that hinge on the correlation between the intellectual thought and ideological formations of Zionism and more concrete prescriptions for action and domination established to realise its goals. The research of this thesis contributes a socio-material analysis of the production of instruments of control and war as they have unfolded in this particular project of national, human engineering. The genesis and dynamics of the security industry cannot be understood without considering Israel’s broader aspirations of both territorial expansion and capital accumulation, including the implications of transferring these technologies and capacities to new sites and contexts. The case of Israel’s security industry and its alliance with state and military forces demonstrates how the production and construction of (in)security is an essential tool of modern control. 10.1 The Israeli security sector The Israel security sector is one of Israel’s premier industrial sectors. It expresses the cumulative experiences of state-based violence. It has been the key to Israel’s broader path of industrialisation. The sector is versatile, unifying, and an always powerful military-economic dynamic. As Denes puts it, the Israeli security sector is: The consummate expression of permanent war’s mobilising of bodies, institutions, and values toward a cohesive and vibrant national order (Denes 2011a: 259). From the outset of Zionist settlement, dominant capital and military structures have worked to produce and embrace a plethora of forces and institutions that has come to embody the Israeli state and nation. The formation, growth, and nurturing of the industry has developed according to Zionism’s broader goal of both deconstructing exiting structures (Palestine) and replacing them with new ones (Israel). The quest for economic independence is a routine part of Israel’s 292 settler governmentality, which works to establish and normalise the amalgamation of ethnic and capital structures into a fertile architecture of ethnic security capital. Israel’s security sector is structured to provide both the capacity to destroy and to erect. This observation is based on Wolfe’s assessment of pure settler-colonialism as a process that ‘destroys to replace’. This view of Zionism as a structure of invasion (Wolfe 2006) looks at ‘what was’ and ‘what became’. The consequence of this is a force that consistently seeks a balance between the desire to modernise Israel and de-modernise Palestine. These simultaneous realities do not take place as separate events, but as co-imbricating structures around which the security sector is organised. The Israeli production scheme is shaped by the particular circumstances and conditions of the Zionist colonial project, whose form of pure settler colonialism is not based on the extraction of resources for the overseas metropolitian mothership but on conquering and settling the land itself. In this way, the Israeli security industry reverses the usual extraction perspective of overseas colonialism, which places extraction and enrichmentin one place thorugh its variety of of pure settler colonialism. Instead, Israel’s expansive practices and its modes of production create a force that entails ‘accumulation by dispossession’ (Harvey 2003, 2009), which in turn ensures the elites a (potential) surplus of capital. The security industry configures this into a ‘security fix’ where security, accumulation, and territorial expansionism work together in a dialectical relationship between territorial and capitalist logics of power. This process is reflected in the concrete territoriality of the state policies of expansion and domination – strategies of ethnic transfer and separation – and also in the expansion of global and especially emerging markets. As Harvey argues: The incorporation of new space into the system of accumulation absorbs these surpluses in two ways: First, it promotes their utilization in the activities involved in opening up the new space and endowing it with the necessary infrastructure, both physical and social. Secondly, once the new space has been adequately ‘produced’, the surpluses of labour and capital can be absorbed in the new productive combinations that have been made profitable by the spatial enlargement of the system of accumulation (Harvey 2003: 109–112). In turn Israel’s settler colonial practices support a production scheme where the expansion and control of territory and people come to create a surplus of capital that is reinforced and extra-territorialised by the industry’s exports. 293 The Israeli security sector is a fertile economy of both material artefacts and formations of discourses and visions of control, and has become commensurate to the state’s early investment in intellectual and industrial capacities. The longitudinal history of the political economy of the Israeli security industry reveals a link between Zionist nation building and the formation of industrial and state structures, which are all part of the militarisation of the emerging and consolidating Israeli economy. The industry has also been shaped by and has benefitted from a rapid process of modernisation marked by a fusion of structures of kinship (Davis 1977) and capital formations. A built-in racialisation of the national settler colonial project takes place through military-economic alliances that sustain the mobilisation of ‘ethnic capital’. This was made possible by extensive waves of Jewish immigration of skilled labour into Israel to entrench the nascent state project The nascent industrial structures have been and still are determined by Israel’s perpetual mobilisation for war. Enshrined in the state-led strategy of economic independence, the close ties between capital and military and industrial elites in a variety of arrangements inside and outside the territory has spurred the formation of key defence and security ventures and companies. The Israeli security industry is a result of a productive mixture of Israel’s anachronisms, its colonial reality, and its concomitant high-tech economy. The consolidation of the IDF as a people’s army and