Muslim and Jewish groups stand against hate; an incisive analysis of Sharon
December 6, 2004
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Today's Contents:
ANTI-PALESTINIAN, ANTI-MUSLIM HATE SPEECH BY SELF-PROCLAIMED
MEMBER OF JDL PROMPTS MPAC & ADL TO UNITE
(Direct E-mail) Hope for setting a
precedent
Sharon and the Future of
Palestine (NY Review of Books) An extensive analysis
of Ariel Sharon and the current situation by Henry Siegman
[JPN Commentary: A poster in a store
window has brought about an unusual alliance between the Muslim Public Affairs
Council and the Anti-Defamation League.
The
offensive signs in the window of a Santa Monica store included extremely racist
language directed at Islam, Arabs and Palestinians. In the past, the ADL has
been criticized for being slow to respond to anti-Muslim rhetoric. One can
surely hope that this is a sign of better days to come, where Jewish and Muslim
groups stand together against speech and actions of hate against Jews, Muslims,
or anyone else. – MP]
ANTI-PALESTINIAN, ANTI-MUSLIM HATE SPEECH BY
SELF-PROCLAIMED MEMBER OF JDL PROMPTS MPAC & ADL TO UNITE
View Exclusive Footage of JDL Member Confessing to be Member
(Los Angeles – 12/6/04) – The
Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) will
hold a press conference tomorrow to partner against the racism and bigotry
expressed by a self-proclaimed member of the Jewish Defense League (JDL), a
known terrorist organization. Salam Al-Marayati, Executive Director of MPAC and
Amanda Susskind, Executive Director of the ADL will share their organizations'
joint efforts to denounce Santa Monica business owner Bunnie Meyers' signs
displaying derogatory and slanderous rhetoric against Palestinians and President
Bush in her store windows. Exclusive footage of the storeowners' affirmation as
a member of the JDL will also be shown for the first time.
After
exposing a link between a Santa Monica storeowner and the JDL just weeks ago,
MPAC called for a special meeting with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and Rabbi Steven Jacobs of Temple Kol
Tikvah to discuss safety concerns of the community. The FBI and ADL expressed
their commitment to protect the community, and join efforts to increase public
awareness and pressure on the Santa Monica storeowner.
The press
conference comes over eight weeks since the Muslim Public Affairs Council first
discovered the offensive signs, which refers to Arabs as "stupid rag head" and
"pig," Islam as a "pig faith" and Palestinians as "murderous scum pigs" and
"God-less freaks," further stating "Palestinians are worthless filthy scumbag
cockroaches descended from the bowel movements of pigs!"
In efforts to
condemn and organize against this hate speech, MPAC has also joined efforts with
the Los Angeles County Human Relations Commission, the Asian Pacific American
Legal Center (APALC), the Coalition on the Humane Immigrant Rights of Los
Angeles (CHIRLA), the South Asian Network (SAN), the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC), the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center (LAGLC),
and Santa Monica residents. The partnership also contacted the City of Santa
Monica's Consumer Protection Unit, filed a hate incident report with the Santa
Monica Police Department, and held a press conference with Santa Monica Mayor
pro-tem Kevin McKeown, Robin Toma, Executive Director of the LA County Human
Relations Commission and Rabbi Steven Jacobs of Temple Kol Tikvah.
[JPN Commentary: In this essay published in the
December 2nd issue of the New York Review of Books, Henry Siegman helpfully
connects the dots of known information about the causes and consequences of
three and a half years of Intifada and Israeli military response and settlement
activity. He also sets forth a realistic plan for resolving the conflict. His
analysis is that Israel's current "disengagement" process under the leadership
of Ariel Sharon, even if it takes place as planned, is not a cause for any
optimism that the reigning powerbroker, Sharon, has changed his spots or that
the Palestinians are likely to get a fair deal. "Sharon is not about to agree to
the minimal conditions for a workable Palestinian state," Siegman contends. He
cites a Peace Now Settlement Watch report that shows new construction taking
place at 474 settlements, including 50 sites where construction goes beyond the
boundaries of existing settlements, in violation of Sharon's promises to
President Bush. Hundreds of acres of West Bank land have been newly appropriated
by Israel this year.
The upshot is that the Gaza withdrawal is meant to
offer Palestinians a virtual prison compound in which residents will be isolated
from the outside and denied freedom of movement within. Thirty-seven percent of
the Palestinian population lives in the tiny Gaza enclave (representing just
1.25% of the original territory of the pre-1948 Palestinian mandate), and the
territorial formula that the Sharon government envisions for them almost
guarantees chaos. But Sharon's senior advisor and chief of staff Dov Weissglas
has been remarkably candid that the aim is not to further -- but to prevent --
any advancement of a peace process. The disengagement, according to Weissglas,
"supplies the amount formaldehyde that is necessary so there will not be a
political process with the Palestinians."
