In his capacity as defense minister, David Ben-Gurion establishes officially the Military Government to replace the ad hoc administrations that the army had established in areas that continued to be home to a significant number of Palestinians. The purpose of the military government is to impose as many restrictions as possible on the daily life of the Palestinians, to prevent the return of refugees crossing the Arab-Israeli lines back to their homes, and to facilitate the seizure of Palestinian properties. In the areas placed under their responsibility, the military governors will make immediate use of two articles of the Defence (Emergency) Regulations, 1945, issued by the British Mandate: article 124, which allows them to impose a curfew in any area for any length of time; and article 125, which allows them to forbid any person to enter or leave an area declared a closed area if such person does not have a permit. The military government will be abolished in 1966.
The Palestinians who remained in Israel when the state was created lived formally under military rule from 1948 until the end of 1966. Over a two-year period, the military government was dismantled and its repressive powers were transferred to the police and intelligence services. During that transition, Israel launched a war (on 5 June 1967) against neighboring Arab states in which it seized the remaining Palestinian territories (the
The Israeli government decided to impose military rule on Palestinians who remained in their homes in
Although the Israeli government officially vowed that Palestinians who remained in the state would be treated as citizens with full rights, in fact it treated them as enemies under occupation, and military rule was the primary tool it used to control them. Tactics included strict control of Palestinians’ movements and organization, suppression of any attempts to resist repressive policies, and discrimination against them in all spheres of life. In the first few years after the
Military rule, and the way it managed Arab citizens’ civil affairs, had its legal basis in the Defense (Emergency) Regulations of 1945
and other mandatory and Israeli legislation. Of the 162 Articles in the Emergency Regulations, the military government used only five extensively. Articles 110, 111, and 124 were used to restrict or prevent freedom of movement, and Articles 109 and 125 were used to announce closed zones that Arab citizens were forbidden from entering. Military personnel who worked in the military government issued movement permits to people they liked and denied them to those they did not. Arab citizens were forced to request permission from the military governor if they wanted to do any kind of work or activity beyond the borders of their villages. This included engaging in paid work, commerce, shopping, education, and health care. Military personnel dictated Arab citizens’ livelihoods and every aspect of their lives, and sometimes even intervened in their relationships, including marriage and divorce. Military personnel also encouraged people who cooperated with Zionist settler colonialism; supported political and community leaders who cooperated with the government and
In 1958, the Rosen Commission
, a parliamentary commission headed by Minister of Justice Pinchas Rosen
, was formed to investigate when military rule could be terminated. This committee was active during a period when Egyptian president
This second phase of government control of Palestinians in Israel was characterized by the easing of military rule over Arab citizens, starting in 1959. This was due to several reasons. The Israeli economy had developed remarkably and needed more cheap labor, which required greater freedom of movement for Arab workers. There was also a shift in Israel’s security considerations. Some of the original goals of military rule had been achieved during that period; the government had successfully prevented refugees from returning across the ceasefire lines, and it controlled villages from which Palestinians were displaced. Moreover, in the wake of the
The way these representatives voted reveals that even from the beginning, military rule went beyond civil, social, and economic spheres. It also infiltrated the political sphere, particularly with regards to Arab representation in the Knesset. For diplomatic reasons, the ruling party, under Ben-Gurion’s leadership, was unable to avoid granting Arabs in Israel the right to vote, but it still used this right to its advantage. It used military rule to prevent independent Arab parties from forming, and it put pressure on Arab leaders in villages to persuade and threaten residents and to encourage them to vote for the ruling party and Arab candidates associated with it. In contrast to Mapai’s tactics, other Zionist parties tried to attract Arab voters to increase their share of Knesset seats, using Arab voters as pawns in these parties’ games. Only when it became clear that the military government had no security significance and was simply playing a political role for Mapai, did right-wing parties such as
Ben-Gurion thwarted all attempts to abolish military rule until 1963, when Levi Eshkol assumed the position of Prime Minister. In late 1963, Eshkol announced that he planned to end military rule and the military government. This eventually occurred in December 1966, when the police, under the supervision of the Chief of Staff, was tasked with implementing the Emergency Regulations. In terms of Israeli legal tools, it was not until late 1968 that military rule was abolished, relevant articles in the Emergency Regulations were suspended, and military commanders’ surveillance of Palestinians in Israel ended.
These developments did not fundamentally change Arab citizens’ lives in the first stage. With the 1967