the creation of a militarised nation or a ‘nation in arms’ have brought together economic and military forces in an exclusively Jewish alignment. The IDF has been the prime breeding ground for ideas, comradeship, and collaboration that have informed the security industry. The industry’s connection to military institutions and units ensure the exchange of people and experiences between the field, the office, and the factory. Concrete experiences, interpersonal relationships, and the educational benefits of the IDF provide the basis for second careers in the echelons of the security industry, academia, security companies, and state agencies that constitute Israel’s pan-institutional economy. The staffing of the security industry hinges on the strategic incorporation of skills and forces from interconnected knowledge, financial and military institutions. However, Israeli security companies tend not to be in complete agreement over the meaning of security and the level of patriotism that drives their entrepreneurism. Neoliberal features of the Israeli economy have turned the industry into a liberalised marketplace where competition and its organisation represent a pyramid structure: the subversion of smaller enterprises under Israel’s security giants has become an essential condition of commercial and corporate life in Israel. In the dominating Israeli security narrative, the state, along with the technologies at its disposal, has the capacity to alleviate insecurity. The industry serves the state and provides the best solutions to fight that insecurity. In a wider perspective, 294 the debates on what constitutes security and insecurity are central parts of the ongoing defining and redefining of the meaning of Zionism. At the same time, the goal of establishing security is both challenged and blessed with elements of violent and non-violent native resistance. This resistance habitually allows for real-life testing of technologies and products and for the security producers to adjust their ideas and technology to the realities of the battlespace. This resource of native resistance rests on Zionism’s inability to ensure congruence between nation and state. The translation and commercialisation of security helps to form the meaning and purpose of Israeli security technologies as viewed by a global audience. At security industry fairs, Israel is promoted as a conveyer of security both inside Israel and far beyond its own borders. While the industry has been nurtured by nationalism, unstable conditions of ethnic nationbuilding, and the utopian notion of homogeneity, the industry thrives on a self-promotional ethos of maximum security. By extension, Israel’s global integration has to a large extent been shaped by its security/defence policies and its security production. The insertion of Israeli security products into the flow of the global economy has both shaped and been shaped by diplomatic overtures, external reparations, military aid, and a growing export portfolio with global appeal. While it was shaped first and foremost by political motifs, Israel’s technological capacities increasingly motivate this international engagement. The country first shifted gradually from a (military)-economy of dependence to a militarised neoliberal economy; it has been subsequently transformed into an export economy. The security products themselves and the industry’s skill in promoting them has been a key engine of this internationalisation, which constituted by experience, technological breakthroughs, and active government support. Today, Israel’s exports help produce a new militarised cartography of moral, civilisational, and technological difference. Through its military economy Israel plays a role in creating lobal hierarchies of uneven development asserted by the world’s pre-eminent economic and military powers. Both the empirical and conceptual analyses of this thesis have demonstrated how the Zionist expertise and political economy of security constitute a hyper version of both nationalising and subjecting forces elsewhere. As a comprehensive entity, the Israeli security industry expresses a co-imbrication of political intent and technological artefact. This is materialised in the production of security technologies that is part of the constant configuration and 295 allocation of the sources of power in the settler colonial project. The constant pursuit of ‘Jewish security’ has been shaped by and has shaped the notion of Zionism as a national project. 10.2 Hyper and radical securitised nationalism Zionism is not unique, rather, as a project of national engineering it has worked as a time- and space-specific variant of securitised technological nationalism. In this sense Zionism needs to be approached as a hyper version of securitised nationalism performed through the techniques and schemes of pure settler colonialism realised through technological innovation. Seeing Zionism as a variant of securitised nationalism includes the envisioning of a national community where specific national practices of migration and immigration control, planning and urbanisation, military strategies and doctrines, and industrial and R&D policies have informed national security practices To grasp the broader implications of Israeli homeland security, it is essential to perform a critique of security. Instead of reducing security to a simple matter of mitigating threats, we need to question the ontological and interest-driven assumptions behind security as ‘a public good’. This means conducting a critical inquiry into the broad claim that maximising security is the best remedy to alleviate insecurity. Seeing security as a source of modern state control, as a principle for order making, and as a vector for the production of new insecurities is fruitful way to ask fundamental questions about the political and social architecture of security as a (settler colonial) governance strategy, a technological specification attributed to an artefact, and as a formation of a national narrative. The reason for this type of inquiry is clear: technologies of security are more than