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	Palestinian Appeal to the UN for Independence the 
	September  
	By Adam Keller 
	Gush Shalom,
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 21, 2011
  
       
	Why is this year different from all years and this vote from all 
	other votes? 
	For decades, the UN General Assembly is meeting every year in the month 
	of September. And every year it adopts by a large majority a series of 
	resolutions initiated by the Palestinians. These resolutions gets reported 
	(if at all) as a minor news item deep down on page 10 and go straight to the 
	UN archives. No one seriously expects them to be actually implemented in 
	reality. This year, it is quite different.
  Never did a UN vote get 
	such attention as the vote which is expected in September this year. This 
	year, Israel's Defense Minister expressed apprehension that the expected UN 
	vote might cause a political Tsunami. And the Foreign Ministry embarked on 
	an emergency mobilization of all its diplomats in all countries throughout 
	the world and instructed them, many months in advance, to focus their 
	energies on the expected vote in the General Assembly. And the IDF and the 
	police hold extensive exercises, half a year in advance, anticipating the 
	United Nations vote and its predicted impact on the ground. And the Prime 
	Minister of Israel and his senior ministers are all the time running around 
	the world, from one capital to another, in a non-stop campaign of 
	conversations and speeches and persuasions and pressures, so as to gather 
	and collect a General Assembly vote here and there. And the President of the 
	United States of America in person undertook a trip to Europe and met with 
	the prime ministers of Britain and Germany, in a desperate attempt to 
	formulate and present the Palestinians with a substitute of equal value 
	which may yet convince them to take back their appeal to the UN and save the 
	United States and its President the difficult dilemma of what to do and how 
	to vote in September.
  What has changed? It is not the UN itself which 
	had changed since last year. Its prestige was not greatly enhanced, nor did 
	it gain additional concrete powers. UN Member States still determine their 
	vote because of various interests, and the great powers still cast their 
	veto due to similar considerations. Still, the situation did change. It is 
	the situation on the ground which has changed.
  44 years have passed 
	since Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza - more than two thirds of the 
	total period of Israel's existence. 44 years, during which the State of 
	Israel has established dozens of settlements and created hundreds of 
	accomplished facts and carefully refrained from annexing these territories 
	and explained to anyone who asked that this was a temporary situation and 
	that the permanent status negotiations shall be held in the future, once 
	upon a time. And after 44 years Israel's PM still asserts that the final 
	status would be determined in negotiations which would start once upon a 
	time, when the Palestinians fulfill all the conditions presented to them, 
	and that such negotiations might even be concluded at an even more distant 
	future date, but that actually there is not much to hope for "since the 
	conflict is in fact unsolvable."
  Already for seventeen years the 
	Palestinians have the Palestinian Authority with its President and 
	Parliament, Prime Minister and Ministers duly placed in charge of ministries 
	– everything which a sovereign state has, except for one thing: real power 
	on the ground. Also seventeen years after the creation of the Palestinian 
	Authority, a 19 year old Israeli corporal standing at the checkpoint on the 
	road between Ramallah and Nablus has much more power and influence on the 
	daily lives of Palestinians than the Palestinian Authority's President and 
	its Prime Minister and all ministers together.
  No wonder that 
	Palestinians are less and less enthusiastic about the Palestinian Authority 
	which is supposed to represent them. No wonder that fewer and fewer 
	Palestinians believe that diplomatic activity can make the occupation army 
	and settlers go or that it might lead to the creation of a free and 
	sovereign Palestine, whose borders would be based on the 1967 lines and 
	which would have East Jerusalem as its capital.
  Palestinian 
	confidence in this option eroded further after the President of the United 
	States called for negotiations based on the 1967 borders and Israel's prime 
	minister rejected this call out of hand at the podium of the U.S. Congress 
	while receiving the prolonged applause of American lawmakers from both 
	parties alike.
  The expected UN vote in three months from now, in 
	September 2011, is the final test and the last chance - now or never. The 
	Palestinian Authority's last chance to prove to its people that their hope 
	to be a free people in their land is not lost, that the international 
	community is behind them and that through its support a miserable and hollow 
	Palestinian Authority could be upgraded and turned into a real sovereign 
	state.
  In the UN Security Council, the United States has veto power, 
	as is officially enshrined in the UN Charter. In the United States Congress, 
	the Government of Israel has veto power which does not appear in any written 
	document but is enshrined deep within American politics, and which in effect 
	controls the U.S. veto at the UN. And the United States remains the 
	strongest power in the world, and its exercise of the UN veto is a highly 
	significant gesture. Still, in recent years doubts are heard and fissures 
	appear in the US global might, competitors and opponents show up to 
	increasingly challenge the might of the American empire. If its veto is 
	bypassed through the General Assembly, leaving the Americans in a less than 
	splendid isolation in their opposition to Palestinian aspirations, these 
	fissures would become somewhat wider. 
  And what would happen on the 
	day after? In his famous speech Obama warned the Palestinians that the UN 
	vote by itself would not create a Palestinian state - which is undoubtedly 
	true. A UN vote in itself does not establish states which fail to 
	materialize on the ground. Also the UN vote on November 29, 1947, did not in 
	itself establish the State of Israel, it only provided a framework and 
	legitimacy to the acts of David Ben Gurion and his colleagues. So, what will 
	happen on the ground?
  The influential columnist Tom Friedman urged 
	the Palestinians to implement the creation of their state in practice 
	through a non-violent struggle - large processions setting out every Friday 
	to Jerusalem, with olive branches in their hands. For this scenario, 
	Israel's army and police already begun to prepare and practice, and they 
	have a wide spectrum of measures to counter what Army Chief of Staff Benny 
	Gantz termed "The Demonstrations Threat" – from tear gas and stinking water 
	to snipers who are instructed to shoot to kill.
  But a state 
	recognized by the International Community has various new possibilities open 
	to it, even when its territory is still under occupation by a foreign army, 
	and even if its full membership in the UN was stopped by an American veto. 
	For example, to lodge a complaint to International Court in the Hague for 
	the violation of its sovereignty by the occupying army and by the settlers 
	illegally introduced into its sovereign territory by that army. Also, start 
	individual international proceedings against particular officers in the 
	occupation army, for personal acts in violation of International Law 
	committed on its sovereign territory. 
  Once the state of Palestine is 
	recognized, it will be much harder to send Israeli forces late at night into 
	the heart of Ramallah, in order to detain Palestinians wanted by the Israeli 
	security services for the purpose of " interrogation under moderate physical 
	pressure". From the purely military aspect, there would be no problem to 
	bring to bear a tremendous firepower which would overcome all opposition by 
	the Palestinian police forces, but the Israeli officers involved may need 
	immediately afterwards to get legal assistance. Adv. Michael Sfard already 
	pointed out that the diplomatic tsunami of which the Defense Minister is so 
	apprehensive might be dwarfed by the judicial tsunami which the State of 
	Israel might face if insisting upon retaining the Palestinian Territories 
	after September. 
  
