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Obama-Kerry Modified Arab
Initiative:
Illegal Settlements to Israel, Promises and
Delusions to Arabs By Uri Avnery Al-Jazeerah,
CCUN, May 6, 2013
No, We Can’t! AN AMBASSADOR is an honest
man sent abroad to lie for the good of his country, a British statesman
famously wrote some 400 years ago. That is true, of course, for all
diplomats. The question is whether the diplomat lies only to
others, or also to himself. I am asking this these days when I
follow the arduous efforts of John Kerry, the new American foreign
secretary, to jump-start the Israeli-Arab “peace process”.
Kerry seems to be an honest man. A serious man. A patient man. But does
he really believe that his endeavors will lead anywhere? TRUE,
THIS week Kerry did achieve a remarkable success. A delegation
of Arab foreign ministers, including the Palestinian, met with him in
Washington. They were led by the Qatari prime minister – a relative of
the Emir, of course – whose country is assuming a more and more
prominent role in the Arab world. At the meeting, the ministers
emphasized that the Arab Peace Initiative is still valid. This
initiative, forged 10 years ago by the then Saudi Crown Prince (and
present King) Abdullah, was endorsed by the entire Arab League in the
March 2002 Summit Conference in Beirut. Yasser Arafat could not attend,
because Prime Minister Ariel Sharon announced that if he left the
country, he would not be allowed to return. But Arafat officially
accepted the initiative. It will be remembered that soon after
the 1967 war, the Arab Summit Conference in Khartoum promulgated the
Three Noes: No peace with Israel, No recognition of Israel, No
negotiations with Israel. The new initiative was a total reversal of
that resolution, which was born out of humiliation and despair.
The Saudi initiative was reaffirmed unanimously in the 2007 Summit
Conference in Riyadh. All Arab rulers attended, including Mahmoud Abbas
of Palestine who voted in favor, excluding only Muammar Gaddafi of
Libya. The initiative says unequivocally that all Arab countries
would announce the end of the Arab-Israeli conflict, sign peace treaties
with Israel, and institute normal relations with Israel. In return,
Israel would withdraw to the June 4, 1967 border (the Green Line). The
State of Palestine, with its capital in East Jerusalem, would be
established. The refugee problem would be solved by agreement (meaning
agreement with Israel). As I wrote at the time, if
anyone had told us in May 1967 that the Arab world would make such an
offer, they would have been locked up in an institution for the mentally
ill. But those of us who advocated the acceptance of the Arab initiative
were branded as traitors. In his conference with the Arab
ministers this week, John Kerry
succeeded in pushing them a step further. They agreed to
add that the 1967 Green Line may be changed by
swaps of territories. This means that the
large settlements
along the border, where the great majority of the settlers reside, would
be annexed to Israel, in return for largely inferior Israeli land.
WHEN THE initiative was first aired, the Israeli government was
desperately looking for a way out. The first excuse that sprang
to mind – then as always – was the refugee problem. It is easy to create
panic in Israel with the nightmare of millions of refugees “flooding”
Israel, putting an end to the Jewishness of the Jewish State.
Sharon, the Prime Minister at the time, willfully ignored the crucial
clause inserted by the Saudis into their plan: that there would be an
“agreed” solution. This clearly means that Israel was accorded the right
to veto any solution. In practice, this would amount to the return of a
symbolic number, if any at all. Why did the initiative mention
the refugees at all? Well, no Arab could possibly publish a peace plan
that did not mention them. Even so, the Lebanese objected to the clause,
because it would leave the refugees in Lebanon. But the
refugees are always a useful bogeyman. Then and now. ONE DAY
before the original Saudi initiative was submitted to the Beirut Summit,
on March 27, 2002, something terrible happened: Hamas (allegedly)
carried out a massacre in Netanya, with 40 dead and hundreds wounded. It
was on the eve of Passover, the joyous Jewish holiday. The
Israeli public was inflamed. Sharon immediately responded that In these
circumstances, the Arab peace initiative would not even be considered.
Never mind that (this was allegedly) committed by Hamas with the express
purpose of sabotaging the Saudi initiative and undermining Arafat, who
supported it. Sharon mendaciously blamed Arafat for the bloody deed, and
that was that. Curiously – or maybe not – a similar thing
happened this week. On the very day the upgraded Arab initiative was
published, a young Palestinian killed a settler with a knife at a
checkpoint – the first Jew killed in the West Bank for more than a year
and a half. The victim, Evyatar Borowsky, was the 31-year old
father of five children – usual for an orthodox man. He was a resident
of the Yitzhar settlement (built illegally on Palestinian lands) near
Nablus, perhaps the most extreme anti-Arab settlement in the entire West
Bank. He looked like the quintessential ideological settler – blond,
bearded, with East-European looks, long payot (side locks), and a large
colored kippah. The perpetrator came from the Palestinian town of
Tulkarm. He was shot and severely injured. He is now in an Israeli
hospital. Before the incident, Netanyahu had been hard at work
to formulate a statement that would reject the peace initiative without
insulting the Americans. After the killing, he decided that there was no
need. The (attacker) has done his job. Justice Minister Tzipi
Livni, who is in charge of the (nonexistent) negotiations with the
Palestinians, and President Shimon Peres welcomed the Arab statement.
But Livni’s influence in the government is next to nil, and Peres is by
now a joke in Israel. IF THE
American Secretary of State really believes that he can
nudge our government slowly and gradually to “meaningful” negotiation
with the Palestinians, he is deluding himself. If he does not believe
it, he is trying to delude others.
There have been no real negotiations with the Palestinians since
Ehud Barak came back from the Camp David conference in 2000, waving the
slogan “We Have No Partner for Peace”. With this he destroyed the
Israeli peace movement and brought Ariel Sharon to power.
Before that, there were no real negotiations either.
Yitzhak Shamir announced that he was happy to
negotiate for ever. (Shamir, by the way, declared that it was a
virtue to “lie for the fatherland”.) Documents were produced and
gathered dust, conferences were photographed and forgotten, agreements
were signed and made no real difference. Nothing moved. Nothing - apart
from settlement activity, that is. Why? How would anyone
entertain the belief that from now on everything would be different?
Kerry will elicit some more words from the Arabs. Some more
promises from Netanyahu. There may even be a festive opening of a new
round of negotiations, a great victory for President Obama and Kerry.
But nothing will change.
Negotiations will just drag on. And on. And on.
For the same reason that there has
been no movement in the past, there will be no movement in the future –
unless… UNLESS. UNLESS Obama takes the bull by the horns,
which, it seems, he is exceedingly unwilling to do. The horns of
the bull are the horns of the dilemma, on which Israel is sitting.
It is the historic choice facing us: Greater Israel or Peace?
Peace, any conceivable peace, the very basis of the Arab Initiative,
means Israel’s withdrawal from the occupied Palestinian territories and
the establishment of the State of Palestine in the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip, with its capital in East Jerusalem. No ifs, no buts, no
perhapses. The opposite of peace is Israeli rule over the whole
of the land between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, in one
form or another. (Lately, some despairing Israeli peaceniks have been
embracing this, in the absurd hope that in this Greater Israel, Israel
would grant equality to the Arabs.) If President Obama has the
will and the power to compel the government of Israel to make this
historic decision and choose peace, may the political price for the
President be as it may, then he should proceed. If this will and
this power do not exist, the whole
great peace effort is an exercise in deception, and
honorable men should not indulge in it. They should honestly
face the two sides and the world and tell them: No, We Can’t.
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