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

The liberation strategy of the Palestinian national movement is in crisis. The current situation offers Palestinians unprecedented opportunities for creating space for the sovereign application of Palestinian power, yet the opportunity is in danger of being missed by a leadership and an opposition that is looking forward by looking backward to an undeservedly idealized past that is gone forever.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has based his strategy of liberation form Israeli occupation upon demands for a restoration of the territorial and political benchmarks that defined the Oslo period and the "road map." Neither of these guideposts can be said to reflect historical Palestinian preferences for complete Israeli withdrawal from occupied lands, but they have nevertheless been embraced by the Palestinian leadership in the pursuit of these goals.

This strategy rests upon the questionable assumption that both Oslo and the road map are fixed, eternal elements in a static environment, and that demands for their implementation, sounded often and loudly enough, will eventually be realized. The world does not work this way, however. Changing interests and a dynamic environment have put Abbas in the hapless position of one who looks to the future by adhering to mantras of a past beyond his power to recreate.

Fact: In December 2001, Israel's Cabinet defined the Palestinian Authority (PA) as an "entity that supports terror," setting the stage for the institution's subsequent emasculation. This declaration has not been amended or repudiated.

Fact: In April 2002, Israel restored direct security control over the entire West Bank, inaugurating a new, post-Oslo era in the Occupied Territories. The understandings between Israel and the Palestinians that made possible the establishment of the PA led by Yasser Arafat and the creation of Palestinian security services with a mandate in Palestinian populated areas, namely Area A, of the West Bank were irrevocably undermined. Likewise, the territorial division of the West Bank that resulted from the Oslo process - the creation of Areas A, B, and C - was no longer relevant to the reality in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Subsequent events, including Israel's departure from Gaza, have confirmed that neither the Israeli government of Ariel Sharon nor many Palestinians support the "land for security" bargain at the heart of Oslo, a failed formula that nonetheless continues to captivate the international community and has been enshrined in the moribund road map.

Once the Sharon government decided to proceed without reference to Oslo, it destroyed Palestinian operational security capabilities, adding to the already formidable obstacles faced by the PA in its lackluster effort to establish a unified and decisive monopoly over force.

The Gaza disengagement plan established an entirely new Israeli security doctrine there, dependent neither on direct occupation, settlements, or the performance of Palestinian security forces. In the West Bank, Israeli forces regularly exercise freedom of action everywhere without reference to the PA. Unilateral Israeli actions, notably the creation of the separation barrier and the draconian controls on Palestinian movement, now define Israel's security instruments. Despite Palestinian and international entreaties, Israel has shown no interest in reassessing these policies.

Israeli policies are predicated on the premise that the PA will be permitted to exercise only the most limited of security functions. In the current environment Israel has no faith in, nor has much use for, an effective Palestinian security force in the West Bank, and it is at best ambivalent about the rehabilitation of such a capability in Gaza.

Arafat, as the recognized embodiment of Palestinian aspirations for independence, was able to survive his failure to realize his goal. Not so Abbas, who remains committed to Oslo and the road map. This dependence has crippled his ability to establish governing institutions deemed credible by his own people, and to establish a Palestinian diplomatic agenda independent of priorities established by others.

What can he do? Fortunately, Israel's retreat from Gaza offers Abbas an opportunity to reorient Palestinians policies in a direction more likely to establish popular support for Palestinian institutions and better suited to the expansion of Palestinian sovereignty than anything offered by Oslo.

The first and most difficult Palestinian requirement however is not in the realm of policies, or even actions, but belief. Opportunities are impossible to exploit if they are not recognized. The Gaza disengagement created space for the recreation of Palestinian institutions able to exercise sovereignty. Abbas has to stop acting like a supplicant and start acting like a sovereign. Palestinians would not be the first people to establish a sovereign authority on the part of their homeland liberated from foreign rule. The Palestine Liberation Organization even committed itself to such an option in 1974.

Abbas' first objective should be to establish a sovereign space in Gaza by removing Israeli supervision of borders not its own. He can convince Egypt to consider Palestine, not Israel, the responsible party along the old Philadelphi corridor, including the border crossing at Rafah. He should insist upon the normal, transparent operation of Gaza's border with Egypt according to international norms, a view that could not but be supported by the international community.

The just announced "Agreed Principles for Rafah Crossing" do not meet these tests. Israel has surrendered its exclusive role as policeman at the border, but the PA has also accepted restrictions on its ability to act independently on its own borders, a precedent that will be difficult to undo. Only Palestinians residing in the Occupied Territories, holding Israeli-approved identity documents, will be permitted to use the Rafah crossing. All others, including diaspora Palestinians, will have to apply to enter Gaza via a new terminal in Israel, run by Israelis, at Kerem Shalom. Imports will also be under Israeli control at Kerem Shalom, thus preserving the customs regime established during the Oslo era.

Israel insisted that the price of a Palestinian demand for unhindered operation of its border with Egypt was an end to the customs regime. So be it. Israel's plans to operate its crossing points with Gaza as international frontiers will anyway soon make it worthless. This will enable Abbas to renegotiate an economic relationship with Israel, and other nations, based on the reality of Palestinian sovereignty. As for the fear of splitting the destiny of a sovereign Gaza from the West Bank, the source of their common identity is not a unified VAT or an Israeli-issued identity card, but a shared national narrative and an unquenchable desire for freedom.

And what about diaspora Palestinians, some of whom intended to return to Gaza via what they hoped would be a border where the PA was sovereign? What does an agreement that maintains the status quo for millions of such Palestinians say about the PA's commitment to preserving a shared future with them? Palestinians exiting Gaza through terminals on Israel's border should be treated according to international norms as conducted between neighboring countries and not as between ruler and ruled. The recent agreement preserves the latter, a fact fatally imperiling its implementation.

The operation of the land border with Egypt establishes vital precedents for the future independent operation of a Palestinian seaport and airport. Conceding to Israel a central role in the operation of these facilities undermines Israel's interest in ending its destructive intervention in Palestinian life and the Palestinian interest in exercising powers not mediated by Israel. Both are vital if the PA is to become an institution capable of exercising power on behalf of its people.

Next on Abbas' list is to fashion his relations with Israel and the international community on a basis that reflects the new reality of Palestinian sovereignty rather than Oslo. This includes a Palestinian seat at the United Nations, participation in international, multilateral and bilateral trade and security agreements. It also means recalibrating diplomacy between Palestinians and Israelis to focus on changing the facts rather than the character of Israel's occupation of East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Pursuit of this strategy does not promise that the PA will escape from its ever increasing role as ward of the international community with limited responsibilities intended to ease the consequences of occupation and exile. But it does offer the best opportunity in decades for Palestinian institutions to act in a sovereign manner, and in doing so establish the only basis for building the trust and support of the Palestinian public.

Geoffrey Aronson is director of the Foundation for Middle East Peace in Washington. He wrote this commentary for THE DAILY STAR.

 
 
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