Preventing Palestine:
A Must Read History of US Failed
Peace-Making
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
September 27, 2018
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Preventing Palestine: A Must Read History of Failed
Peace-Making
Seth Anziska's "Preventing Palestine: A Political History From
Camp David to Oslo" is a deeply insightful and profoundly disturbing
book that traces the tortuous path of Middle East peace-making during
the past four decades. It was quite painful to read.
Having been
a close observer and sometimes participant in many of the developments
that have unfolded since the end of the 1973 War, Anziska opened old
wounds while shedding new light on the painful events and acts of
betrayal that have shaped recent Palestinian history.
Through all
of the twists and turns of this period, the brutal wars and the
diplomatic initiatives, the one constant that emerges is the Israeli
determined refusal to recognize the Palestinian right to
self-determination and statehood and the self-serving acquiesce to their
intransigence by successive American administrations and key Arab
leaders.
The culprits are many. In Anziska's telling of this
history, we can find fault with most of the parties to the conflict—all
of the US Administrations that were involved during this period: Israeli
Prime Ministers, whether from Labor or Likud; Egyptian Presidents Sadat
and Mubarak; Lebanon's Phalange Party; and, in the end, even the PLO's
Yasser Arafat.
Digging deep into the official records of the
Israelis, Egyptians, Americans, Palestinians, and others who
participated in the region's wars and various diplomatic endeavors,
Anziska mines government and research center archives unearthing
revealing contemporaneous accounts, minutes of meetings, and official
communiques—providing the story behind the story of events as they
unfolded.
Especially fascinating were: the internal debates that
took place in Israeli cabinet meetings and how, at times, they would don
a diplomatic mask of accommodation, while clinging to their firm refusal
to surrender sovereignty of Palestinian lands or recognize the existence
of a Palestinian nation; the discussions that occurred between President
Carter and his aides; the frustrations expressed by Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat's various Foreign Ministers over his betrayal of the
Palestinian cause; the way Israel's Ariel Sharon rudely manhandled US
emissaries and their cowering in the face of his belligerence; the way
Israel's Menachem Begin initially sought to pose as the savior of the
Christians of Lebanon only to "turn on a dime" after they refused to
sign a peace agreement on Israel's terms; the insidious plotting of a
Phalange leader with the Israelis to end the Palestinian presence in
Lebanon; and the short-lived, but still worth noting, instances of
frustration of US Presidents Carter and Reagan and Secretaries of State
George Schultz and James Baker with the Israelis.
What
emerges as key to the denial of Palestinian rights is the self-imposed
paralysis of American decision-makers in the face of Israeli
intransigence—resulting from successive Administration's fears of the
domestic political fallout that might follow any pressure the US might
apply on Israel. Time and again, US principals grew impatient with
Israeli ploys and their hardline refusal to recognize and grant national
rights to Palestinian, only to back down after advisers cautioned them
of the political consequences that might result. There were no American
"profiles in courage" emerging from Anziska's book.
Carter, for
example, began his term with a pledge to realize a "homeland" for the
Palestinians. In line with his Administration's commitment to human
rights, Carter was moved to end their suffering in exile and under
occupation. The vehicle he envisioned to initiate the path toward this
goal was an international all-party conference to end the Arab-Israeli
conflict. Carter's efforts were ultimately upended by a combination of:
Israel's refusal to participate in any forum that would question their
claim of sovereignty over the Palestinian territories; Sadat's resolve
to achieve a separate Israeli-Egyptian peace without the Palestinians,
despite his public pronouncements to the contrary; and the pressure from
the American Jewish community, which caused sufficient enough discomfort
within the White House to cause Carter to back away from pressing Israel
to cede land or political rights to the Palestinians.
In the
end, Carter acceded to the pressure and sheparded the Camp David peace
agreement between Israel and Egypt. The agreement, shaped by largely by
the Israelis, promised only future discussions on a vaguely worded plan
for Palestinian "autonomy"—which in the Israeli lexicon meant that the
Palestinians could realize control of their persons, but not control
over land. The result, as Anziska notes was that at Camp David Sadat got
the Sinai and Begin got the West Bank. And with Israel's southern border
secured, Begin was free to attempt to “wipe out” the PLO in Lebanon.
Throughout the next four decades the region witnessed the horrific
Israeli invasion and occupation of Lebanon (together with the aerial
bombardments that devastated Beirut and the massacres in the Palestinian
refugee camps), two Palestinian uprisings, and repeated failed American
efforts at peace-making. During this time, the US dithered, professing
to want to solve the conflict, but refusing to apply the pressure needed
to make it happen. As Anziska observes, throughout this entire period,
the Israelis, while agreeing to negotiate, insisted on their exclusive
sovereignty over the occupied territories and their "God given right" to
settle in them. These were not topics they would discuss. In communiques,
they repeatedly chided their American interlocutors rejecting the
designation "occupied territories" and insisting on the terms "Judea and
Samaria." They also rejected the term "Palestinian people", referring to
them, instead, as "Arab inhabitants."
As a result of this
Israeli intransigence and the weak-kneed American response, the Israeli
occupation of the Palestinian lands only deepened. In 1977 there were
about Israeli 5,000—8,000 settlers in the West Bank, by 1992 there were
100,000 settlers, and today the number exceeds 600,000.
Despite
the euphoria that accompanied the September 1993 signing of the Oslo
Accords, Anziska demonstrates the similarities between what Oslo
provided for the Palestinians and the autonomy proposal offered by
Menachem Begin at Camp David 15 years earlier. The supposed self-rule
won by the Palestinians at Oslo was circumscribed by Israel's insistence
that it retain control over land, resources, security, and borders. Like
Begin's proposal at Camp David, there would be no Palestinian
sovereignty and no truly independent state. Anziska cites many prominent
Palestinians who called Arafat to task for his rush to sign what they
termed a "flawed agreement."
Menachem Begin, while adamantly
rejecting a Palestinian state, at times, spoke magnanimously of
extending rights to the "Arab inhabitants in Judea and Samaria"—whom he
saw as a "minority" living in Eretz Israel. Anziska quotes Begin saying,
"What's wrong with a Jewish majority living together with an Arab
minority in peace, in human dignity, in equality of rights?"
Well, here we are in 2018, 40 years after Camp David. The Palestinian
dream of an independent state is not only unrealized but is most likely
unrealizable. With many Palestinians now favoring a one state solution,
they may throw Begin's words back at him and say, "There's nothing wrong
with that!" The problem for the Israelis, of course, is that the once
"Arab minority" is now a majority and Israelis have only themselves to
thank for digging this hole. By "Preventing Palestine", they have given
birth a new reality.
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