Given increasingly successful
efforts of Israel to subdivide the Palestinian territories into three
discontiguous cantons, the salient question then is whether an apartheid state
will be the final result. Siegman cites the prominent Israeli columnist Nahum
Barnea in answer to this question: "thirty-seven years after the occupation, in
the eyes of a large part of the world Israel has become a pariah country. It's
not yet the South Africa of apartheid, but definitely from the same family." As
for the barrier Israel is building to separate itself from the Palestinians,
retired general and former director of military intelligence Shlomo Gazit has
remarked that the reason Israel lost its case for the wall at the International
Court of Justice at The Hague is that what was once a "security fence" has been
turned into a "political fence." Gazit recognizes that "[t]he argument in The
Hague was not about the security needs of Israel, but about Israel's right to
establish political Jewish settlements deep inside Judea and
Samaria."
Siegman points out that Palestinian terror directed against
Israeli civilians, as well as the failure of Arafat as an institution builder,
have contributed to the failure of the political process. "But," he continues,
"Palestinian failures do not begin to legitimize Sharon's policies, or those of
the Bush administration, for that matter. Palestinians have the right to a state
in the West Bank and Gaza not because they meet certain standards set by Sharon,
the man who aspires to acquiring much of their land, or because Bush has a
'vision' of two states living side by side, but because of universally
recognized principles of national self-determination."
Only international
intervention, Siegman concludes, not mere facilitation, stands to end the bloody
conflict. He recommends that an international conference be arranged with the
participation of the UN, the EU, Russia, and hopefully the US. The conference
should have as its goal the adoption of a set of internationally recognized
principles for ending the conflict, with or without Israeli and Palestinian
approval. Such principles are already widely acknowledged: return to the
pre-1967 boundaries, as stipulated by the Road Map, with adjustments to be made
on the basis of one-for-one swaps; return of Palestinian refugees to Palestinian
territory only; East Jerusalem to become the capital of the new Palestinian
state; and special provisions for the Haram as-Sharif/Temple Mount. While
Siegman does not expect that the US would participate in such a conference, he
believes that American leaders would have a hard time denying the legitimacy of
clearly expressed international consensus on principles that derive directly
from the Road Map. Nor does he imagine that Israel, or even the Palestinians,
would agree to implement these principles. But, he says, the point is to
influence the cost-analysis of both sides, whose economic and political
relations with the international community would be affected by refusal to
comply or by implementation of unilateral measures.
Siegman's argument is
that European unity in enacting such a plan perhaps may be augured by the
unexpectedly near-unanimous vote in The Hague against Israel's separation
barrier. His analysis, and his plan, make sense. --LS]
Sharon and the Future of Palestine
By
Henry Siegman
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17591
The New York Review of Books
Volume 51, Number 19 · December 2,
2004
Feature
1.
When Ariel Sharon first announced his intention to "disengage"
unilaterally from Gaza and to dismantle four isolated settlements in the
northern West Bank, many observers believed he was on his way to fulfilling
their expectation that, sooner or later, he would transform himself into an
Israeli De Gaulle and make the tough decisions that would finally end the
Israeli– Palestinian conflict. Even those who were skeptical of the possibility
of such a transformation, and believed that Sharon intended the Gaza withdrawal
as leverage to gain international acceptance of Israel's control over much of
the West Bank, believed that a disengagement from Gaza would create a precedent
that would lead to further withdrawals from the West Bank as well, for it would
dispel the myth that any effort to dismantle settlements would drag the country
into a civil war. For this reason, not only the Bush administration, which has
found no measure taken by Sharon too outrageous to deserve American support, but
also the European Union, the United Nations, and Russia (the other three members
of the Quartet formed to oversee the implementation of the "road map"), as well
as much of Israel's left, welcomed Sharon's initiative.
The perception
that the principal architect of the settlement enterprise had been transformed
into a crusader for their removal has been reinforced by an ever-widening breach
between Sharon and much of his own ruling Likud Party—which overwhelmingly
turned down his proposal for the Gaza disengagement in a referendum on May 2.
The Likud Central Committee humiliated Sharon once again on July 31 by voting
down his proposal to bring the Labor Party into the government to create a
majority in his cabinet in support of the disengagement. On October 11, many in
Sharon's ruling party joined the political opposition in support of a pro forma
motion repudiating the prime minister's "state of the nation" speech marking the
opening of the winter term of Israel's parliament. It was the first time in
Israel's history that the Knesset voted to express no confidence in a prime
minister's opening address. Subsequently, on October 26, a clear majority of the
Knesset voted to endorse Sharon's plan, overriding the opposition to him within
the Likud Party.
