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Palestinian September 2011 Deadline Doomed
By Nicola Nasser
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 21, 2011
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The international Quartet of the US, EU, UN and Russia on Middle
East peace and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) seem set on an
agenda that perceives September 2011 as an historical political watershed
deadline. Among the partners to the Quartet – sponsored Palestinian –
Israeli “peace process,” practically deadlocked since the collapse of the
US, Palestinian and Israeli trilateral summit in Camp David in 2000, only
the Israeli government of Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu seems adamant to
set a completely different agenda that renders any endeavor by the Quartet
to revive the process a non – starter, thus dooming the September deadline
beforehand as another missed opportunity for peace making. Denying
they are containment measures aimed at political survival to avert potential
Palestinian simulation in the aftermath of the regime changes in Egypt and
Tunisia, the PLO is bracing for what it declares as indeed “the” watershed
deadline in September 2011 that would make or break its decision to resume
as a partner to the “peace process.” The PLO is reshuffling its negotiations
department as well as the cabinet of the self-ruled Palestinian Authority
(PA) and has called for presidential, legislative and local elections by
next September to empower itself with electoral legitimacy ahead of that
deadline, encouraged by what the Quartet perceives as a “really important
moment of opportunity,” in the words of the Quartet’s representative the
former UK prime minister Tony Blair, which is an “opportunity” created by
the Arab popular uprisings that so far have swept to the dustbin of history
the Tunisian and Egyptian regimes, both considered for decades major pillars
of the Middle East “peace process.” Blair’s “moment of opportunity”
(Sky News on Feb. 14) was voiced also the next day by the Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov, who told the London School of Economics that, “Time
is a factor, and urgent progress in the Palestinian-Israeli settlement is
necessary.” On the same day while on a visit in Israel and the PA, the EU
foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, citing the “significant changes in
Tunisia and of course in Egypt,” said “there is an opportunity for us to try
and engage better and more quickly on resolving the issue” of the peace
process. On Feb. 12 the UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, citing the “one
of the good things that might come from the events in Egypt and Tunisia,”
joined the “peace opportunity” choir to urge that “it is vital now to take
this (the peace process) forward” because “in a few years time a two – state
solution will be much, much more difficult to achieve.” Citing the same
“changes,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy told the annual dinner of the
Jewish organizations (CRIF) in Paris on Feb. 9 that “it is urgent to revive
direct negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians.” Three days earlier,
on Feb. 6, even the Israeli President, Shimon Peres, addressing the 11th
annual Herzliya security conference and similarly citing the regional
“dramatic events of the recent period” which make it “necessary for us to
take the Israeli – Palestinian conflict off the regional agenda,” urged
Netanyahu that it is a “must” Israel does “this as soon as possible.” It was
also noteworthy that the secretary-general of the NATO, Anders Fogh
Rasmussen, found it necessary to contradict the official Israeli statements
that the recent change in Egypt and Tunisia proves that Arab – Israeli
conflict is NOT the source of instability in the Middle East. “The lack of a
solution to the Israel - Palestinian conflict continues to undermine the
stability of the region,” he told the Herzliya security conference.
TIMETABLE To “do this,” it seems that all those who see in the
collapse of the Hosni Mubarak regime in Egypt a “moment of opportunity” have
set a timetable throughout the September deadline. In addition to the PLO’s
measures, the UN Secretary General, in a press conference on Feb. 8,
reminded that the Quartet will meet at the ministerial level in mid – March
and decided at its latest meeting in Munich earlier this month “to step up
its search for comprehensive Middle East peace,” adding the Quartet “expects
to meet with Israeli and Palestinian officials separately in Brussels at the
beginning of March.” Meanwhile, Paris will host a new international donor
conference in June. Ahead of her meeting in Ramallah with Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas earlier in the week, the EU’s Ashton sounded
affirmative on the Palestinian make – it – or – break – it September
deadline, thus raising Palestinian expectations to the highest level
possible without revealing whatever she might conceal of Israeli forthcoming
to vindicate it. “It is a timeframe that everybody has signed up to,” she
said, and while admitting it would be “challenging,” she added: “I think we
have to try and reach it.” In Munich, the Quartet’s statement on Feb. 5
similarly reiterated its support for “concluding these (Palestinian –
Israeli) negotiations by September 2011,” when the PLO negotiators hope to
see international recognition of their aspired state come true. This
deadline was initially set by U.S. President Barak Obama when he, on last
September 2, re-launched Palestinian – Israeli “direct” talks declaring they
should be concluded a year later and, in his speech delivered to the UN
General Assembly later that month expressed his hope that, “when we come
back here next year, we can have an agreement that will lead to a new member
of the United Nations — an independent, sovereign state of Palestine, living
in peace with Israel.” In spite of their bitter “disappointment,”
which was expressed on record by Abbas, with U.S. and European repeatedly
broken past promises, PLO presidency and negotiators wishfully continue to
make believe and insistently opt to being held hostage to renewed similar
promises, hoping their “peace partners” would, by a miracle, commit to their
words. Building on these “promises,” the PLO mandated its Palestinian
Authority’s cabinet of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad with a two – year plan
for building the institutions of a “state” that is scheduled to be completed
by September. However, Obama’s re-launched “direct” talks were
suspended three weeks later, collapsing on Obama’s helplessness vis – a –
vis Israel’s challenge to his on record call for the extension of the
suspension of the ongoing expansion of the Israeli illegal colonial
settlements on the area designated for a Palestinian state. Accordingly
there are no negotiations to be “concluded” by September. WHAT
‘MOMENT OF OPPORTUNITY’ Suddenly, the Quartet sees a “moment of
opportunity” to re–launch the negotiations and possibly to meet the
September deadline. Ironically, the opportunity is found in the demise of
the regional pivotal Egyptian pillar of the “peace process,” which could not
help the process out while it was still in power. The reader is owed an
explanation. True the post – Mubarak military transitional regime
had already pronounced its commitment to the treaties signed by its
predecessor “regionally and internationally,” implicitly including the peace
treaty with Israel, but committing to this treaty is one thing and
committing to the previous active Egyptian role in the “peace process” is
another. At least for a year and for the near future thereafter the new
regime will be too preoccupied internally to spare time for a role in a
process that has proved futile over the past two decades, let alone that the
foreign policy of the new emerging regime, especially in the regional arena,
is still a guess. Both Israel and the PLO are obvious losers of the
absence of the Egyptian role in the process, and consequently weaker.
Obviously, the Quartet perceives a weaker PLO - - which has just lost its
Egyptian major Arab backer, and saw its U.S. backer renege on its promises
and its European advocates of a two – state solution helplessly following in
the footsteps of their U.S. leader - - would be in a position to be more
receptive of a Quartet pressure to resume direct negotiations with its
Israeli protagonist, which the Quartet failed to influence. Readers
may be reminded that a weaker PLO which lost its Iraqi backer following the
Kuwait war in 1991 was unmercifully pressured to accept the historical
concession of recognizing Israel on four fifths of its historical homeland,
which in turn paved the way for convening the 1991 Madrid Middle East peace
conference and later the Oslo accords to which the PLO has been held hostage
ever since, wishfully believing that the international community which
sponsored both events would ultimately deliver on its promises on a
Palestinian state in return. PLO peace credentials could only be
challenged by its own people. 1600 documents revealed recently by Aljazeera
satellite TV station and British The Guardian show how far the PLO
negotiators have gone in their concessions for peace; Palestinian chief
negotiator Saeb Erekat has resigned in consequence, his department is now
being reshuffled and he went on record to say that the leaked documents
endangered his life. Never in PLO history its leadership was so isolated and
its legitimacy and credibility challenged internally as it is now, thanks to
the broken promises of the U.S. – led sponsors of the “peace process.”
Obviously, next September is the moment of truth for the PLO. Then, it has
no choice but to deliver on its own promises to its people or face
Palestinian waves of the Tsunami of the revolt of Arab masses against the
status quo, which would become impossible to sustain even for the shortest
period of time unless the PLO is empowered with the long promised and long
awaited Palestinian state. The PLO has no interest whatsoever in sustaining
the status quo; Israel is the only beneficiary. This unbalanced political
equation is a recipe for disaster, not for peace making. The
alternative was predicted by the Arab – Palestinian member of the Israeli
Knesset, Hanin Zoubi, who declared recently that “maybe we can free
ourselves of (Israeli) occupation as well,” citing the example of the
Egyptian Intifada and noting: “Israel has been relying on the weakness of
the Arab people, but now this has been changed.” Taken by the
overwhelming surprise of the Intifada of the Arab masses in Tunisia and
Egypt, the world public opinion seems to forget that “Intifada” is an Arab
word coined for the first time in a Palestinian context to describe a civil
and peaceful revolt and uprising against the Israeli military occupation
that brought the PLO officially into the occupied territories and the “peace
process.” The current status quo is ripe for another Intifida that
would certainly take the PLO out of both, unless the Quartet takes immediate
action to avert such a drastic shift of events, but the Quartet action is no
more urgent than in Israel. Squeezed between external and internal
pressures, the PLO as a peace partner is at its weakest breaking point and
could not afford the slightest additional pressure. * Nicola
Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of
the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
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