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John Kerry's Looming Deadline and the
Israeli-Palestinian Peace Process Industry
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 3, 2014
As the US-imposed April 29 deadline for a ‘framework’
agreement between the Israeli government and the Palestinian Authority
looms, time is also running out for the American administration itself.
The Obama administration must now conjure up an escape route to avoid a
political crisis if the talks are to fail, as they surely will.
Chances are the Americans knew well that peace under the current
circumstances is simply not attainable. The Israeli government’s coalition
is so adamantly anti-Arab, anti-peace and anti any kind of agreement that
would fall short from endorsing the Israeli apartheid-like occupation,
predicated on colonial expansion, annexations of borders, land
confiscation, control of holy places and much more. Ideally for Benjamin
Netanyahu and his allies in the right, far-right and ultranationalists,
Palestinians would need to be crammed in disjointed communities, separated
from each other by walls, Jewish settlements, Jewish-only bypass roads,
checkpoints, security fences, and a large concentration of Israeli
military presence including permanent Israeli control of the Jordan
Valley. In fact, while politicians tirelessly speak of peace, the above is
the exact ‘vision’ that the Israelis had in mind almost immediately
following the 1967 war - the final conquest of all of historic Palestine
and occupation of Arab lands. Palestinians are currently paying
the price of earlier Israeli visions, where Vladimir Jabotinsky's ‘Iron
Wall’ of 1923 was coupled with the Allon plan, named after Yigal Allon, a
former general and minister in the Israeli government, who took on the
task of drawing an Israeli design for the newly conquered Palestinian
territories in 67. Not only would it not make any sense for a Zionist
leader like Netanyahu - backed by one of the most rightwing governments in
Israeli history - to bargain with Palestinians on what he considers to be
Eretz Yisrael - the Whole Land of Israel -he has shown no desire, not even
the most miniscule, to reach an agreement that would provide Palestinians
with any of their rightful demands, true sovereignty notwithstanding.
It is implausible that the Americans were unaware of Israel’s lack of
interest in the whole undertaking. For one, Israeli extremists like
Naftali Bennett – Israel’s minister of economy and the head of the
rightwing political party the Jewish Home – are constantly reminding the
US through unconstrained insults that Israel is simply not interested in
peacemaking efforts. The Americans persist, however, for reasons that are
hardly related to peace or justice. Previous administrations
suffered unmitigated failures in the past as they invested time, effort,
resources, and reputation, even to a greater extent than to Obama’s, in
order to broker an agreement. There are the familiar explanations of why
they failed, including the objection to any US pressure on Israel by the
pro-Israel Zionist lobby in Washington, which remains very strong despite
setbacks. The lobby maintains a stronghold on the US Congress in all
matters related to Israel and Israeli interests anywhere.
Preparing for the foreseeable failure, US Secretary of State John Kerry
remained secretive about his plans, leaving analysts in suspense over what
is being discussed between Mahmoud Abbas’s negotiators and the Israeli
government. From the very start, Kerry downgraded expectations. But the
secrecy didn’t last for long. According to Palestinian sources cited in
al-Quds newspaper, the most widely read Palestinian daily, PA president
Abbas had pulled out of a meeting with Kerry in Paris late February
because Kerry’s proposal didn’t meet the minimum of Palestinian
expectations. According to the report, it turned out that Kerry’s
ambitious peace agenda was no more than a rehash of everything that Israel
tried to impose by force or diplomacy, and Palestinians had consistently
rejected: reducing the Palestinian aspiration of a Jerusalem capital into
a tiny East Jerusalem neighborhood (Beit Hanina), and allowing Israel to
keep 10 large settlement blocks built illegally on Palestinian land, aside
from a land swap meant to accommodate Israel’s security needs. Moreover,
the Jordan Valley would not be part of any future Palestinian state, nor
would international forces be allowed there either. In other words, Israel
would maintain the occupation under any other name, except that the PA
would be allowed a level of autonomy over Palestinian population centers.
It is hard to understand how Kerry’s proposal is any different from the
current reality on the ground. Most commentary dealing with the
latest US push for a negotiated agreement would go as far back as Bush’s
Roadmap of 2002, the Arab peace initiative earlier the same year, or even
the Oslo accords of 1993. What is often ignored is the fact that the
‘peace process’ is a political invention by a hardliner, US politician
Henry Kissinger, who served as a National Security Advisor and later
Secretary of State in the Nixon Administration. The idea was to co-opt the
Arabs following the Israeli military victory of 1967, the sudden expansion
of Israel’s borders into various Arab borders, with full US support and
reinforcement. It was Kissinger himself who lobbied for massive US arms to
Israel that changed the course of the 1973 war, and he was the man who
worked to secure Israeli gains through diplomacy. While many are
quick to conclude that the ‘peace process’ has been a historical failure,
the bleak estimation discounts that the intent behind the ‘peace process’
was never to secure a lasting peace, but Israeli military gains. In that
sense, it has been a splendid success. Over the years, however, the ‘peace
process’ became an American investment in the Middle East, a status quo in
itself, and a reason for political relevance. During the administration of
both Bushes, father and son, the ‘peace process’ went hand in hand with
the Iraq war. The Madrid Peace Talks in 1991 were initiated following the
US-led war in Kuwait and Iraq, and was meant to balance out the extreme
militancy that had gripped and destabilized the region. George W. Bush’s
Roadmap fell between the war on Afghanistan and months before the war on
Iraq. Bush was heavily criticized for being a ‘war president’ and for
having no peace vision. The Roadmap, which was drafted with the help of
pro-Israel neoconservative elements in his administration, in consultation
with the lobby and heavy amendments by the Israeli government, was W
Bush’s ‘peace’ overture. Naturally, the Roadmap failed, but until this
day, Bush’s insincere drive for peace had helped maintain the peace
process charade for a few more years, until Bill Clinton arrived to the
scene, and kick started the make-believe process once more. In
the last four decades, the ‘peace process’ became an American diplomatic
staple in the region. It is an investment that goes hand in hand with
their support of Israel and interest in energy supplies. It is an end in
itself, and is infused regularly for reasons other than genuine peace.
Now that Kerry’s deadline of a ‘framework agreement’ is quickly
approaching, all parties must be preparing for all possibilities.
Ultimately, the Americans are keen on maintaining the peace process
charade; the Palestinian Authority is desperate to survive; and Israel
needs to expand settlements unhindered by a Palestinian uprising or
unnecessary international attention. But will they succeed? -
Ramzy Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. He is a
PhD candidate at the University of Exeter, UK. His latest book is “My
Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London).
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