Sharon's willingness to risk his premiership and to
split his own party over the issu of the Gaza withdrawal has persuaded many in
the most unlikely quarters that he ha finally realized, in the words of an
Economist editorial, that "he cannot erase the national dream of the
Palestinians by force."[1] The Economist admonished "a world that has grown used
to demonising Mr. Sharon" to wish "for his success."
Similarly, Avraham
Tal, an Israeli columnist, asked, "Will Sharon ever shed the demonic image that
is attached to him? Even when he decides to take actions no one ever imagined
him capable of, struggling valiantly against persistent forces in his own party
trying to torpedo him, Sharon continues to be painted as a cunning politician
who always cloaks his true intentions."[2]
Citing an Op-Ed essay I had
published in the International Herald Tribune,[3] Tal faulted "Siegman and his
ilk" for failing to understand how much Sharon has changed. He insisted that
"Sharon now understands that in order to remain a Jewish state, Israel must
disengage from as many Palestinians as possible," which means getting rid of
Gaza and most of the West Bank.
According to many of these same
observers, it is not only Sharon who has been transformed, but the Palestinian
side as well. They point to a Palestinian "Young Guard" that is challenging the
so-called "Abus" who came from Tunis with Yasser Arafat, leaders seen as corrupt
and inept by members of the younger Palestinian generation, who earned their
right to be heard by taking part in the first intifada and doing time in Israeli
jails. The Economist editorial cited above concluded that this younger
generation of Palestinians has learned that "they cannot erase Israel by
force."
Unfortunately, these views are based on a misreading of both
Israeli and Palestinian realities. Sharon is not about to agree to the minimal
conditions for a workable Palestinian state. His unshakable resolve to avoid
dealing with the Palestinians—even to prevent chaos in the wake of the promised
withdrawal from Gaza—and to widen Jewish settlement activity throughout the West
Bank, which has increased following the announcement of his disengagement plans,
gives the lie to such wishful thinking.
The latest report from Israel's
Peace Now Settlement Watch found that building and infrastructure construction
is taking place at 474 settlement sites in the West Ban and Gaza, including
fifty sites where expansion or new construction deviates from th existing
boundaries of the settlements, in violation of promises made by Sharon to
President Bush [4] As of the end of August, there were around 3,700 housing
units under construction throughout the occupied territories. Moreover, the
ground was being prepared for thousands of additional houses—even in locations
earmarked by Sharon for evacuation under the disengagement plan. The growth and
extension of major settlements in the West Bank now being carried out help to
divide it into three noncontiguous Palestinian cantons, in effect Bantustans
that Palestinians could inhabit under Israeli surveillance without having a
unified state of their own.
Under the guise of "state lands" Sharon's
government has continued to expropriate territory in the West Bank to expand the
settlements, according to data from Israel's Civil Administration. Since the
start of 2004, some 2,200 dunams of land (550 acres) in the West Bank have been
declared state lands, compared to 1,700 dunams designated as such last year. As
noted by Peace Now's Settlement Watch, this designation consistently allowed
Israeli governments to establish and expand the settlements, enabling them to
circumvent their commitment not to expropriate any more Palestinian territory
for settlement construction.
For Sharon, withdrawal from Gaza is the
price Israel must pay if it is to complete the cantonization of the West Bank
under Israel's control. Just as important, Gaza is to be turned into a living
example of why Palestinians are undeserving of an independent state. Under the
conditions attached by Sharon to the disengagement, Gaza —an area that makes up
only 1.25 percent of the Palestine Mandate but contains 37 percent of the
Palestinian population—will exist essentially as a large prison isolated from
the world, including its immediate neighbors Egypt, Jordan, and the West Bank.
Its population will be denied the freedom of movement essential to any
possibility of economic recovery and outside investment. Sharon's insistence
that withdrawal from Gaza will be entirely an Israeli initiative and will not be
negotiated with any Palestinian leaders seems designed to produce a state of
anarchy in Gaza, one that will enable him to say, "Look at the violent, corrupt,
and primitive people we must contend with; they can't run anything on their
own."[5]
Until recently, many would have rejected such a harsh reading
of Sharon' intentions as defamatory. But this is now impossible, for Sharon's
closest friend an colleague, Dov Weissglas, who has been intimately involved in
the formulation an execution of Sharon's policies as the prime minister's senior
adviser and chief of staff has described in great detail the content and purpose
of Sharon's propose disengagement from Gaza. In a long interview that appeared
in Haaretz,[6] he asserts bluntly that the disengagement, which he and Sharon
had persuaded President Bush and both houses of Congress to endorse, was
actually intended to prevent a peace process, to consign Bush's road map to
oblivion, and to preclude the emergence of a Palestinian state of any
kind.
