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

When US President George W. Bush hosts Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas at the White House today, he is expected to reiterate Israeli concerns and disappointments over his "inaction" in the face of "terror".

Or he could underline America's support for Palestinian reforms and free elections in January.

For his part, Abbas would do well to take along a copy of Bush's speech of June 24, 2002, outlining his vision of a viable and contiguous Palestinian state, and a map of the West Bank to show him how Israel has been systematically tearing down that vision by creating new harmful facts on the ground and in the process radicalising the Palestinian society.

Abbas would do well to use a yellow marker to highlight for Bush his pledge that if the Palestinians chose new leaders, new institutions and new security arrangements with their neighbours, then a new provisional Palestinian state would see the light in three years which fall in this week.

However, to this day, Israel continues to occupy the autonomous Palestinian areas and hold thousands of prisoners in contravention to the American position.

To justify its actions, the Israeli government blames the Palestinian authority whom it accuses of failing to take the necessary security and political measures that qualify it as a peace partner.

Worse, Israel is pressuring Washington not to yield to Abbas's requests until, in Sharon's words, they dismantle the infrastructure of terrorism.

But a three-year balance sheet shows that incessant Palestinian efforts to satisfy the American-Israeli demands have been met by more of the same Israeli violations of its agreements and of Bush's vision.

The Palestinians have reformed their financial and bureaucratic systems in accordance with American and World Bank directives and are preparing for new legislative elections in the summer under severe Israeli conditions.

They have also reformed and regrouped their security services under new heads and agreed to new security cooperation with Israel that has so far succeeded in halting most attacks.

According to its own report, the Palestinian authority has prevented 17 attacks, found 75 explosives, confiscated 15 Qassam rockets and halted seven attempts to smuggle goods across the Egyptian border during its first month of self-rule in the Gaza Strip.

The Palestinian authority has also proved far more effective than Israel had in the past to maintain security and order and to achieve it without violence.

Instead of confronting and imprisoning tens of thousands of Palestinian militants or rounding up their weapons that would lead to a civil war, the Palestinian authority has succeeded in reaching a ceasefire understanding with the militant groups and has brought them into the political and electoral process.

If Washington gives Abbas a hand by supporting his homegrown and so far successful approach, he will prove far more credible and effective in attaining long-term security and stability than an immediate crackdown by Israel or under its pressure, which has failed utterly.

That's why, to the dismay of many of his compatriots, Abbas, like the late Egyptian president Anwar Sadat who believed America held 99 per cent of the solution, is gambling his political career on the Bush presidency.

If Bush lets him down in these crucial times and leaves him at the mercy of Sharon, his administration will bear the responsibility for the authority's failure and for any future escalation in Palestine.

For its part, the government of Ariel Sharon has made a mockery of the international roadmap to peace.

It expanded and increased Jewish colonies and their by-pass roads after he made it clear it "must stop" all activity.

Israel built a massive illegal wall that segregates the Palestinians after he challenged it to support the "emergence of a credible Palestinian state".

And it consistently blocked the movement of peoples and goods after he urged it "to allow the Palestinian economy to develop".

Today, Bush is obliged to provide the necessary mechanisms and equal treatment missing from his 2002 speech in order to realise the two-state vision.

That includes reciprocity that forbids Israel from erecting barriers or expanding the colonies.

America needs to assure the Palestinian leadership that Israel's unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip is part of the international roadmap for peace and that Washington will soon call for an international conference in coordination with the international quartet members, the European Union, UN, Russia in order to finally propose ways to resolve final status issues such as Jerusalem and refugees in accordance with the president's articulated roadmap.

Before he leaves, Abbas could well remind Bush that like the four million Americans who struggled bitterly to gain their independence from Britain, eight million Palestinians will not rest until they have attained their freedom and independence.

It's in America's as much as the Palestinian and the Israeli's best interest to restrain Sharon's drive in the West Bank in order to allow for a viable Palestinian state to emerge.

 
 
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