	
	http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/the-legal-tsunami-is-on-its-way-1.358758 
	 
	
	http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/features/a-legal-tsunami-on-the-horizon-1.362001 
	 And inter alia, a sovereign state is definitely entitled to issue its 
	own currency. If the Government of Israel insists upon keeping the 
	Palestinian territories within a single economic framework with the State of 
	Israel, there could suddenly flow into this shared economy an enormous 
	amount of Palestinian Pound notes and coins, with vast economic effects 
	unforeseen and uncontrolled by the eminent economist Stanley Fisher, who 
	apparently failed in his bid to head the IMF and will have to remain at the 
	head of the Bank of Israel.
  And yet, what if all this does not help 
	the Palestinians? What if their state remains a piece of paper at the UN 
	General Assembly, with no sign of it visible on the ground, with occupation 
	keeping its usual routine and Israeli soldiers standing at the checkpoints 
	through all the highways and the settlers in place, driving bulldozers and 
	building and expanding and bursting out in all directions? A great victory 
	for the Israeli right wing and the vision of Greater Israel. A very great 
	pyrrhic victory, 
  If the Palestinian leadership is revealed as having 
	given false promises and false hopes and having nothing further to offer to 
	its people, the revolutions in the Arab World would swiftly arrive in the 
	Palestinian streets. The Palestinian Authority which failed to transform 
	itself into a state will collapse like a house of cards, its government and 
	parliament swept away without a trace, and with them all remaining support 
	for a solution based on a Palestinian state alongside Israel. 
  
	Palestinians would abandon en masse the demand for an independent state, and 
	would instead adopt a call – already gaining support among them – for a 
	single state from the sea to the Jordan, a democracy with voting rights for 
	all. All settlements would remain in place - only that their Palestinian 
	neighbors in Nablus and Hebron, Jenin and Ramallah as in Gaza and Rafah 
	would also send their democratically elected representatives to the Knesset. 
	And just then, when support for a democratic state from the Mediterranean to 
	the Jordan would spread throughout the world, an Israeli government – 
	terribly fearful of the loss of the Jewish state and the Jewish majority – 
	would very urgently offer all that it refused and rejected before...  
	
	http://adam-keller2.blogspot.com/2011/06/why-is-this-year-different-from-all.html 
	 
       
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