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Obama's Cave-In to Israel:
Letter Suggests US Not Honest Broker
By Johathan Cook in Nazareth
Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October
6, 2010
Jonathan Cook considers the significance of a leaked letter from
US President Barack Obama to Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu which
undermines Obama’s claim to be an honest broker and confirms suspicions that
Netanyahu’s professed desire to establish a Palestinian state is insincere.
The disclosure of the details of a letter reportedly sent by President
Barack Obama last week to Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister,
will cause Palestinians to be even more sceptical about US and Israeli roles
in the current peace talks.
According to the leak, Obama made a
series of extraordinarily generous offers to Israel, many of them at the
expense of the Palestinians, in return for a single minor concession from
Netanyahu: a two-month extension of the partial freeze on settlement growth.
A previous 10-month freeze, which ended a week ago, has not so far been
renewed by Netanyahu, threatening to bring the negotiations to an abrupt
halt. The Palestinians are expected to decide whether to quit the talks over
the coming days.
Obama's promise to Israel
US veto of UN Security Council proposals on
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
No further extensions of settlement building freeze
Permanent Israeli military presence in occupied
Jordan Valley Permanent
Israeli control of Palestinian borders
US to give Israel enhanced weapons systems, security
guarantees and increase its billions of dollars in annual aid
US to create anti-Iran regional security pact
Netanyahu was reported last week to have declined the
US offer.
The White House has denied that a letter was sent,
but, according to the Israeli media, officials in Washington are privately
incensed by Netanyahu’s rejection.
The disclosures were made by an
informed source: David Makovsky, of the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy, a close associate of Dennis Ross, Obama’s chief adviser on the
Middle East, who is said to have initiated the offer.
The letter’s
contents have also been partly confirmed by Jewish US senators who attended
a briefing last week from Ross.
According to Makovsky, in return for
the 60-day settlement moratorium, the US promised to veto any UN Security
Council proposal on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict over the next year, and
committed to not seek any further extensions of the freeze. The future of
the settlements would be addressed only in a final agreement.
The
White House would also allow Israel to keep a military presence in the West
Bank’s Jordan Valley, even after the creation of a Palestinian state;
continue controlling the borders of the Palestinian territories to prevent
smuggling; provide Israel with enhanced weapons systems, security guarantees
and increase its billions of dollars in annual aid; and create a regional
security pact against Iran.
There are several conclusions the
Palestinian leadership is certain to draw from this attempt at deal-making
over its head.
The first is that the US president, much like his
predecessors, is in no position to act as an honest broker. His interests in
the negotiations largely coincide with Israel’s.
Obama needs a short
renewal of the freeze, and the semblance of continuing Israeli and
Palestinian participation in the “peace process”, until the US Congressional
elections in November.
Criticism by the powerful pro-Israel lobby in
Washington may damage Obama’s Democratic Party unless he treads a very thin
line. He needs to create the impression of progress in the Middle East talks
but not upset Israel’s supporters by making too many demands on Netanyahu.
The second conclusion – already strongly suspected by Mahmoud Abbas, the
Palestinian president, and his advisers – is that Netanyahu, despite his
professed desire to establish a Palestinian state, is being insincere.
The White House’s private offer meets most of Netanyahu’s demands for US
security and diplomatic assistance even before the negotiations have
produced tangible results. For Netanyahu to reject the offer so lightly,
even though the US was expecting relatively little in return, suggests he is
either in no mood or in no position to make real concessions to the
Palestinians on statehood.
The Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz reported on
1 October that senior White House officials were no longer “buying the
excuse of politicial difficulties” for Netanyahu in holding his right-wing
governing coalition together. If he cannot keep his partners on board over a
short freeze on illegal settlement building, what meaningful permanent
concessions can he make in the talks?
The third conclusion for the
Palestinians is that no possible combination of governing parties in Israel
is capable of signing an agreement with Abbas that will not entail
significant compromises on the territorial integrity of a Palestinian state.
“...without the Jordan Valley, the creation of a viable Palestinian state
... would be inconceivable. Statehood would instead resemble the
Swiss-cheese model the Palestinians have long feared is all Israel is
proposing.”
One US concession – allowing Israel to maintain its hold on the Jordan
Valley, nearly a fifth of the West Bank, for the forseeable future –
reflects a demand common to all Israeli politicians, not just Netanyahu.
In fact, the terms of Obama’s letter were drafted in cooperation with
Ehud Barak,
Israel’s defence minister and leader of the supposedly left-wing Labour
Party. When he was prime minister a decade ago, he insisted on a similar
military presence in the Jordan Valley during the failed Camp David talks.
Ariel Sharon, his successor and founder of the centrist Kadima Party,
planned a new section of the separation wall to divide the Jordan Valley
from the rest of the West Bank, though the scheme was put on hold after
American objections.
Today, most Palestinians cannot enter the Jordan
Valley without a special permit that is rarely issued, and the area’s tens
of thousands of Palestinian inhabitants are subjected to constant military
harassment. B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights group, has accused Israel of a
“de facto annexation” of the area.
But without the Jordan Valley, the
creation of a viable Palestinian state – even one limited to the West Bank,
without Gaza – would be inconceivable. Statehood would instead resemble the
Swiss-cheese model the Palestinians have long feared is all Israel is
proposing.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His
latest books are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the
Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine:
Israel's Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.
A version of this
article originally appeared in The
National, published in Abu Dhabi. The Rredress version is published by
permission of Jonathan Cook.
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