the sum of manufactured objects that circulate between manufacturers and militaries. They also raise the question of how security is performed and how it reflects a certain doxa on security (Guittet and Jeandesboz 2009: 238). Israel’s security doxa is rooted in the plethora of forces driving the Zionist mobilisation for nationhood forward. This doxa has been unfolded here as a set of narratives, strategies, governmentalities, and ideological interpretations as to what constitutes security and for whom, how to best practice it, and how to position it in relation to Israel’s broader industrial development and production. Thus, a recurring theme of this analysis is the existence of a dialogic relationship between the security industry and Israel’s state of permanent warfare. This correlation is essential to our understanding of the realities of what Weizman has called ‘the material theatre of war’ (Weizman 2007). 296 Israel’s multifaceted theatre of war relies on ideological tenets and is deeply tied to techno-territorial forces entrenched in the alliance between nation builders and machine makers (Efron 2011). In Israel-Palestine, technical and conceptual fields of military transformation compose logics of war and surveillance in diverse, but interconnected operational theatres. Consequently, Israel’s security complex produces an ideologically informed notion of ‘public good’ that hinges on the systematic ingathering of some and the systematic exclusion of others. The entrenchment of the term ‘homeland security’ as a modus of public security to realise and protect the chosen nation proves these critical assumptions. Zionism’s permanent state of emergency reifies homeland security as a way of confirming the national community. In other words, because war is integral to security in Israel, it is neither possible nor desirable to end the emergency. Emergency governs, and the pacification of humans becomes the only way to remove threats. This security/ threat/pacification/exclusion mindset has produced a violent project with no end in sight: it is a war that has unlimited means to achieve unlimited ends. In the context of Israel’s settler colonial history and practices, it has become clear that security is also a node of settler governmentality. By deconstructing dominant Israeli security narratives and practices on the ground, this study has demonstrated how facts are constructed as threats and problems to be tackled. As Bigo has argued, security is about ‘the doing of security’ rather than simply ‘what is being done’ (Bigo 2001). While security technology is sold as a neutral solution to a conceived security and/or logistical problem, security should also been seen as a way of knowing, of doing, and of creating new material and discursive images of reality. A plethora of mental and physical spectres of control have created a hard physical reality entrenched by soft normative factors such as ethno-national hierarchies and ontological narratives of (in)security. Israel has harvested its technological finesse from this reality and transformed it into an industry of security. 10.3 Racialisation and ethnic security To unfold the co-imbrication of security and differentiation, the study has looked at the Israeli security industry’s production of technologies that help reproduce the unequal conditions of living so key to settler colonialism. These technologies rest on an ideologically informed emphasis on different levels of human worth (defined in very rough terms by the line drawn between the coloniser and colonised). The phrase ‘different levels of human worth’ attests to the intent behind the technology and its effects of differentiation and racialisation of groups of people and their ascription to territory based on a hierarchical categorisation of people. 297 The nation is defined, delimited, and moulded through this process. Rather than departing from racial differences as a biological fact, Israel’s security technologies produces categories of (racila) differemce. It is in the targeting that race is made. Israel’s features as a racial state have been allotted to the purpose of the technologies and the mode of their deployment. The notion of ethnic or racialised security has provided the industry with a unifying organisational and operational logic. The implicit relational character of the settler colonial project and its translations of relational violence into technologies provide the field with a built-in structure of racialised governance. This has proven relevant as part of the broader historical path of the Zionist project and the Palestinian trajectory, and in more specific instances of invasion and encounters between people and technologies. Zionism as an ideology and as a set of settler colonial practices is driven by an ever-present ontological insecurity in Israel and the broader (Jewish) diaspora. Its quest for ‘ontological security’ has worked as a persistent mental-political compass for the state building project and is a very real feeling among its citizens, who have been socialised by a culture of fear and legacies of persecution. Zionism’s national vision of security has gone through a process of transmission that has been informed by broader developments in the settler colonial project. The intense yet intangible security vision manifests itself a security vision where risks and threats are everywhere. While Israel’s packaging of the security economy in rationalist and scientific arguments is fused with propositions of a liberal imagery of security maximising as a universal public good, security in Israel often becomes a racialised security narrative based on kinship. Despite its promotion as a public good, the idea of security as kinship management and protection prevails through a Jewish-Israeli alignment shaped and propagated by the Israeli state as a security issue. Writ large in Israel, the security issue is based on a rejection, or non-acceptance of geo-political limits in its search for security. The racialised features of state control are based on Zionism’s quest for ontological (and practical) security for