Apparently Weissglas was concerned that there might be Israelis
who, even after his interview, may still believe that the disengagement from
Gaza and a few West Bank settlements proposed by Sharon might lead to further
disengagements in the West Bank—an argument advanced by Shimon Peres, the Labor
Party chairman, who has been eagerly awaiting an invitation from Sharon to
rejoin his government. Weissglas assures us that given the conditions Sharon
attached to resuming a peace process, "Palestinians would have to turn into
Finns" before this could happen. "Effectively, this whole package called the
Palestinian state, with all that it entails, has been removed indefinitely from
our agenda," he said. "And all this...with a [US] presidential blessing and the
ratification of both houses of Congress." Just in case someone may still have
illusions, he explains that the proposed disengagement "is actually
formaldehyde. It supplies the amount of formaldehyde that is necessary so there
will not be a political process with the Palestinians." As Ephraim Sneh, a Labor
member of the Knesset, observed, "Formaldehyde, it should be noted, is the
liquid in which dead bodies are preserved."[7]
Evidently, the only ones
who still don't get it, despite Weissglas's painstaking clarifications, are the
officials in Washington. After Sharon's office issued an entirely
predictable—and patently dishonest—statement that he remains committed to the
road map, a US State Department spokesman immediately declared that not only
does this administration not doubt Israel's continued adherence to the road map
and to President Bush's two-state "vision," but there is "no cause" for such
doubt.
What is remarkable about all of this is neither Sharon's deception
about the purposes of his disengagement nor the administration's pandering
during a presidential election.[8] It is, rather, the arrogance that allows
Weissglas to flaunt Israel's deception without fearing that it would damage
Sharon's plan, so certain are he and Sharon that they have Bush and Congress in
their pockets.
What is uncertain is why Bush signed his letter of April
14, which Weissglas drafted, in effect giving US approval to Sharon's plan to
bury the Palestinian national cause by conferring legitimacy on Israel's
settlements. Did he do so out of sheer naiveté or because he knowingly
collaborated with Sharon's deception?
Even without Weissglas's extensive
interview, it should have been clear long before now that the "new Palestinian
leadership" Sharon has been calling for would never agree to Sharon's version of
a peace agreement—an "interim" arrangement that leaves Israel in control of the
West Bank and defers Palestinian statehood for decades while Israel continues to
annex territory and to fragment what is left into isolated cantons.
There
is no basis for the self-serving Israeli claim promoted by Ehud Barak—an by The
Economist—that the goal of the older Palestinian generation is the eradication
of Israel. Neither the Old Guard nor the Young Guard believes in that goal—if
only because they know how utterly unachievable it is. But both groups will
resist territorial concessions to Israel if they are not accompanied by fair
exchanges of territory on both sides of the pre-1967 border that are mutually
agreed to in a peace negotiation. This issue has never distinguished the "Abus"
from their challengers.
Those who identify with the Palestinian Young
Guard are demanding an end to the corruption of the old-time Fatah leaders who
dominate the Palestinian Authority; they also call for new leaders who can
formulate a coherent strategic approach to the struggle for Palestinian
statehood, something Arafat was incapable of providing. Whether the Young Guard
will succeed in producing such a strategy, and whether that strategy will
embrace or reject violence, will be determined in large measure by Israel's
willingness to assure Palestinians that a viable state can be achieved by
nonviolent means. That is an assurance that Sharon's proposal for unilateral
disengagement from Gaza does not offer. Indeed, as everyone now knows from
Weissglas's interview, it is intended to preclude
it.
2.
The assaults on Sharon from the right have been
misunderstood. Sharon and his right-wing critics differ over whether
Palestinians should be allowed to call an apartheid-like arrangement of three
disconnected and isolated West Bank cantons a state. Sharon insists they should
be, for otherwise the arrangement would be rejected by the United States. Many
in the Likud, including Benjamin Netanyahu, argue that if Israel concedes to the
Palestinians the right even to nominal statehood, this would incite a dynamic
movement toward sovereignty that Israel would be unable to
control.
Despite the abusive and violent rhetoric they direct at Sharon,
most leaders of the settlement movement understand that Sharon's unilateral
disengagement from Gaza is really intended to assure Israel's permanent control
of the West Bank. But they also fear what Israel's left hopes for— that the
precedent of removing any settlement will dispel a longstanding taboo and open
the door to the removal of settlements even in the West Bank. Furthermore, they
do not agree with Sharon that such a withdrawal is a price Israel must pay. They
are convinced that US disapproval of Israel's continuing annexation of
Palestinian territories, even in the West Bank, would make little difference,
for the "realities on the ground" would in the end prevail. After all, did not
President Bush say in his letter to Sharon of April 14 that the US recognizes
that "new realities" on the ground (created unilaterally by Israel) must be
recognized by Palestinians in any future peace accord?
