MIFTAH
Saturday, 18 May. 2024
 
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Today signals the launching of “marathon” talks between the Palestinian and Israeli delegations for final status negotiations headed by Yasser Abd-Rabbo and Oded Iran respectively.

Secluded in an unknown location, the core delegations will conduct intensive, non-stop talks away from the eyes and ears of the press, for the purpose of drafting a framework agreement on permanent status issues by February 13.

These concentrated, accelerated talks are projected to last for ten days, with US envoy Dennis Ross joining them in his “observer” capacity on Wednesday, February 2—to be followed by a visit from Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

A meeting between Israeli PM Barak and Palestinian President Arafat is to take place on Thursday the 3rd or Friday the 4th, both to assess the talks and to give them a forward push.

Subsequently, a decision will be made as to whether the talks will be moved to Washington for another “marathon” of trilateral, top-level, intensive meetings.

Combined with Barak’s visit to Cairo and his meeting with Egyptian President Mubarak today; Arafat’s and Clinton’s meeting in Davos (in the context of the World Economic Forum) on Saturday, January 29; and the convening of the Multilateral Steering Committee in Moscow on Feb. 1, it is clear that a flurry of peace-process-related activity is in the making.

With diminished dramatic impact, the Palestine Central Council is also set to convene on Wednesday, Feb. 2, to examine yet one more time the issue of declaring Palestinian statehood.

Given such a hectic agenda, the peace process should be exhibiting signs of vitality (or at least of motion sickness) rather than the current lethargy or substantive lack of progress.

Clearly, one vital ingredient is missing—the political will on the part of the Israelis to take the necessary decisions and to abandon the mentality of the occupier in favor of the mindset of the peacemaker.

If Barak persists in rejecting international law as the basis for any agreement, the talks can never take off.

Nor can any progress be made with his insistence on reinventing Jerusalem in order to maintain Israel’s illegal sovereignty over the real Jerusalem.

His refusal to even consider the Palestinian refugees’ right of return (UN Res. 194) in the context of such contemporary expressions of a global consensus as those of Kosovo or East Timor is unconscionable.

Conversely, the Israeli “law of return” affords Jewish immigrants instant rights and actively seeks the studied repopulation of the original homes and lands of the Palestinian refugees.

Barak’s latest statements on Israel’s refusal to take moral responsibility for the plight of the Palestinian refugees is even more reprehensible. His pronouncement that not one refugee will be allowed to return is not only an expression of willful moral blindness; it is also an irresponsible and dangerous blow to the prospects of peace.

Furthermore, Barak’s outright rejection of the June 4, 1967 boundaries and his insistence on maintaining Israeli settlements within Palestinian territories are a direct contravention of UN resolutions and the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Given all of the above, it is not surprising that the peace process is rapidly getting nowhere.

It is not just the gap between both sides that needs bridging; more importantly, it is the Israeli attitude that requires a drastic shift to be brought into compliance with international law and the imperatives of peace.

Neither “lowering the expectations of the Palestinians” (a phrase that Barak borrowed from his predecessor Netanyahu), nor “making painful compromises” (Clinton’s tactics at friendly persuasion) can revitalize the peace process.

The Palestinian people cannot be made to relinquish those rights guaranteed to them by international law, nor will they accept any peace by diktat or by coercion.

While the Israeli side entered into final status talks with a hard-line maximalist position, the Palestinian side had already made the historical compromise and entered the talks with a minimalist position that leaves very little (if any) room for maneuver.

The absent interface cannot be artificially created at the expense of Palestinians rights.

Ultimately, it would be at the expense of peace itself.

Without the necessary political will, all that commotion associated with the peace process may be filled with “sound and fury,” but actually “signifying nothing.”

 
 
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