Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
The Misnomer of Israeli-Palestinian peace
Talks
By John Chuckman
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 13, 2010
I don’t know how anyone given the task could draw a map of Israel:
it is likely the only country in the world with no defined borders, and it
actually has worked very hard over many decades to achieve this peculiar
state. It once had borders, but the 1967 war took care of those.
It has no intention of ever returning to them because it could have done
so at any time in the last forty-three years (an act which would have been
the clearest possible declaration of a desire for genuine peace with
justice and which would have saved the immense human misery of
occupation), but doing so would negate the entire costly effort of the Six
Day War whose true purpose was to achieve what we see now in the
Palestinian territories. As far as peace, in the limited sense of
the absence of war, Israel already has achieved a kind of rough, de facto
peace without any help from the Palestinians. The Palestinians have
nothing to offer in the matter of peace if you judge peace by the
standards Israel apparently does. Israel has the peace that comes
of infinitely greater power, systematic and ruthless use of that power,
the reduction of the people it regards as opponents to squatters on their
own land, and a world too intimidated to take any effective action for
justice or fairness. Genuine peace anywhere, as Canadian physicist
and Holocaust survivor Ursula Franklin has observed, is best defined by
justice prevailing. But you can have many other circumstances inaccurately
called peace; for example, the internal peace of a police state or of a
brutally-operated colony. Israel appears to have no interest or
need for the kind of peace that the Palestinians can offer. What then can
the Palestinians give Israel in any negotiation? There are many
“technical” issues to be settled between the Israelis and Palestinians,
such as the right of return, compensation for property taken, the
continued unwarranted expulsions from East Jerusalem, the Wall and its
location largely on Palestinian land, but in a profound sense these are
all grounded in the larger concept of genuine peace as Ursula Franklin
defined it, something we have no basis for believing Israel is, or ever
has been, interested in. Israel wants recognition, not just as a
country like any other, but as “the Jewish state,” whatever that ambiguous
term may mean, given the facts both of Israel’s rubbery borders and the
definition of Jewish, something which Israelis themselves constantly fight
over – reformed, orthodox, ultra-orthodox, Ashkenazi, Sephardic, North
African, observant, non-observant, and still other factions and divisions
in what is quite a small population. I very much think that the
reasons Israel wants that particular form of recognition are not
benevolent: it is the kind of term once put into a contract which opens
the future interpretation of the contract to pretty much anything. After
all, recognition of Israel as a state is something Arab states have long
offered Israel in return for a just settlement, but Israel has never shown
the slightest interest. If recognition of Israel as “the Jewish
state” were granted, what would be the status of any non-Jewish person in
Israel? I think we can guess, given the awful words of Israel’s foreign
minister Avigdor Lieberman, or the even more terrible words of Ovadia
Yosef, founder of the Shas Party, a Netanyahu ally, and Israel’s former
Chief Rabbi. After all, about nineteen percent of Israeli citizens
are non-Jews, mainly the descendants of Palestinians who refused to run
from the terrors of the Irgun and Stern gangs in1948. They carry Israeli
passports, but are not regarded as citizens in the same sense as Jewish
citizens, and there are even laws and restrictions in place creating the
kind of deadly distinction George Orwell wrote of in Animal Farm, “Some
animals are more equal than others.” The new talks do not include
even the most basic requirement of a legitimate voice to represent the
Palestinians, a desirable situation perhaps from Israel’s point of view,
one Israel’s secret services have long worked towards with dark ops and
assassinations. How do you negotiate with opponents you allow no voice?
Mahmoud Abbas, an almost pitifully shuffling character who is the
man supposedly representing Palestinian interests, is now approaching two
years of playing president without an election: he has zero legitimacy
with the Palestinians and the outside world. Even at that, his assumed
authority extends only to parts of the West Bank of the territories.
Hamas, despite the shortcomings found in any leadership of a
heavily oppressed population (after all, it is often forgotten that the
African National Congress in South Africa was communist-affiliated), is
nevertheless the elected government of Gaza territory, but Israel has
pressured the United States - and through it, effectively the world - to
regard Hamas as a coven of witches, ready to unleash dark powers if only
once Israel relaxes its stranglehold. It would be far
more accurate to talk of a settlement or an accommodation with the
Palestinians than peace, but any reasonable agreement requires intense
pressure on Israel, which holds all the cards, pressure which can only
come from Washington. Accommodation involves all the difficult “technical”
issues Israel has no interest in negotiating - right of return,
compensation, the Wall, and East Jerusalem. Israel’s position on all of
them is simply “no.” But we know that Washington is contemptibly
weak when it comes to Israel. The Israel Lobby is expert at working the
phones and the opinion columns and the campaign donations. It even gets
Washington to fight wars for it, as it did in Iraq, and as it now is
attempting to do in Iran – surely, the acid test of inordinate influence
on policy. Most American Congressmen live in the same kind of
quiet fear of the Israel Lobby as they once did of J.Edgar Hoover’s
special files of political and personal secrets. Hoover never even had to
openly threaten a Congressman or Cabinet Secretary who was “out of line.”
He merely had a brief chat, dropping some ambiguous reference to let the
politician know the danger he faced. It was enough to keep Hoover’s
influence going for decades. You never heard a thing in the press
about the quiet power Hoover exercised in the 1940s and 1950s and 1960s,
but it was there. Just so, the Israel Lobby today. So where does
the impetus for a fair accommodation come from? Nowhere. Israel
goes right on with its calculatedly-unfair laws taking the homes and farms
of others, slowly but surely pushing out the people with whom it does not
want to share space. Anywhere else, this process would be called
ethnic-cleansing, but not here, not unless you want to be called a bigot
or an anti-Semite. One says this about the impossibility of a
settlement with a reservation. It is possible that the weak Abbas, locked
in a room in Washington, could well be browbeaten and bribed into signing
some kind of bastard agreement, giving Israel every concession it wants in
return for a nominal rump Palestinian state composed of parcels Israel
doesn’t want or hasn’t yet absorbed. It wouldn’t be worth the paper it was
written on, but Israel would then undoubtedly assume its perpetual
validity and in future interpret it as it wished. After all, the
history of modern Israel involves agreements divvying up the land of
others without their consent, but even those historical divisions – look
at the maps attending the Peel Commission (1937) or the UN decision on
partition (1947), and you see roughly equally divided territory – today
are ignored by Israel or given some very tortured interpretation. So what
will have changed? There simply can be no genuine peace with
justice where there is no will for it.
|
|
|