There is yet
another reason for the murderous rage that has characterized the reaction of
some extremist settlers and their rabbis (including those known in Israel as
"the hilltop youth," whom the then foreign minister Sharon encouraged after the
signing in 1998 of the Wye River Memorandum between Israel and the
Palestinians—which provided for gradual "redeployment" of Israeli forces in the
West Bank—to "grab as many hilltops in the West Bank as possible"). As some
Israeli observers have already noted,[9] two states living side by side already
exist between Jordan and the Mediterranean—the State of Israel and the Jewish
settler state in the West Bank and Gaza. In that settler state, Israeli norms
and laws do not apply, and Israeli police and the IDF largely defer to the
settlers. Settlers who injure or murder Palestinian farmers and destroy their
property and farm lands are rarely arrested and almost always go unpunished.[10]
This settler state has succeeded in recruiting a network of supporters
in the State of Israel, including cabinet ministers who head various ministries
that have been channeling to them— surreptitiously and criminally, without any
public accountability—hundreds of millions of dollars for the expansion of
settlements and infrastructure. These settlers simply do not recognize the right
of the State of Israel and its elected officials to interfere with their
messianically inspired rule in this settler state. Sharon's decision to
dismantle the settlements in Gaza is seen by them as a challenge to their
"sovereignty."
Still, whatever their differences over semantics and
tactics, and over whether to let go of Gaza, Sharon and his Likud critics share
an essentially identical understandin of Israel's relations to the Palestinian
people and to the territories. No one ha described that understanding more
revealingly than Uzi Arad, a foreign policy adviser when Netanyahu was prime
minister. Arad is now with the Interdisciplinary Institut in Herzliya, at whose
annual meetings Sharon and the heads of Israel's security establishment make
some of their most important pronouncements. It was at such meeting last
December that Sharon announced his intention to resort to unilatera measures
that would serve Israel's needs
In an article in Haaretz,[11] Arad
scoffed at the argument that because Jews, as a result of the higher Palestinian
birth rate, will become a minority in Palestine, they must either withdraw from
the territories or impose an apartheid regime on the Palestinians if they are to
preserve the Jewish identity of the state. He wrote that "for the last decade,
all Israeli governments have been implementing political disengagement from the
Palestinian population of the territories. The cities and towns of the West Bank
have long since been evacuated. The number of Palestinians between the river and
the sea is no longer relevant to Israel being a Jewish democratic
state."
In fact, the South African apartheid government also "disengaged"
from the Bantustans that they had set up as homelands for the black majority.
Arad and those who support Sharon's policies seem not to understand, or not to
care, that it is precisely South Africa's "disengagement" that defined its
racist regime, and that disengagement will produce a similar result for Israel
if it persists in following the South African model by holding on to much of the
West Bank and "cantonizing" the remainder.
It is one of the ironies of
history that Jews—whether in the US, Europe, or Israel—who were
disproportionately involved in struggles for universal human rights and civil
liberties should now be supporting policies of a right-wing Israeli government
that is threatening to turn Israel into a racist state. For if Sharon leverages
his promised withdrawal from Gaza into an Israeli presence in the West Bank that
is impossible to dislodge—a point that some observers insist has already been
reached—a racist regime is surely what his policies will produce.
That
likelihood is a nightmare hardly limited to Sharon's critics on the left. Even
the right-wing Ehud Olmert, Israel's deputy prime minister, has warned that an
apartheid state is the direction in which the Jewish state is heading.[12] Nahum
Barnea, Israel's most respected political commentator, recently wrote that
"thirty-seven years after the occupation, in the eyes of a large part of the
world Israel has become a pariah country. It's not yet the South Africa of
apartheid, but definitely from the same family."[13]
There is no
question that the terrorism resorted to by elements within th Palestinian
national movement, particularly terrorism aimed at civilian targets, ha been a
major security threat to Israel's population. But this threat cannot be invoked
a a pretext for policies that will bring apartheid rule to the West Bank and
Gaza. For it i not true that terrorism threatens the existence of the State of
Israel. And if it were true it is a threat that can be countered by Israel more
effectively from within its pre-196 borders, if only because with a state of
their own, Palestinians would have much t lose from continued terrorism and
would seek to prevent it. The fact is that Israel ha been far more successful in
countering cross-border terrorism from neighboring state than the terrorism of a
resentful population under its occupation
The notion that terror can best
be fought by continuing the occupation is not the only widely held Israeli
belief about the country's security that is contradicted by logic and
experience. For some twenty years, a large majority of Israelis believed that
their most vital security interests required them to remain in southern Lebanon.
