What Should Palestinians Do Now and An Israeli View on Divestment
November 21, 2004
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Today's Contents:
[JPN Commentary: Ali Abunimah is
a cofounder of the Electronic Intifada. He is becoming one of the most
well-recognized Palestinian voices in the US. In the article below he's calling
for the Palestinians to take a good look at the opportunities, as well as the
pitfalls, that Arafat's death presents. -- RG]
What Palestinians should do
now (Electronic Intifada) Ali Abunimah on the
Palestinians' future after Arafat's death
What Palestinians should do now
By Ali
Abunimah
The Electronic Intifada
18 November 2004
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article3340.shtml The first priority for Palestinian leaders now must be to defend
their people against Israel's relentless colonization and violence and not to
negotiate with Israeli guns to Palestinian heads. They must formulate a national
strategy to regain Palestinian rights enshrined in UN Resolutions, clearly
explain this strategy, and organize Palestinians and allies everywhere to
struggle for it, starting with full implementation of the ICJ decision on the
West Bank wall. Palestinians should seek to emulate the success of the African
National Congress that freed South Africans from apartheid by confronting and
defeating injustice, not seeking to accommodate it.
If the PLO and the
Palestinian Authority (PA) can transform themselves to take on this role, they
deserve the support of every Palestinian. If, however, they plan to continue as
they have before, they must dissolve. As constituted by the Oslo accords, the
Palestinian Authority harms Palestinian interests, because it obscures Israel's
responsibility as the occupying power without providing any minimal protection
for the people against Israel's continuous onslaught. Its existence has allowed
the spurious agenda of "reform" to trump Israel's obligations under the Geneva
Conventions and UN resolutions. Palestinian leaders should no longer accept the
responsibility for governing Palestinians on behalf of the occupying power.
Israel should bear the full cost of its choices.
Yet the conventional
wisdom says that Yasir Arafat's death provides an opportunity to revive the
Palestinian-Israeli peace process. Realities such as Israel's refusal in word
and deed to withdraw and allow the establishment of a genuine Palestinian state
in the occupied territories have simply been ignored. Dov Weissglas, the most
senior advisor to Israeli premier Ariel Sharon, explained in early October that
Israel's Gaza "disengagement" plan, which has been embraced by the bankrupt
international peace process industry, is actually a ruse to kill--not
advance--any peace process. Weissglas said, "when you freeze that [peace]
process, you prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, and you prevent a
discussion on the refugees, the borders and Jerusalem. Effectively, this whole
package called the Palestinian state, with all that it entails, has been removed
indefinitely from our agenda."
Logically, therefore, any "opportunity"
for peace through the establishment of a Palestinian state depends either on a
clear change of Israeli policy or a clear willingness by the United States and
the international community to force Israel to change its policy. So far, the
only policy announcement to come from Israel is that it plans a posthumous
"anti-Arafat crusade" in the media.
President Bush has already shattered
hopes that in a second term, freed from re-election concerns, he might pressure
Israel. At his November 12 press conference with UK prime minister Tony Blair,
Bush was asked if Israel should at last implement a freeze on West Bank
settlement expansion. He side-stepped the question, placing the entire burden on
the Palestinians: "I believe that the responsibility for peace is going to rest
with the Palestinian people's desire to build a democracy and Israel's
willingness to help them build a democracy." Bush also stated that peace "can be
reached by only one path, the path of democracy, reform and the rule of law."
There is no sign yet that the EU or Arab states intend to challenge his
approach. Yet at the same time, Bush and Blair declared support for elections in
the occupied territories -- a position seemingly in tune with Palestinian
aspirations. But elections present both dangers and opportunities.
At a
minimum, fair elections require international intervention to protect the
Palestinians from the occupier and ensure all candidates have fair access to
PA-controlled media and are free from intimidation whether by Israel or the PA.
The danger is that snap elections in the West Bank and Gaza, under Israel's
crushing rule, will offer no fair opportunity for new Palestinian leaders with
new strategies to emerge. Elections must provide a genuine contest and not be
mere plebiscites confirming the post-Arafat appointments of failed old guard
figures like PLO chairman Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia and
their backers who control the PA apparatus with money and guns. Ominously, The
New York Times reports that Israel, under American pressure, has already
released $40 million in blocked PA funds to "strengthen the position" of the old
guard.
In the best case, from Israel's perspective, the old guard
confirmed in place by flawed elections would continue to offer disastrous
concessions as they did throughout the Oslo period. And at worst, they would
simply become new scapegoats to whom Israel and the US will deliver impossible
demands and then heap blame when they are inevitably unfulfilled. Palestinian
leaders must no longer accept this assigned role.
Palestinians should
also demand elections in the diaspora as well the occupied territories. Arguably
Arafat's greatest mistake is that after signing the Oslo accords, he abandoned
the PLO's base in exile. Millions of Palestinians were disenfranchised and the
negotiating position of the Palestinian leadership severely weakened because it
could not claim that it had to refer any agreement back to its
people.
Assistance from the United Nations and host countries would be
essential to successful diaspora elections. The recent Afghan election, in which
740,000 refugees in Pakistan voted, proves it can be done. Currently, almost
four million Palestine refugees are registered with UNRWA. All exiled
Palestinians should have the right to vote and be elected to a Palestinian
national assembly with the sole authority to approve any future peace agreement.
This would be in the best interests of Palestinians because it
would strengthen and hold accountable any eventual Palestinian negotiating body
by ensuring it accepts no deal which compromises basic rights, particularly the
rights of refugees. This is exactly why such elections would be strongly opposed
by Israel, the United States, the EU, and the Palestinian old guard.
But
now is the time for Palestinians to set their own agenda, to build a new
movement, and to see who among their self-declared allies really has their
freedom, democracy and rights at heart.
Ali Abunimah is a co-founder of
The Electronic Intifada. A version of this article first appeared in The Daily
Star.
Jewish Peace News Editors:
Judith Norman
Alistair Welchman
Mitchell
Plitnick
Lincoln Shlensky
Ami Kronfeld
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne
Minkin
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai