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

No one should have been taken by surprise at the failure of the Arafat-Barak summit (Feb. 3) to achieve a breakthrough or at least to forge a new common language.

The signs have been visible, the symptoms discernible, and the negative indicators cumulative.

Barak made no secret of his position on substance and his attitude towards the conduct of the talks.

Just as significantly, his total disregard and disdain for Palestinian rights and international law, as well as his patronizing high-handed manner in dealing with the Palestinian side have systematically eroded any remaining confidence and undermined the talks themselves.

The first grievance had to do with Barak’s unilateral decision on the 6.1% third withdrawal in the second phase of redeployment.

Regardless of “oral” hints or implicit commitments, no Palestinian should have been surprised be the one-sided Israeli decision on the territory to be handed over.

All previous redeployments were carried out in the same unilateral way, and despite repeated protests by the negotiators, they still returned to the negotiating table to receive the same treatment yet again.

As for the nature of the areas themselves, again this provides another example of Israeli consistency. It has always been unpopulated (or sparsely populated) areas, and the Jerusalem vicinity has been persistently left out.

Territorial contiguity has also been willfully avoided, with each redeployment emphasizing the fragmentation of the West Bank, while assuring the continuity of the Israeli settlements, particularly as extraterritorial extensions of Israel.

The Palestinian side had accepted the fragmentation of both the phases and the land, and (American pressure notwithstanding) had consequently relinquished to Israel the quantitative and temporal frame.

Israel proceeded to exploit this to the hilt, in a qualitatively prejudicial and minimalist approach—all the time calling upon the “ghost” of Warren Christopher and his notorious unilateral letter to Israel that had bestowed upon it the unilateral gift to decide on the nature of the territory to be returned.

Palestinian post hoc attempts at undoing the damage inflicted by others (or by their lack of persistence and attention to details in previous agreements) have not borne fruit so far.

As for delays and missed deadlines, one would be hard put to identify a single date, whether deadline or target date, which had been honored. A sliding timeframe has characterized the peace process from its inception, with the Israeli side introducing the slope and the Americans providing the lubricant.

The February 13th date was an Israeli invention to accompany another Israeli fabrication of a FAPS as an essential framework agreement devoutly to be wished for!

When the Palestinian side protested, the sulky Barak threatened to withdraw from Sharm el-Sheikh. A lot of American back patting and some arm-twisting led to the adoption of yet another formula for an agreement to be signed first and negotiated later (cf. the Declaration of Principles).

All along, it was clear that Barak had intended to merge the interim phase redeployments with final status talks; in particular, he wanted to avoid the implementation of the third phase and to incorporate it within the talks on boundaries and settlements.

This way, the outcome of final status talks would have been predetermined (and unilaterally prejudged) by Israel, while bringing the interim phase agreements to comply retroactively with such a view.

It has been no secret, either, that Barak had rejected the “Oslo” agreements and had sought to abandon all outstanding issues in favor of moving directly to final status without implementing previously signed mini-agreements.

Such a re-tailoring of the peace process has become endemic to Israeli policy-making regardless of the format or ideology of each successive government.

Such hammering of reality to fit Israeli pre-conceived notions has also been a consistent trait of Israeli governments—with a little bit of help from their American friends.

The way in which Israeli leaders have persisted in humiliating the Palestinian side, and the condescending patronizing attitude of dictating to the other from a position of strength, have plagued the process and undermined any vestiges of trust.

They also succeeded in inflaming Palestinian public opinion and producing an equal and opposite reaction of hostility and contempt.

Needless to say, this has left the atmosphere seriously polluted, with the peace process gasping for a breath of fresh air.

Such a total disregard for Palestinian public opinion has also contributed to the political toxic waste.

Conversely, domestic Israeli considerations (including the extremist Israeli settler population) and the blackmail of every little party in the coalition to stay in government have formed the real motivation for any political decision associated with the peace process—including increased settlement activity and collective punitive measures.

Thus while Barak is looking inwards for his peace partners (regardless of their ideological orientations), he is losing his external partner with whom real peace is to be made (both Palestinian and Syrian).

While naval contemplation may be a relaxing mental exercise at times, however one cannot hope to indulge in such an exercise and maneuver through the minefield of the peace process simultaneously.

Another major component of this latest crisis is Barak’s refusal to “give” the Americans any role.

It, too, should not have come as a surprise to anyone.

From his first days in office, Barak defined and distributed roles as he saw fit. He gave the Americans a “back seat” position and declared Israel as the driver of the process—with the Palestinians and everyone else being hapless passengers.

Clinton (US President, that is) at the time was like a “kid with a new toy,” totally absorbed by the gift that is Barak to notice that he was being taken for a ride.

Perhaps in Davos, with Barak being too busy elsewhere for a trilateral summit, Clinton began to wonder. One cannot say for certain.

What is certain, though, is that no one should hold his or her breath—the polluted atmosphere notwithstanding.

Barak’s notorious “red lines” are now being operative.

(Just in case anyone forgot, these are: no to the return of the Palestinian refugees; no to the return to the June 4, 1967 boundaries; no to the removal of Israeli settlements; no to sharing Jerusalem; etc.)

The policies and mentality of the occupation are still in place.

The peace process has been entirely dislocated—both in time and place.

What is amazing is that some people still insist on being taken by surprise!

 
 
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