They believe the same thing about their presence on the Golan Heights. But since
Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon, security along Israel's northern border
has improved, not worsened, despite the fact that Hezbollah was able to boast
that they had chased out the mighty IDF. And recently Moshe Ya'alon, the IDF's
chief of staff, has said that he—like his three predecessor chiefs of
staff—believes that Israel's security would not be diminished if the Golan were
returned to Syria.[14]
Israelis are also convinced that the deep
incursion of Israel's separation fence into Palestinian territory is essential
to their security, and that the recent opinion of the International Court that
it is illegal and must be removed can only be explained by the Court's alleged
anti-Semitism. But in his recent article in Yedioth Ahronot, Nahum Barnea stated
the contrary view taken by many of Israel's best experts on security. The
separation fence's route, he wrote,
should have been on the Green Line,
without deviations or trickery. That way it could have been built quickly,
without legal delays and political damage, as a security fence, not a political
border.... But the route planners, from the prime minister down, preferred to
try to pull the wool over the world's eyes. Instead of focusing on security they
preferred to play politics.
Shlomo Gazit, the retired general formerly in
charge of IDF military intelligence, wrote in Maariv:
Let's face the facts.
We turned the fence, which is so necessary, from a security fence to a political
fence, and that's why we were so roundly defeated. The argument in The Hague was
not about the security needs of Israel, but about Israel's right to establish
political Jewish settlements deep inside Judea and Samaria.[15]
3.
Clearly, nothing has played more directly into Sharon's
determination to avoid a political process than Palestinian terrorism directed
at Israeli civilians. Terrorism and Arafat's disastrous failures at Palestinian
institution-building have been exploited by Sharon to discredit the entire
Palestinian national enterprise and to undermine those in Israel and in the
international community who have sought to help it succeed. But Palestinian
failures do not begin to legitimize Sharon's policies, or those of the Bush
administration, for that matter. Palestinians have the right to a state in the
West Bank and Gaza not because they meet certain standards set by Sharon, the
man who aspires to acquiring much of their land, or because Bush has a "vision"
of two states living side by side, but because of universally recognized
principles of national self-determination.
The application of these
principles to the Arabs of Palestine was formally recognized and endorsed by the
international community when the UN adopted the resolution partitioning
Palestine into Jewish and Arab states in 1947. The Palestinian claim to what the
international community affirmed in that resolution as their rightful patrimony
has not been annulled by Arafat's bad behavior or by the failure of the
Palestinian Authority's institutions, which, one should note, have provided far
greater freedom and more accountability than are to be found in many neighboring
Arab countries.
Unfortunately, Weissglas's revelations about Sharon's
motives for the Gaza withdrawal—revelations indicating that the Palestinians
have no Israeli peace partner—will have little impact on Israel's continuing
claim that there is no Palestinian partner with whom it can negotiate.
Weissglas's statement will probably have no more effect than previous
revelations by Israel's most senior intelligence and security officials that the
intifada of September 2000 was not planned by Arafat, but a spontaneous eruption
of Palestinian anger which they had predicted well before it
occurred.
Ami Ayalon, the head of Israel's Shin Bet under Ehud Barak (and
before that the chief of Israel's navy), warned Prime Minister Barak that the
unrestrained growth of settlements under his administration and his neglect of
the Palestinian peace process in favor of efforts to reach a Syrian agreement
(which, we now know from President Clinton's and Dennis Ross's memoirs, failed
because Ehud Barak reneged on the deal), and, above all, the hardships and
humiliations experienced by Palestinians in the territories, created an
explosive situation that only needed a spark to set it off. That spark,
according to Ayalon, was Sharon's calculatedly provocative visit in September of
2000 to the Temple Mount.[16] This, too, was the conclusion of the Mitchell
Commission following its careful investigation of the causes of the intifada.
Ayalon has stated repeatedly that the Shin Bet had no evidence that Arafat
planned a second intifada. Had he been doing so, the Shin Bet would have known
about it.
The central thesis of Sharon and many other Israeli leaders
that Arafat's objective was not a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza
but in all of Palestine has been dismissed as unfounded by the reserve general
Amos Malka, who served as the IDF' chief of intelligence under Barak. He and
other key Israeli intelligence officials hav accused Amos Gilad, who was in
charge of the IDF's intelligence research branch, o lying when he implied that
his view that Arafat's goal was the dismantling of Israe was based on
intelligence information. Instead, according to Malka
All military
intelligence assessments spoke of Arafat wanting to go through with the
political process to reach a two-state permanent settlement.... If his demands
were met, he would have signed. If not, by the end of 2000 he would have headed
toward a crisis to create domestic and international pressure on Israel to be
more flexible in its positions, just as he had done in the past.
