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Despite Barak's Arrogance and Trump's Lunatic
Idiocy, Jerusalem Can Only Be the Capital of Both Palestine and Israel
By Uri Avnery
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
December 11, 2017
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The Dome of the Rock at Al-Aqsa Mosque in Al-Quds, Jerusalem |
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From Barak to Trump EHUD BARAK has
"broken the silence". He has published an article in The New York Times
attacking our prime minister in the most abrasive terms. In other words,
he has done exactly the same as the group of ex-soldiers who call
themselves "Breaking the Silence", who are accused of washing our dirty
linen abroad. They expose war crimes to which they have been witnesses,
or even participants. But apart from the attack on Binyamin
Netanyahu, Barak has
used the article to publish his Peace Plan. A former
chief-of-staff of the Israeli army and a former prime minister, Barak is
obviously planning a comeback, and his peace plan is part of the effort.
There seems to be, anyhow, open season for Peace Plans in our region.
I respect the intelligence of Barak. Many years ago, when he was
still the deputy chief-of-staff, he unexpectedly invited me for a talk.
We discussed the military history of the 17th century (military history
is an old hobby of mine) and I soon realized that he was a real expert.
I enjoyed it very much. On a spring evening In May 1999, I was
part of a huge jubilant crowd in Tel-Aviv's Rabin Square after Barak had
won the Knesset elections and become prime minister. He promised us "the
dawn of a new day". In particular, he promised to make peace with the
Palestinians. Intellectually, Barak is superior to all other
politicians on the Israeli scene. Soon enough it appeared that this may
be a handicap. Intelligent people tend to be
arrogant. They
despise people of lesser mental powers. Knowing that he had all the
answers, Barak demanded that President Clinton call a meeting with
Yasser Arafat. On the morrow I spoke with Arafat and found him
deeply worried. Nothing has been prepared, no prior exchange of views,
nothing. He did not want to go to the meeting which he thought was bound
to fail, but could not refuse an invitation from the president of the
US. The result was catastrophe. Barak, sure of himself as usual,
presented his peace plan. It was more accommodating than any prior
Israeli plan, but still fell far short of the Palestinians' minimum. The
meeting broke up. What does a diplomat do in such circumstances?
He announces that "we had a fruitful exchange of views. We have not yet
reached total agreement, but the negotiations will go on, and there will
be more meetings, until we reach agreement." Barak did not say
that. Neither did he say: "Sorry, I am totally
ignorant of the
Palestinian point of view, and I shall now study it seriously."
Instead, Barak came home and announced that Israel had proposed the most
generous terms ever, that the Palestinians had rejected everything, that
the Palestinians want to throw us into the sea, that we have "no partner
for peace". If this had been declared by a right-wing
politician, everybody would have shrugged. But coming from the leader of
the Peace Camp, it was devastating. Its effects can be felt to this very
day. SO HERE comes Barak, the new Barak, with a brand-new Peace
Plan. What does he say? The aim, he writes, is "separation" from the
Palestinians. Not peace, not cooperation, just separation. Get rid of
them. "Peace" is not popular just now. How separation? Israel
will annex the new Jewish neighborhoods in East Jerusalem and the
"settlement blocs" the clusters of Jewish settlements beyond the Green
Line but close to it. He agrees to "land swaps". And then comes the
killer: "overall security responsibility in the West Bank will remain in
the hands of the Israel Defense Forces as long as necessary."
And the sad conclusion: "Even if it is not possible to solve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict at this stage and it probably is not
"
If there is one Palestinian who would accept these terms, I shall
be surprised. But Barak, then and now, does not care for the views and
feelings of the Palestinians. Just like Netanyahu, who at least has the
decency not to propose a "Peace Plan". Unlike Trump. DONALD
TRUMP is not a genius
like Barak, but he also has a Peace Plan. A group of right-wing
Jews, including his son-in-law (also no genius, he) have been working on
this for months. He has proposed it to Mahmoud Abbas, Arafat's
successor, to the new Saudi Crown Prince and other Arab princes. It
seems to provide for a Palestinian State composed of several small
isolated enclaves on the West Bank, without Jerusalem and without an
army. This is sheer lunacy.
Not one single Palestinian and not one single other Arab would accept
this. Worse, anyone proposing such a caricature of a state betrays utter
ignorance. That's where the real problem lies: it is much worse
than just not knowing. It demonstrates
abysmal contempt for the Palestinians and for Arabs
in general, a basic belief that their feelings, if any, dont
matter at all. This is a remnant of colonial times.
Palestinians, and Arabs at large, do have deep feelings and convictions.
They are a proud people. They still remember the times when Muslims were
incomparably more advanced than the barbarian Europeans. To be treated
like dirt by the US president and his Jewish entourage hurts them
deeply, and may lead to a disturbance in our region that no Arab prince,
hired by the USA, will be able to control. THIS ESPECIALLY
concerns Jerusalem. For Muslims, this is not just a town. It is their
third holiest place, the spot from where the Prophet peace be upon him
ascended to heaven. For a Muslim to
give up Jerusalem is inconceivable. The latest
decisions of Trump
concerning Jerusalem are to put it mildly
idiotic. Arabs are furious, Israelis don't
really care, America's Arab stooges, princes and all, are deeply
worried. If disturbances erupt, they may well be swept away. And
what for? For one evening's headline? There is no subject in our
region, and perhaps in the world that is more delicate. Jerusalem is
holy to three world religions, and one cannot argue with holiness.
In the past I have devoted much thought to this subject. I love
Jerusalem (contrary to the founder of Zionism, Theodor Herzl, who was
disgusted by it and left it in a hurry after one single night). The
early Zionists disliked the city as a symbol of all that is wrong and
foul in Judaism. Some twenty years ago I composed a manifesto,
together with my late friend, Feisal al-Husseini, the leader of
Jerusalem's Arabs and the scion of its most noble family. Hundreds of
Israelis and Palestinians signed it. Its title was "Our
Jerusalem". It started with the words: "Jerusalem is ours, Israelis and
Palestinians, Muslims, Christians and Jews." It went on: "Our
Jerusalem Is a mosaic of all the cultures, all the religions and all the
periods that enriched the city, from earliest antiquity to this very day
- Canaanites and Jebusites and Israelites, Jews and Hellenes, Romans and
Byzantines, Christians and Muslims, Arabs and Mamelukes, Othmanlis and
Britons, Palestinians and Israelis. "Our Jerusalem must be
united, open to all, and belonging to all its inhabitants, without
borders and barbed wire in its midst." And the practical
conclusion: "Our Jerusalem must be
the capital of the two states that will live side by side in this
country West Jerusalem the capital of the State of Israel and East
Jerusalem the capital of the State of Palestine."
I wish I could nail this Manifesto to the doors of the White House.
***
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