Jewry, which becomes integral to Israel’s method of constructing and guarding of volatile frontiers. Therefore, security is a conception of the ‘general interest’ that privileges some identities, interests, and spatio-temporal horizons. Its ontological (in)security is rooted in an ideological scheme and Israel’s historical experience thinking about security. This has informed the ways in which Israel taps into the broader context of practicing security through the identification and management of majority or minority groups as ‘ethnic threats’. Israel’s security innovation process and the role of Palestine as a ‘laboratory’ bind together intent and effect in one circular motion. This analysis suggests that Israel’s imagined community consists of religio-nationalised ideas constructed into the notion of ethnic unity or patterns of kinship, hence the notion of ethnic and even racialised security narratives. The close relationship between ethnic or 298 racialised warfare/control and the dominant narratives of security capture in an almost ontological sense the distinction between lives worth saving and those that are not. The view of who constitutes the nation codes and shapes the filter that decides whose lives are subject to protection and whose lives are the subject of oppression/exclusion. From the settler colonial perspective, security is only for some, and insecurity is associated with ethnic difference and opposition. The realisation of security is weighed against the ideal of the absence of ethnic threats. In approaching Israel-Palestine as a biopolitical battlefield, the technologies of difference reflect the tensions of biopolitics’ ‘positive’ side, i.e. its accentuation or schemes of improvement for the selected species, and the ‘dark’ side that relates to Mbeme’s view on the necro-political calculus of assigning life to the ‘death world’ (Mbembe 2003). In sum, Israel’s security sector’s operational features reflect a desire for racialised domination, which has come to mean an almost unquestioned subjugation of non-Jews. Differentiation as a mode of governing has provided the Israeli security sector with a broad appeal to other systems of racialisation and differentiation of control. This happens through a process of transferring (il)legitimacy from the Palestinian to other suspect groups or individuals: the ‘Palestinianization of the racial contract’ (Abu-Laban and Barkan 2011; Mills 1997). As the desire to sort and filter people and flows of goods has intensified, the globalisation of the spaces of control has only fortified this trend. The spread of technologies to sustain border regimes of differentiated sanctioning contributes to the globalisation of the Palestinian condition. The idea of the free, mobile Israeli and the ‘bounded in’ Palestinian mirrors the more broad contradictions of Western cosmopolitanism and its exclusive/closed interpretations of nationalised citizenship. Israeli practices of security travel across borders and assist the imposition of nodes of illegitimacy upon different groups of the dangerous ‘outside’ (Walters 2004). 10.4 Science – an ethos and a strategy Surely technological breaktrhough and smart upgrades can help improve the lives of people. Even save lives. However scientific progress also has a dark side. Zionist elites have consistently rationalised and legitimised Zionism as a ‘civilising mission’, which is not only used as an engine to unify the Jews in Israel-Palestine, but also as a mission with a broader impact on the Levant. Science as a strategy, a narrative, and as a form of capital has been key herein. While the pursuit of an independent ‘Jewish’ economy has been central to the Israeli security industry, science also has a practical and discursive role. 299 Science and Zionist ideas have pushed forward both the national project and the business sector as a techno-scientific enterprise advocating progress and emancipation. The techno-scientific intersections of war and science have been a centrepiece of Zionist calculations of how to both promote a strong security economy and depict and shape the combat zone. The entrepreneurial ethos and spirit of Israel’s security industry is a result of a range of concrete legacies and self-legitimising discourses of ethno-national emancipation and the isolation of the native other. This has been and is expressed in Israel through the prevailing sense of collective necessity that provides Israeli security actors with the narrative of being a part of an existential mission. It is important to give credence and explanatory power to a set of dominant mentalities and discourses that exist among the sector’s actors. Thus, Israel’s emancipatory ethos and spirit of survival and necessity provide the industry with raison d’etre, a unifying logic, and a promotional basis. These ideas and their expression in promotional as well as day-to-day narratives have created a pronounced sense of social cohesion inside the strata of the industry. In fact, these narratives of essential or existential predicaments have become an internal organising principle of the industry. This has been transferred into the meaning given to its technological output: ‘ein breira’ (necessity) technology. The articulation of this mission hinges on a tendency to generalise from the Jewish experience of survival and emancipation to a condition of Jewish security ensured by a protective state. This shift provides the sector’s ensembles with a self-narrated claim of altruistic sacrifice for Jewish experience under a strong, caring state. This cohesiveness projects the idea of an ideological mission that helps to conceal its violent genesis. It also helps subordinate internal fractions and hierarchies growing out of the neo-liberal organisation of the sector around security giants, which operate in close alliance with the state. In addition, the state’s support of a fertile layer of start-up companies has also kept the production of security technologies within the strategic confines of the state. In its more practical stages, R&D support and funding for basic research schemes tie together