Malka
dismissed as "total nonsense" the charge that Arafat conspired to eradicate
Israel.[17]
Yet these revelations have made no dent in the widespread
Israeli conviction that Arafat was the author of the intifada, that he
orchestrated it even before he entered peace talks with Barak at Camp David, and
that he rejected Barak's peace proposals because his real goal has been, and
continues to be, the destruction of the State of Israel. Israelis cannot
conceive of any other explanation for Arafat's rejections of Barak's "generous"
proposals at Camp David. Israel's four-decades-long occupation of Palestinian
lands has apparently so dulled the moral imagination of its citizens that it
does not occur to them that Barak's demand that Israel's territory, which
already comprises 78 percent of Palestine, be enlarged with additional
Palestinian territory taken from the 22 percent—less than half of what the UN
allotted to a Palestinian state in 1947—that is left them could hardly have been
considered generous by any Palestinian.
4.
With Arafat apparently
near death as this article goes to press on November 4, Sharon will have the
opportunity to disprove his critics' accusation that he has shamelessly used
Arafat and the "no partner" argument as a pretext to continue Israel's
annexation of the West Bank. He can do so by ending unilateral measures and
resuming negotiations with a new Palestinian leadership based on an
unconditional acceptance of the road map, i.e., without the fourteen crippling
reservations adopted by his cabinet on May 27, 2003, which emptied Israel's
acceptance of the road map of all meaning.
The road map requires the
Palestinian Authority to make good-faith efforts to halt the violence by
consolidating its security forces and demobilizing the militias and terrorist
groups. This will not happen overnight, and to succeed, Israel will have to
support a new leadership by ending settlement activity, removing checkpoints,
and gradually withdrawing the IDF to pre-intifada positions. If Sharon again
insists that none of this will happen until all violence has ceased and
Jeffersonian democracy has been brought to Gaza and the West Bank, then we will
know he is up to his old tricks and has no intention of ever engaging
Palestinians in political negotiations.
If Sharon rises to the occasion,
he will prove that he has indeed transformed himself into a statesman, and not
only Israelis and Palestinians but the world will be in his debt. If he stalls,
and subverts the new Palestinian leaders the way he subverted Mahmoud Abbas when
he assumed the Palestinian premiership over a year ago, Sharon's toxic role in
the peace process should finally become clear to all.
The end of Arafat's
presidency similarly challenges the incoming US administration. Will it repeat
President Bush's betrayal of his promise last year to "ride herd" on both
parties to assure compliance with the road map, or will it assume the role of an
honest broker prepared to do what only a great power can do to end the
conflict?
If Israel and/or the Palestinians fail to respond to this
unexpected opening for a return to the road map, and the US fails to intervene
aggressively to prevent such failure, the international community must finally
abandon the "facilitation" model that has been the basis of all previous US and
other Middle East peace initiatives. Facilitation assumes that, for all their
differences, the adversaries prefer a resolution of their conflict to its
continuation, a situation that existed during the Oslo period, between 1993 and
2000 (with the exception of the period of Benjamin Netanyahu's premiership).
Facilitation limits the role of third parties to helping both sides overcome
obstacles that stand in the way of achieving a goal they both desire. But when
Sharon came to power, both parties came to believe they had more to gain from a
continuation of the conflict than from its resolution, and the facilitation
model became irrelevant.
Facilitation, it should be clear, no longer
holds any hope of ending the conflict Only interventionism can. Because the
conflict is exacting an unacceptable human cost and endangering critical
strategic interests of many other countries, including th war to defeat global
terrorism, the international community should no longer permit it to continue.
The UN, the EU, Russia, and—it is to be hoped—the US should therefore convene an
international conference that is not dependent on the approval, or even the
participation, of Israelis and Palestinians, who have proven beyond any doubt
that if left to their own devices, they will allow the conflict to become worse
before it becomes even worse. The goal of this international conference would be
the adoption of internationally endorsed principles for the resolution of the
major permanent status issues in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
Those
principles are widely known and widely supported, and it should not be difficult
to bring about an international consensus in support of them. In addition to the
requirement that the pre-1967 border must be the starting point for the
negotiations, a stipulation already contained in the road map, they would also
include the following provisions: that territorial changes be based on equal
exchanges on both sides of that border; that the right of return of Palestinian
refugees be exercised in the new state of Palestine and not in Israel; and that
Arab sections of East Jerusalem become part of the Palestinian state and serve
as its capital. In addition, special arrangements will have to be made for the
Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif. Sovereignty of these holy places should be divided
along lines of previous proposals, i.e., by assigning sovereignty over the Haram
to Palestinians and over the Wailing Wall and related structures to Israel; or
by a "horizontal" division assigning above-ground sovereignty of the Temple
Mount/ Haram al-Sharif to the Palestinians, and below-ground sovereignty to
Israel. Alternatively, the issue of Israeli or Palestinian sovereignty over the
holy places could be bypassed by setting up administrative arrangements in which
a third, international party would participate.
