The Rise Of Zionism

ChatGPT says: Alliance Theory would see Zionism not primarily as an ideology about land or theology, but as a successful re-engineering of Jewish alliance structure after the collapse of the old rabbinic–diaspora coordination system under modernity.

Pre-Zionist crisis.

By the 19th century, the traditional Jewish alliance system had three problems:

Loss of interdependence.
States replaced kehillot, rabbinic courts, and communal welfare. Jews no longer needed the old institutions to survive.

Transitivity breakdown.
Jews were entering rival super-alliances: liberal nationalism, socialism, science, bourgeois professions. “Who are my allies?” was no longer uniformly “other Jews under Torah authority.”

Rival map instability.
Emancipation promised inclusion, but periodic pogroms and antisemitism showed that Jews were still treated as a distinct out-group. The old exile narrative no longer coordinated action effectively, but the threat never fully disappeared.

Alliance Theory predicts that when a long-standing coordination system fails but external threat remains, groups seek a new focal alliance form.

Zionism as alliance reboot.

Zionism solved the coordination problem in three moves.

Re-territorialization of alliance
It re-anchored Jewish identity to a state. Not just a homeland, but a power-organizing center. Army, language, economy, law, and education became Jewish again. This recreated interdependence at the highest level. Survival, status, and security once more depended on in-group institutions.

Transitivity restoration
Zionism re-synchronized the rival map. Arabs, later the broader Arab and Muslim world, and eventually parts of the international left became the shared out-group. Support for Israel became the new loyalty signal that cut across religious and secular Jews. You could disagree about God, but you now shared enemies and fate.

Bridging alliance creation
Zionism forged a rare high-low alliance.
Holocaust survivors and socialist pioneers.
Religious traditionalists and secular modernists.
Western diplomats and Middle Eastern refugees.
High-tech elites and Mizrahi working classes.

Alliance Theory calls this a bridging coalition. Elites provided diplomacy, capital, and narrative legitimacy. Masses provided demographic weight, military manpower, and existential motivation.

Why it succeeded where other nationalist projects failed.

Because Jewish alliance psychology had been honed by two millennia of minority survival. High-cost signaling, endogamy, education, ritual time, and persecution memory had already trained Jews to maintain dense transitivity and loyalty under threat. Zionism plugged into this machinery and redirected it from text-centered survival to state-centered power.

Israel today through alliance theory.

Israel now sits in a complex, multi-layered alliance structure.

Internally.

Secular liberals
Religious Zionists
Haredim
Mizrahi traditionalists
Russian immigrants
Arab citizens

This is a fragile bridging coalition. It holds because external rivals keep transitivity high. War and threat synchronize the ally map. Peace or prolonged stability increase factional rivalry.

Externally.

Strategic alliance with the United States and parts of the West.
Tacit alignment with Sunni Arab regimes against Iran.
Hostile alignment with Iran-led proxy network.
Moral conflict with global progressive institutions.

Alliance Theory predicts exactly what we see.

When Israel is framed as a Western outpost defending liberal order, it enjoys elite transitivity.
When it is framed as an ethno-nationalist colonial state, transitivity collapses with progressive coalitions and shifts to nationalist and security-oriented ones.

Diaspora Zionism.

For many Jews, especially in the West, Israel now functions less as a place and more as a coalition symbol. Support for Israel is the primary remaining Jewish boundary marker that still coordinates identity across religious differences. That is classic alliance logic. It is the last shared loyalty test.

Future trajectory.

Alliance Theory would forecast three pressures.

Internal coalition strain
As Haredim grow demographically and secular elites bear military and economic burdens, interdependence frays. Without renewed bridging narratives, factional rivalry intensifies.

External rival consolidation
If Iran-axis hostility and global delegitimation increase, Jewish transitivity will harden. Siege conditions always strengthen in-group cohesion and elevate nationalist authority.

Diaspora realignment
Western Jews embedded in progressive alliances face transitivity conflict. Their local allies increasingly define Israel as a rival. This forces a choice. Defection, silence, or intensified Zionist loyalty. Alliance psychology does not tolerate ambiguity for long.

Bottom line.

Zionism rose because it reconstituted Jewish alliance structure at the level of sovereignty, restoring interdependence, transitivity, and rival clarity after modernity dissolved the old rabbinic system.

It persists because it remains the only coordination system that:

Organizes Jewish power
Defines Jewish enemies
Produces Jewish elites
Demands Jewish sacrifice
And makes Jewish survival a collective, not merely cultural, project.

Whether it stabilizes or fractures will depend not on theology or morality, but on whether its internal factions can continue to treat one another as indispensable allies in the face of shared external rivals.

Alliance Theory would interpret the Muslim–Israeli conflict not primarily as a dispute over land, theology, or human rights, but as a long-running, high-salience alliance conflict in which rival coalitions define their identities, loyalties, and moral worlds through opposition to one another.

At its core, the conflict is about rival alliance systems trying to coordinate:

In-group identity

Enemy definition

Transitivity

Legitimacy of power

For Jews and Israelis, Zionism rebuilt a collapsed alliance structure around sovereignty, army, and state. For many Muslim and Arab populations, especially after the fall of empires and colonial humiliation, opposition to Israel became one of the most powerful focal points for re-synchronizing their own alliance structures.

Several Alliance Theory dynamics explain the intensity and persistence.

First, sacred boundary anchoring.
Jerusalem, Al-Aqsa, the Temple Mount, and the land itself function as ultra-high-value alliance markers. Sacred sites are perfect coalition anchors because they are non-fungible and morally absolute. Any concession signals not just loss of territory but betrayal of the in-group and defection to the out-group. Alliance Theory predicts maximal rigidity around sacred focal points.

Second, transitivity lock-in.
Over decades, the conflict synchronized rival maps across huge populations.

If you are with Israel, you are aligned with:
The West
The U.S. security order
Secular nationalism
Jewish civilizational survival

If you are against Israel, you are aligned with:
The Palestinian cause
Islamic solidarity
Anti-colonial identity
Resistance to Western dominance

Once these rival maps become transitive, moderation becomes structurally punished. Any actor who tries to bridge risks being labeled a traitor by both sides. That is why peacemakers are often killed or politically destroyed. They violate transitivity.

Third, competitive victimhood.
Each side’s narrative centers its own suffering and moral innocence while discounting the other’s. Alliance Theory explains this as propagandistic bias in service of mobilization. Victim narratives are not primarily about truth. They are about:

Hardening in-group loyalty
Justifying sacrifice
Delegitimizing compromise
Moralizing the rival as existential evil

Fourth, bridging alliance failure.
Peace requires a stable bridging coalition that includes:

Israeli security elites
Palestinian political elites
Regional Arab powers
Religious authorities
External guarantors

Alliance Theory predicts that such coalitions are fragile because internal incentives reward hardliners. Within each camp, the most intense boundary-policers gain status, while bridge-builders are accused of betrayal.

Fifth, identity fusion under threat.
Repeated wars, intifadas, and massacres create what alliance psychology calls fusion. Personal identity becomes inseparable from group fate. In such states, people are willing to die, kill, and sacrifice children’s futures because defection feels like self-annihilation. This is not ideology. It is evolved alliance circuitry under siege conditions.

Why the conflict resists rational resolution.

From an Alliance Theory perspective, the conflict is not unsolved because leaders are stupid or evil. It is unsolved because the alliance structures make certain outcomes emotionally and politically impossible:

Mutual recognition undermines boundary sanctity.
Power-sharing weakens in-group hierarchy.
Territorial compromise breaks sacred focal points.
Narrative symmetry collapses competitive victimhood.

Every peace proposal threatens internal alliance stability more than it promises external peace.

Future trajectories.

Alliance Theory would say the conflict will shift only if one of three structural changes occurs.

Rival map re-sorting.
If major Muslim powers fully reclassify Israel from existential enemy to strategic ally, transitivity could change. Some of this is beginning with Gulf states and Iran becoming the primary rival. But mass-level identity lag keeps old maps alive.

Generational identity decay.
If emotional fusion weakens and material interdependence rises, alliance intensity can soften. This requires long periods without major violence, which the current structure keeps disrupting.

New super-ordinate alliance.
Only a larger identity that both sides can join, such as a credible regional security and prosperity bloc, could subsume the conflict. Alliance Theory predicts this is extremely hard when sacred history and humiliation are involved.

In short:

The Muslim–Israeli conflict persists because it is not just a political dispute.
It is a civilizational alliance boundary that organizes identity, honor, victimhood, and loyalty on both sides.

Until the underlying alliance maps change, no amount of rational negotiation can dissolve what is, at bottom, a deeply stabilized friend–enemy system.

About Luke Ford

My work has been covered in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and on 60 Minutes. I teach Alexander Technique in Beverly Hills (Alexander90210.com).
This entry was posted in Israel, Zionism. Bookmark the permalink.