innovative projects and risk taking with a more stabilising long-term strategy of the state to use funding to liberate the market while keeping it under tight state control. The involvement of Israel’s scientific institutions in innovations for warfare has been and still is core to the sector. The scientific subsector functions as the producer of resources of war, while knowledge-based structures and people are resources for both private companies and the IDF. 300 10.5 Techno-conceptual shifts Throughout its history Israel’s modes of rule and control have been marked by techno-conceptual shifts. These changes have taken place in negotiation, competition, and collaboration between developments ‘on the ground’ (namely, Israel’s wish to refine its managerial approach to governing in the OPT), the security sector’s industrial organisation, and the opportunities resulting from scientific research in educational institutions and companies’ R&D. A range of themes and sites have defined both the destruction and reconstruction of the colonial site in the OPT and inside Israel proper. The intersection of modernisation (technologisation and digitalisation) and war is a fertile one that as has been demonstrated in the case of Zionism’s discourses as projected into the domestic sphere. This intersection can also explain how the technologies and ideas to support this have found a broader relevance to a global audience and to the general trends of securitisation, war, and policing. Israel’s skills have come to prevail in the context of the filling of niches, where specific devices have become well-known brands in themselves. At the same time, Israel’s exports also happen on a more doctrinal level, where more comprehensive and holistic operational systems of control have become objects of export (such as the separation, or hafrada architectures and the ‘ruling from afar’ Gaza strategy). Israeli system integrators form a broad network and perform a sort of commercialised doctrinal emulation. This was demonstrated through the analyses of a broad range of technologies tied together in large-scale projects of urban reconfigurations (‘smart cities’) to strategies spanning from the physical concentration of the state’s triple helix forces (military, industry and academia) in the ‘technopolis’ to the ‘habits of destruction’ (Khalili 2014), as in the case of the almost routine invasions of Gaza. These sites and themes, which represent the cutting edge of Israel security, are very relevant to the long-term strategies and practices of Zionist security and military pioneers. Therefore in order to understand the techno-conceptual shifts of the industry and the broader settler colonial project, it is vital to analytically merge the forces of science, Zionism, and security. Three domains of security can be identified by examining the nature of the battlefield and the effect of the technologies: the space between the digital and the physical, the Israeli ‘smart city’ as a label and system of urbanisation, urban control, and warfare, and border construction and control as a tool for moulding the nation and constituting its exclusionary ideological and practical mechanisms. 301 A shared feature of these domains is the presence of the politics of intent combined with a progression and intensified advancement of its systems of control developing at least in part against the backdrop of broader changes in the state’s dispositions vis-à-vis the native ‘other’. In relation to Israel’s digitalised avenues of control, interfaces of virtual and physical control have altered and expanded the battlespace. A range of cyber, digital, and biometrical control schemes has come to penetrate the ruling systems of the OPT. These include an intense (pre-emptive) control of the emotional landscape, i.e. the capacity to mobilise the minds of the colonised and shape their actions and reactions through an invisible, random presence. The technologies and systems of digital enveloping represent a sanitised model of war in which the sovereign aims to keep a distance from direct battle and physical contact. The digital enveloping epitomises a refinement in the modes of subjugation, which allows the sovereign to shape and form lives, bodies, and mobility through predictive software, online surveillance, and algorithmic control. The technologised panopticon both de-territorialises and re-territorialises the combat zones into new patterns of subjection and resistance. These measures alter the settler colonial topography into a complex synthesis of visible and invisible controls. The racialisation of these conditions takes place through a codification of the object of control, whereby governing through risk takes place through a set of ideologically charged, hierarchical categorisations such as ID regimes and permit systems. Under these regimes, racialised bodies become carriers of information. Accordingly, the techno-conceptual shifts in Israel’s technological capabilities provide a matrix of control that entails a securitisation of bodies, feeling, behaviour, and human attributes. At the same time, broader political events such as the political geography of the Oslo Accords and the outsourcing of security provisions to private entrepreneurs shape the space in which the capacities take form. The Israeli ‘smart city’ is a key facilitator of this technologised panopticon. The integrated systems of urban control and warfare that operate under ‘the smart city’ label were developed through the intersection of the long-term co-constitutional process of Israel’s settler colonial urbanisation and its concomitant control and deconstruction of Palestine’s urban space. The smart city draws from global discourses of smartness, but has also grown out of Israel’s desire to urbanise and modernise the landscape for the settler population and develop and install a broad range of methods and techniques to establish urban control over Palestinian sites and even conduct ‘smart urban war’ in the OPT. Israel’s intense process of urbanisation reflects a constant movement of the colonial project, which enables companies to harvest and innovate new ideas. 