MIFTAH
Saturday, 18 May. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Five months after Barak’s election and more than three months following the formation of the new government in Israel, it has become abundantly clear that the much anticipated progress in the peace process is till beyond reach.

It has also become evident that conditions on the ground for the Palestinians who had looked forward to marked improvements remain blatantly unjust and punitive.

Despite frequent protestations, proclamations, and statements of intent, the new-old Israeli government is neither building bridges of confidence and gaining supporters for the peace process nor pursuing decisive and substantive policies to create new realities consistent with the imperatives and objectives of peace.

The most intensive efforts to date have been exerted in internal negotiations between Barak and the settlers and/or their organizations (such as the Yesha’ Council).

Disregarding the majority opinion within his own Labor Party (let alone his coalition partners such as Meretz, and his Palestinian voters in the Arab parties), Barak seems to have turned to the settlers as an equal and opposite force that must be placated and accommodated.

His intensive negotiations and maneuvers with the settlers have led to agreements—both signed and unsigned, declared and secret—that seem to take precedence over all other agreements.

The repeated promises made by the previous and this Israeli government to the American administration concerning the cessation of settlement activities and the signed agreements with the Palestinians in this regard (even those preceding Sharm el-Sheikh and Wye) have been superseded by such sinister attempts at settler appeasement.

The logical conclusion is that Barak suffers not only from a severe case of misplaced priorities but also from a schizophrenic policy orientation that seeks to create an abnormal coexistence between one position and its opposite simultaneously.

The discordant outcome is one of a dual and diametrically opposed government that openly espouses the cause of resuscitating peace while allowing the settlers’ bulldozers to dig its grave.

The settlement movement has always been the most vocal, strident, and destructive anti-peace force in Israel. It neither elected Barak nor did it endorse his “peace” agenda or platform.

In spite of all his attempts at appeasement and accommodation, when the chips are down they will turn their ill-gained force and power against him and against any progress in the peace process. Their voracious appetite for the land, their extremist ideological absolutism, and their total disregard for human rights and the rule of law all place them on a direct collision course with any peace camp or government.

Conventional wisdom in Israel had granted them license to behave outside the law, beyond accountability, and with full impunity—provided their victims were Palestinian. Such power is liable to backfire, and such abuse will turn inward against the legal and political systems in Israel itself, the most dramatic example being Rabin’s assassination.

So what does Barak have to gain by postponing the inevitable confrontation with the settlers and by pandering to their illegal demands and pressures?

A temporary truce, at best, is the most immediate objective. Its price, however, includes the increasing internal distortion within Israeli society (as well as the judicial and legal systems). It also includes the alienation and possible loss of the peace constituency in Israel, particularly as Barak’s credibility erodes and his integrity is questioned.

At stake, primarily, are the Palestinian partnership and the whole peace process. The equation is relatively simple and obvious—either peace or settlements. The pursuit of peace cannot incorporate the elements of its own negation. Settlement activities and the settler agenda are entirely antithetical to the spirit and the letter of the peace platform.

The “other” government in Israel is dictating its own agenda and transforming it to a reality on the ground, while seeking to bestow an illegal “legality” on the settlements.

Petty maneuvers and trivial tactics such as the removal of “symbolic” outposts while maintaining the larger settlements and granting retroactive license to others have all been exposed for what they are—a sham and a shame!

Secret agreements to allow settlers to return to evacuated sites and to continue their control and use of the land are even more devious and shameful.

Having approved and spent NIS 39 million for the “protection” of such settlements, and the request of NIS 140 million in additional “protection” funds, betray a mentality of war rather than peace.

Detaching army units, allocating bullet-proof vehicles, building observation posts, erecting barbed wire and electrified fences, digging trenches, building alternative by-pass roads, and stockpiling more than 11,000 weapons in these settlements are not only expressions of a grave and explosive apartheid reality. They are also the seeds of a growing militia and a vigilante population whose immediate threat is to the Palestinians but whose long-term lethal impact will be felt in all aspects of Israeli life.

Israel has habitually created its own monsters. It doesn’t take a great deal of intelligence to discern where the next threat to Israel’s security is being created.

Add to that the reluctance, procrastination, arrogance, and sheer stubbornness that characterize the implementation of agreements, and you have the ingredients of another lethal concoction.

The “safe passage” is neither safe nor free nor unhindered. It is the most humiliating and obnoxious expression of racism and control devised by the mentality of occupation.

Natan Sharansky’s declared “revision” of the policy of ethnic cleansing in the form of Jerusalem ID confiscation has not materialized. On the contrary, new and improved means of convoluted, endless, bureaucratic, and impossible control have been devised to perfect the torturous and racist process of creating a “Palestinian-free” Jerusalem.

Political, judicial, ideological, and settler circles are in an unholy alliance over property confiscation—whether land or houses, as in the case of the ‘Abbassi family home in Silwan that remains occupied by extremist settlers despite the “absent” owners’ very visible and uninterrupted presence.

New statements about “separation” by means of barbed wire and fences are being released as a unilateral expression of an Israeli concept of “peace” that seeks to predetermine borders, control crossing points and freedom of movement, consolidate annexation, steal water resources, manipulate economic priorities, contain Palestinian demography, and maintain settlement and military locations. Then Barak will negotiate!

So far, no negotiating teams and no head of delegation have been announced.

With this pressure cooker heating up, Barak wants to reach a “framework agreement” with the Palestinians for the purpose of putting an end to “hostilities” or terminating the conditions of “conflict.”

The irony cannot be missed or ignored. Barak’s habit of imposing conditions that negate his avowed objectives, or attempting to reconcile the irreconcilables, is more than tedious. It is entirely irresponsible and dangerous.

Only the “two-state” solution can lead to real peace and security, provided Barak does not succeed in eliminating the option in his mollification of the settlers and other expansionist elements.

Genuine “separation” means full withdrawal and elimination of settlements and all other expressions of extraterritoriality, apartheid, and control.

The essential requirement is parity—the asymmetry of power does not in any way mean inequality of rights.

Barak’s peace partner is the Palestinian side, not the settlers.

His terms of reference are international law, not the politics of coercion and intimidation.

His agenda for permanent status talks is set and his mandate is to negotiate a just peace, not to adopt unilateral and prejudicial policies and measures pertaining to Jerusalem, borders, refugees, settlements, water rights, and relations with neighboring countries.

His timeframe is rapidly being depleted and his grace period has run out.

The two-state solution may still be possible if the elements of justice, legality, and sanity prevail.

It is impossible, however, for a two-government state to achieve it.

It is time for Barak to put the settlers (and everything they stand for) in their place!

 
 
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