MIFTAH
Friday, 26 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

US Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell was in the region again last week. His visits no longer stir much interest or speculation about what he has brought with him to break the deadlock. Most concerned parties know well by now that he has not much left in his sack.

He came anyway, because all that is left for the bankrupt American-sponsored "peace process" is to keep trying the same old things in the hope that what failed before might suddenly show different results now. But apart from rearranging the words and trying to devise face-saving formulas, the results are no different.

Despite an intense campaign by Israel's US lobby to incite confrontation and war with Iran, and blame the Palestinians' supposed "preconditions" for the deadlock, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to be seen as the main culprit, obstructing American as well as international efforts to broker a peace deal. Netanyahu has rejected all the American proposals intended to enable Fateh leader Mahmoud Abbas to resume talks, and to enable Arab states, in addition, to reciprocate by taking further normalisation steps with the Jewish state.

Netanyahu was, as a result, seen as a stubborn rejectionist even when the terms offered were very favourable to his country; they were indeed wrapped in layers of affirmation of unshakeable US support, unlimited commitment to Israel's security and an indestructible strategic alliance between the two countries. That in addition to a disguised promise of consolidating all accumulated Israeli war gains.

The supposed clarity of this perception has led to another false assumption: the road to a peaceful settlement would have been paved all the way to the end if only Netanyahu had agreed to stop settlement building, even for a limited period (Netanyahu's 10-month settlement freeze was not taken very seriously because it not only excluded Jerusalem as well as other significant exceptions, but it was matched by huge new building projects in and around the occupied city).

But let us assume that Netanyahu had agreed right from the beginning to stop all settlement building in all the occupied Palestinian territories, including Jerusalem, and that he had also agreed to stop any expansion in the existing settlements even if "natural growth" required that, just as US President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had initially demanded. Let us also assume that Netanyahu had committed to the "two-state solution" and had assigned an Israeli team to lead the resumed negotiations with the Palestinians. At that point, the "international community" would have been highly euphoric, Arab states would have reciprocated with generous confidence-building and normalisation measures, Netanyahu would have been praised as a courageous leader and a man of peace, and theories would have abounded, showing how bold decisions for peace can only be taken by rightwing hardline leaders not moderates (remember Begin and Sharon). But when the two sides would have engaged in negotiations, with American, Quartet, European and international patronage, there would have been a quick return to square one. Israel, at that point, would have offered the Palestinians nothing and would not have enabled the negotiations to move an inch. Israeli negotiators would have demanded Palestinian concessions, to reciprocate their “painful sacrifices”. They would have served the Palestinians with prohibitive demands and once these met, there would have been more demands. If they would have allowed further negotiations at some point, there would have been no hint as to what the Palestinians could expect from them. There would have been, as we have always experienced, endless negotiations for their own sake and, of course, for buying time.

The Israelis would have demanded that the Palestinians stopped "incitement" - an endless process the fulfilment of which can never be judged; would have demanded that the Palestinians recognise Israel as a "Jewish state", that infrastructure of Palestinian “terror” be dismantled and that weapons in the hands of Palestinians be all collected. The Israelis would have also asked the Palestinians to forego the right of return, accept Jerusalem as the united eternal capital of the Israeli state, accept a state of their own, which has none of the features of any state except for the name, and abandon any claim to have Israeli settlements built on Palestinian land as established irreversible facts removed - never mind the illegal outposts and the land swap gimmicks.

All such demands and more would be asked before even any meaningful negotiations start. The Israeli side would not accept any possible claim that such demands are preconditions. On the contrary, it would insist that they are vital prerequisites for the negotiations, lest essential Israeli security interests should be jeopardised.

Judging from the very clear lessons of 43 years of peace-making efforts - negotiations started with Ambassador Gunnar Jarring in 1967, not only with Madrid in 1991 - it would be foolhardy to expect any progress in negotiating a peaceful settlement with Israel - I repeat, Israel not Netanyahu - if the terms of any such settlement clash with the Zionist programme for Palestine and its immediate surroundings.

It is not Netanyahu who has been blocking any progress. His sticking to his position so far has been more representative of Israel's policy than that of many other Israeli leaders who showed fake flexibility but acted the same way.

In Israel there are no moderates and extremists; there are rather blunt, aggressive, arrogant and obdurate extremists on the one side, and soft-spoken, elusive, subtle and deceptive extremists on the other. The only difference is the style. Netanyahu's arrogance has disguised the much more serious difficulties along the road to peace than the meagre step of settlement freeze.

Netanyahu could have engaged in negotiations without any fear of advancing towards undesired results; he could have ensured that with the usual Israeli prohibitive demands. He simply did not want to commit to any settlement freeze for ideological as well as practical reasons. He claimed that the Palestinians have negotiated for years while settlement construction was going on. He did not want to be different.

The Palestinian Authority has been indeed negotiating with Yitzhak Rabin, Netanyahu, Shimon Peres, Ehud Barak, Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert for years without gaining a thing. Actually it was gradually losing while Israel was constantly creating irreversible fact on the ground.

Much as arrogant, aggressive and disagreeable Netanyahu can be, he is not the obstacle to peace. Israel itself is the obstacle to peace.

 
 
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