302 Israel’s tactics of urban warfare and its desire to control urban spaces were not developed as add-ons to its military infrastructure; they are an outgrowth of the logics of pushing forward the settler colonial project in Israel-Palestine. This has created an urban setting of architectures where the inevitability of punishment for a crime is implicit. Israeli security companies have not simply taken on the smart city concept and adjusted its technologies to fit a hyped brand. The very experience and urban character of Israel’s settler colonial practices and its dialectic of urban modernisation/de-modernisation and construction/de-construction have provided Israeli companies with the experience, capacities, incentives, and tools to provide thoroughly analysed smart city systems. Holistic smart systems are made manifest in a number of venues such as Digi-Tel (the smart city of Tel Aviv) and the Palestinian urban enclave of Qalqilya. The spread of the smart city in various forms constitutes a continuation or integration of racial control and policing. The multifaceted smart city schemes help sustain urban regimes of control or even ‘urbicide’, i.e. the destruction of (Palestinian) urban life and structures (Graham 2002, 2004). Smart technologies are used to make space open and accessible to control and intervention. Smartness is a label used by the security industry to deracinate and mask invasive policies, which is why this smartness enables and sanctions regimes of differentiation. This fortifies the argument that rather than taking smartness for granted as an outcome of technological progress, Israeli security actors and system integrators tap into the global discourses of urban progress. This happens through the customising and commercialising of Israel’s modes of urban warfare, which transforms them into urban regimes and techniques of governance and control over people and objects. Deploying the label or mantra of smartness as an advertising strategy and metaphor helps to create public acceptance of new technology that often motivates new combinations of private-public interventions under the auspices of the neo-liberal state. The centrality of immigration/access and transfer/denied access to the Zionist projects gives border making a key role in the broader Zionist project. Israel’s border construction and control is at the epicentre of the state’s national strategy of promoting a chosen group and its vision of purifying violence to promote its security. At the same time, borders are used to demarcate difference and to deny access to those who are not considered central to the conception of the national community. As in the case of the smart city label, Israel’s conceptual development of border control reflects the advanced ways in which borders have implanted territorial division and expansion and the registration of people. Israel’s processes of social and geographical change are increasingly aligned with technological breakthroughs that improve border systems. The broader vectors of change in the industry include a qualitative shift from crude violence and invasive 303 militarised rule to governing through the threat of violence and risk management. The imagery of unlimited yet manageable insecurity entails a logic that carries the promise of controlling future security risks. The very lens through which risk is calculated is inherent to a belief system, in this case Zionism’s vision of a secure and stable Jewish state. The key to power in border control lies in the capacity to turn indication (meaning data) into actionable information (processed data). Hacking makes the claim of a duality – or Janus-faced – approach to the calculation of probability. ‘On the one side it is statistical, concerning itself with stochastic laws of chance and process. On the other side it (probability) is epistemological, dedicated to the assessing of reasonable degrees of belief in propositions quite devoid of statistical background’ (Hacking 1975: 12). In addition, what is important about the techno-conceptual shifts is the role of (private) security companies in presenting and analysing public and private spaces as a version of ‘our’ social reality. The combination of capacities to remotely control territory and people, the increased sophistication of data collection, and a clearer division of territories has created a technologised panopticon of settler colonial rule. This means that the assessment of ‘reasonable degrees of belief ’ hinges on an a priori demarcation of risky zones and groups. This fits into a broader scheme of development where racial identity, meanings, and structures are created through the use and shaping of new media and communication technologies (Chow-White 2008). Israel has securitised the geopolitical complex of Israel-Palestine to make territory and populations ‘legible’ to control (Scott 1998). A dominant logic in its security industry is that the remedy to insecurity is to maximise security. This has been accomplished by turning people into objects of securitisation (Stritzel 2011, 2014), which is a key feature of Israel’s settler colonial pursuits. Securitisation needs a vision of security upon which formations of insecurity can be constructed. While not necessarily being a result of Israeli policy/technology transfer, there is a fertile overlap in the way Israel controls the city, the border, and its people and the ways in which neoliberal governance systems have incorporated security into their programmes. This has facilitated the lives of the wealthy elite network/members of the community. 