These basic provisions
would not be subject to change by either party, except by agreement between the
two. The party that unilaterally rejects them, or takes unilateral measures that
violate them, would be subject to economic and diplomatic sanctions. At the very
least, such a clear and decisive international intervention would deny the
offending party any prospect of gaining international recognition of measures
taken in violation of the internationally adopted principles for an
Israeli–Palestinian peace agreement.
To be sure, it is highly unlikely
that the newly elected Bush administration in Washington would agree to join in
such a conference or support such a interventionist role. But Washington would
be hard put to argue that the provision likely to emerge from such an
international conference are not implicit in the road map and in Bush's
much-repeated support of a two-state solution. Nor is it impossible that the new
US administration will be more open to new ideas for ending the conflict tha its
spokesmen were willing to admit during the heated presidential campaign. What is
certain, I believe, is that after having served—humiliatingly—as tails to the
America kite in the Quartet's futile efforts to implement the road map, neither
Europe, the UN, nor Russia will agree to continue in that role. While the
European Union and the UN did not get very far in ending the Israeli–Palestinian
conflict before joining the Quartet, their position has since become even more
marginalized. They have gained no new leverage with either Israel or the
Palestinians, and the conflict has become uglier and more costly than
ever.
Obviously, such an internationally endorsed framework of principles
is not self-implementing, and will be rejected by Israel, the stronger of the
two parties. Palestinians, too, may object to certain of the provisions, such as
the requirement that Palestinian refugees be repatriated in the new Palestinian
state and in countries willing to receive them. But the point of such an
international effort would be to change the calculation of costs and benefits
that both sides engage in. That calculation would be significantly affected by
the prospect that the offending party's diplomatic and economic relations with
much of the international community would be damaged, and that it would have no
prospect of receiving international recognition for unilateral measures it may
take.
That is an outcome even a right-wing Israeli government cannot be
indifferent to, as is evident from recent warnings from within Israel's foreign
ministry about the destructive consequences of Israeli policies that are seen by
the European Union as transforming Israel into an apartheid state. Despite the
derision expressed by Sharon and his government in response to the opinion of
the International Court of Justice about the illegality of the route of Israel's
separation fence, that opinion has affected some decisions since made by
Israel's Supreme Court and the IDF regarding the route of the fence. Even
Sharon's right-wing government experienced a sobering shock when all European
Union member states, including the ten new states that Sharon's government
believed to be more sympathetic to its policies, voted on July 20 in favor of a
UN General Assembly resolution calling for the removal of the separation
fence.
Much now depends on the possibility that this unexpected European
unity on the Middle East peace process was an augury of things to
come.
—November 4, 2004
Notes
[1] July 31–August 6,
2004.
[2] Haaretz, August 26, 2004.
[3] August 20,
2004.
[4] Americans for Peace Now: Middle East Report, Vol. 6, Issue 11
(October 4, 2004).
[5] Gideon Samet, Haaretz, July 21, 2004.
[6]
October 8, 2004.
[7] Haaretz, October 11, 2004.
[8] See Henry
Siegman, "Israel: The Threat from Within," The New York Review, February 26,
2004, and "Sharon's Phony War," The New York Review, December 18,
2003.
[9] Yoel Marcus, Haaretz, October 9, 2004.
[10] On October
25, 2004, Haaretz reported that a settler charged with the murder of a
Palestinian taxi driver "for no reason and without any authority," was not
jailed, as any Arab indicted murderer would have been, but placed under house
arrest in his home in his settlement, Itamar.
[11] August 6,
2004.
[12] Yedioth Ahronot, December 5, 2003.
[13] Yedioth
Ahronot, July 12, 2004.
[14] Yedioth Ahronot, August 13,
2004.
[15] July 12, 2004.
[16] From an interview with Ami Ayalon
by Sylvain Cypel, "An Unconditional Withdrawal from the Territories Is Urgently
Needed," Le Monde, December 24, 2001, and transcript from a roundtable meeting
at the Council on Foreign Relations, "The Middle East Roadmap and Its
Aftermath," September 15, 2003, at www.cfr.org.
[17] Yedioth
Ahronot, June 30, 2004.
Jewish Peace News Editors: Judith Norman Alistair Welchman Mitchell Plitnick Lincoln Shlensky Ami Kronfeld Rela Mazali Sarah Anne Minkin Joel Beinin Racheli Gai
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