10.6 The laboratory of Palestine There is no doubt the extreme conditions of the OPT, the impunity of Israeli political and military strategies, and the sovereign’s intimate knowledge of the 304 sites of contestation and securitisation (whether border, city or cyberspace) allow Israel to take the boundaries of warfare to a new level with each intervention. Each intervention and techno-conceptual shift in border security has enabled a refinement of the security apparatus that sustains the permanent siege of Palestine. The routine management of the ‘conflict’ provides a continuous and important source of energy, resources, and a sense of urgency to the security industry. An overriding theme throughout this study has been the notion of Palestine as a ‘laboratory’. To begin with, the notion of Palestine as a laboratory has been central to the Zionist vision of science as a tool with which to develop the land. The extension of the conventional laboratory into the land, i.e. to the laboratory of doing and practicing settlement and national resurrection has been the centre piece of Zionism’s trajectory. The ‘lab of Palestine’ provides a metaphor for the conceptual promotion of the security industry: it is the site of the actual testing of security practices in the battlespace. The link between the security industry’s innovation processes and battlefield calculations has proved to be a fertile one. Native resistance, i.e. Palestinian reactions/resistance – whether it is organised or not organised, violent or non-violent – unfolds at the junction between technological vision and political reality. The mere presence of the native Palestinian reminds the sovereign and more broadly the ethnic nation of its permanent crisis or structural imperfections and helps to draw the external boundaries of the community in need of protection. To quote Deborah Rose’s renowned words: ‘To get in the way of settler colonisation, all the native has to do is stay at home’ (Rose 1991: 46). The junction between security technologies and operational systems expresses a duality. The goal of non-friction in the daily governance of the settler colonial project is driven by the promise of freedom from fear; this diminution of this fear is delivered by technology. However, settler colonial realities are messy and do not fit any specific pattern or planned colonial trajectory. In fact, the messiness is a source of production for the security industry, a source of innovation. The reconstitution or renegotiation of the relationship between the coloniser and colonised produces a new sense of ‘ordered messiness’. In other words, a security milieu with the ability to predict and control risks and unknown, future threat scenarios has become a sought-after asset for the national security industry and a point of reference for foreign buyers. This ordered messiness relates to how Israel’s physical and virtual control of the emotional landscape has become a technologised interface geared for warfare and conflict management. Both the doctrine of frictionless control and the messiness produce a set of experiences of how to optimise security by detecting faulty techniques. In this way, the relational violence (Fanon 2008) of the settler colo- 305 nial project is reflected in the innovation process and is distilled under the label of ‘tested in the field’, ‘used by the IDF’, or ‘battle-proven’. Thus, the patterns of pacification, resistance, and response to Israel’s racialised interventions become part of the security production cycle. In fact, the effectiveness of a given technology is measured by the link between the detection of a problem, or security threat and the manufacture of an innovative solution that mitigates the threat. The pacified ‘other’ is an integral part of this process and contributes to the commercial success of a product and the manufacturer’s reputation for battlespace success. Israel-Palestine is far from the only laboratory providing defence and security industries with comparative advantages. However, what is special about Israel’s laboratory is its potency, aided by its incomplete yet hyper-intensive security narrative. Most nationalist projects pursue visions of change and transformation. But in the case of Zionism, this pursuit has been radical. The laboratory metaphor also reflects the centrality of Palestine in the industry’s self-promotion. Looking beyond the typical self-celebratory accounts, we find industry narratives that produce a self-reinforcing narrative of success and global impact. These narratives have become a discourse and a branding mechanism that helps build an image of Israel as a progressive nation among nations with an ethos that fortifies the state’s status as an indispensable tech giant. In order to sustain domination, the Israeli security economy is organised as a distinct scheme of production structured to realise nationalist, economic, and scientific goals by engineering both Jews and Palestinians into complex political geographies. Palestinian subjugation and the goal to improve life for the settler entail both pacification and ruptures of violence and resistance. This involves processes of transfer, a quest for spatial sovereignty, and control and regulation of mobility and access; it involves methods and technologies of separation based on racialised practices and architectural innovation underpinned by the ensuing fragmentation of space, the construction of separate space, fences, walls, and checkpoints to institutionalise comprehensive population control. Taken together, the settler colonial and ethnocratic features of the Zionist enterprise and its desire to expand, combined with developmental features entrenched by a permanent war economy have configured into a complex force striving to retain advanced industrialisation, an advanced military machine, and a state economy with strong internationalised features. In many ways, the genesis and logics of the Israeli security sector have come to reflect the malaise of (western) control and the fear of losing it. This research has explored the tools and processes of nationalist human engineering and its roots and effects as they have developed in the battlespace of 306 Israel-Palestine. It has shown how Zionism is a compelling locus for exploring the formation of cultures and practices of security through racialised nation making that is tied to and simultaneously exists without attachment to a specified territory. In turn, the syntax of colonising power relations is the source of war enacted in the pursuit of a stable mode of Jewish nationhood in Zionism. Thus, a key dynamic of the security industry is the state of Zionist project as a yet unrealised endeavour to align state and nation in one territory. Accordingly, the push to ‘fold population into nation’ (Thacker 2005: 36) and the efforts to institutionalise the Jewish nation into a state have produced the reality of Zionism’s structural incongruence (Brubaker 1996). These efforts, which have been marked by separation, transfer, and insecurities, have both shaped the conditions and missions of the security sector and paved the way for Israel to move from the production of ‘swords’ into the future of ‘silicon chips’. In short, the intersection of Zionist mobilisation for nationhood and the global demand for innovative and cutting-edge security technologies have shaped the interface of Zionism’s calculative ideas and its booming security industry The security products that Israel’s security industry produces and exports are not just technologies of warfare and security. They are also an example of the national experience of assembling actors and institutions into one overarching political project of ethnic homogeneity and territorial expansionism, i.e. one wartime order. On the global level, this plays into a system that helps sustain a liberal order in which security is a key structuring mechanism. In this sense, Israel’s settler colonialism and neoliberal policing are a good marriage. The core tenets and aspirations of the Zionist project that are the foundation of the realisation of a Jewish state have produced a historical paradox. The creation of a secure state for the Jews has produced new insecurities tied to the colonial experience of both Jews and Palestinians. Insecurities for those subjected to (new) modes of control, i.e. Palestinians, as well as insecurity for Israeli people as the settler colonial condition of Jewish nation making has led the trajectory of the Jewish people into a new epoch of political struggles. These struggles are often associated with an ethos of emancipation, but in reality they are also tied to the deep human insecurity which comes from the colonial condition. The duality of security/insecurity ingrained into the settler colonial project has created a nationalism in permanent crisis. This condition feeds the security industry, but also discourages the questioning of what kind of security these practices serve. The argument that Israel modernised through its settler colonial endeavour captures the paradox in the strong correlation between security and Zionism. The flipside 307 of this correlation, i.e. the negation of Palestinian rights and a hyper-militarised Israeli state obsessed with security, exposes a perhaps stronger force that is difficult to repel once it has been established: new forms of insecurities that cannot be eliminated through intervention. The Haaretz newspaper outlined these new forms of insecurities eloquently an editorial in 2010: A dangerous dissonance has developed between visible reality and its invisible counterpart. The relative quiet that the Israel Defense Forces, the Shin Bet security service and high tech have granted us has become a toxic quiet. It has allowed us to celebrate our lives without seeing the circumstances of our lives. 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New York: Routledge. 337 TURNING ‘SWORDS INTO S ILICON CHIPS’ – The Israeli Homeland Security Industry and Making of Jewish Nationhood Even before the founding of the Israeli state in 1948, the Israeli economy has grown steadily to become the epitome of a ‘high-tech nation’ that exports advanced technologies and software and hardware to a global customer clientele. A key pillar of this ‘economic miracle’ has developed and grows from the country’s vast homeland security sector. Israeli homeland security lies at the heart of Zionists nation and state building, and expresses both the discursive and material struggles involved in establishing and securing a Jewish state in the former British Mandatory Palestine. The social history of Israel’s security economy is a tale of techno-conceptual shifts in the techno-national evolution of Zionism. The security industry produces a broad range of technologies and systems of control, which have been developed over time to meet the needs of the Israeli military and the growing settler community. In recent years, the industry has had a large impact well beyond the cartography of Israel-Palestine. Building on original empirical material and interviews with actors of the Israeli security industry and fieldwork conducted in interviews and at defence and security fairs, this thesis provides a social and economic history of the genesis, development, and practices of the companies, institutions, and individuals that comprise Israel’s homeland security sector. Its research focuses on how the volatile mix of security, innovation, war, and racialisation has served to advance a distinct nationhood ideal, but has also produced a variety of messy outcomes flowing from the state’s unfinished character as a homogenised Jewish state. The thesis engages critically with theories of nationalism, race, settler colonialism, security, and technological nationalism. It examines how Zionist visions of ethnic nationhood and settler colonial impulses have led to a production scheme revolving around security innovation, and analyses the deeper meaning and logic of the dominant s ecurity narratives, i.e., the larger political content of security. It discusses the ways in which Israeli homeland security is described and practiced by the industry’s actors and entrepreneurs. The thesis is also about Palestine, i.e., how the land of Palestine has been reconfigured, ruptured, minimised, and locked-in and how it has served as a laboratory for the industry and helped to realise settler colonial aspirations. It is an account of what security has meant and still means for those living under Israeli rule, and how the control and managing of Palestine has become an exemplar of security in Israel’s branding and engagement on the global platforms of security trade and knowledge exchanges.