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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Avi Katz

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David Grossman

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from documentary, Promises

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

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Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘george mitchell’

Settlements: The ‘Pause’ That Doesn’t Refresh

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

The pause that refreshes.
Coca-Cola advertising slogan (1929) ranked 3rd best of the 20th century By Ad Age

The N.Y. Times headline tells it all Israel Offers a Pause in Building New Settlements. A pause is not a freeze. A pause ends with a resumption of whatever you were doing before. A freeze is something that stops you dead in your tracks. We all know where this is going and it ain’t a pretty place. Maybe a train wreck. Maybe a repetition of the same Groundhog Day type scenario that happened day after day for over 40 years.

Instead of singing hossanahs as Bibi expects Barack to do, let’s look at what the “pause” does not do. It does not stop East Jerusalem construction, which is some of the most incendiary and definitive in terms of poisoning a final negotiated settlement. Neither will this stop evictions from, and demolition of Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem.

Palestinian laborer prays at site of Gilo settlement construction (Reuters)

Palestinian laborer prays for true settlement freeze at East Jerusalem construction site unaffected by 'pause' (Reuters)

The settlement freeze was originally meant as a way to freeze the political situation & allow all parties to take a step back & re-evaluate their priorities and agendas. This move does nothing toward that end. It allows the most toxic settlement construction to continue. It allow the continued expropriation of Palestinian property and land in the Holy City.

Further, the “pause” allows Israel to continue building 3,000 units currently under construction. Instead of the pause that refreshes, this should be known as the pause that does nothing. Statements like this only add insult to injury and indicate Bibi doesn’t give a crap about what Palestinians think. He’s merely preaching to his right-wing Israeli choir:

Mr. Netanyahu said that Israel was taking a “difficult” and “painful” step, and that he hoped the Palestinians and the Arab world would “seize this opportunity” to work toward peace.

If he prefers preaching to that choir let him make peace with Avigdor Lieberman or Moshe Feiglin. See if they can deliver Palestinian consent to this travesty of a pause.

At one time, I really believed the Obama administration could advance the peace process. But not with delusional statements like this from Madame Secretary:

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the pause in construction “helps move forward” the peace process.

What in the world is she thinking or smoking? What peace process? And “forward?” Try backward. Try nothing. It does nothing. It fools no one. It’s a fig leaf that allows the U.S. and Israel to say they’ve achieved something when they’ve achieved nothing. In fact, it may be said that in raising expectations and disappointing so many, it’s actually set the alleged peace process backward. Certainly not forward.

The only slightly bright spot was Clinton’s reference to negotiations resuming based on 1967 borders. This is a position Israel detests and will avoid like the plague, especially a right wing government like Bibi’s which seeks to retain as much occupied territory as possible in any projected (more like “imagined”) peace agreement.

Michael Oren, that supposedly elegantly moderate Israeli ambassador has, as usual, revealed more than he realized in this statement:

Mr. Oren said Mr. Netanyahu’s decision to temporarily halt settlement construction was “a gesture, first of all, to the president of the United States. I can’t stress that enough.”

Indeed, this shows that Bibi has no interest in achieving peace, at least not with the Palestinians. Perhaps peace with Obama so he may be left to pursue his own agenda regarding the Iranians and Palestinians, but certainly not peace with Abbas or the PA. Who does Oren think Israel is going to make peace with? Obama?

After Mr. Netanyahu spoke, Israeli television news commentators said the settlement moratorium seemed aimed more at making peace with the Obama administration than with the Palestinian Authority.

Indeed. Bibi doesn’t give a crap about the Palestinians nor does he believe in peace. This is an incredibly cynical move on his part and the sad thing is that Obama seems to have fallen for it. In his defense, I’m sure he only praises this piece of Kabuki theater because he believes the parties can now get to the serious stuff of final status negotiations. But Bibi is way ahead of him. He’s not going to go to final status negotiations. And even if he does he’ll string that out for ages as all previous Israeli governments have done so well.

I feel sorry for George Mitchell, who’s been laboring under the heavy weight of trying to deliver a stillborn peace baby. He’s simply too intelligent and decent a man to believe a word of this statement he delivered:

“The steps announced by the prime minister are significant and could have substantial impact on the ground. For the first time ever, an Israeli government will stop housing approvals and all new construction of housing units and related infrastructure in West Bank settlements. That’s a positive development.”

I feel less sorry though for Daniel Levy, who should know better. He has no government position to defend as Mitchell does. Therefore, his Pollyanish optimism comes across as completely empty and hollow:

“The U.S. has taken a further step in laying out a program,” said Daniel Levy, a director of the Middle East Task Force at the New America Foundation in Washington. “What Netanyahu is not doing on settlements led the U.S. to be more forward-leaning in its language than it has ever been before.”

As one of the leading think tank doves and founder of J Street, Levy is abandoning a truly progressive position on this subject and throwing his weight behind an ephemera. We are far beyond a situation in which “forward-leaning language” (whatever that phrase means) will help the situation. The Palestinians and Arabs states will rightly say: “can a starving man eat words?” Give a starving man a meal, that is, something real he can sink his teeth into.

Language is just that, words. Anyone can string together pleasing words into elegant phrases that sound lovely to the ear. Obama did that in Cairo. We all (or most of us) were carried away by the sounds. But we’re beyond that now. We need deeds. And a “pause” is not a deed. It is theater.

Oy, You Can Stick a Stake Through Ross’ Heart, But He Won’t Die

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Dennis Ross appears to have nine lives–at least. He leaves the State Department where he had been hung out to dry by Hillary Clinton and her powerful envoys Richard Holbrooke and George Mitchell. He moves over to the White House for a vague and unspecified assignment. His buddies David Makovsky and the Wall Street Journal talk him up as if he’s going to be given the keys to the kingdom. And then by God, it happens, sort of. Yes, it’s sad but (perhaps) true:

The Cable has learned that deputy national security advisor Thomas Donilon, among others, is positioning Ross to assume an uber-senior NSC position overseeing Iran, Iraq, and the Middle East. The Iraq portfolio formerly assigned to holdover war czar Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute will be shifted to Ross, leaving Lute to focus on Afghanistan and Pakistan. Puneet Talwar, the NSC’s senior director for the Persian Gulf, Iraq, and Iran, will report to Ross, as will Daniel Shapiro, the NSC’s senior director for the Middle East and North Africa.

…[A] group said to be concerned by Ross’s perceived takeover of Middle East turf is the team of Middle East Peace special envoy George Mitchell, which now has to contend not only with resistance from all quarters of the region, but also a rival power center in the NSC that hasn’t tended to see Middle East peace issues the same way.

The Washington Post reports the development as more of a done deal though it also inserts some well-deserved zingers against Ross for his past failures:

It’s been rumored that Ross is headed to the White House National Security Council, but now the picture of his duties seems to be getting much clearer. It does indeed appear to be a big job — a very big job. His duties will include not only Iran but also Iraq and the Middle East peace process — a move that has gotten lots of folks at the NSC very upset, not to mention special Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell.

The most controversial aspect is that Ross will take over the Iraq portfolio from Lt. Gen. Douglas E. Lute, a three-star general who was overseeing both Iraq and Afghanistan. Now Lute will just do Afghanistan — where he’ll be working closely with envoy Richard Holbrooke — while Iraq will be part of Ross’s duties.

Interestingly, Ross has about as much experience with Iraq (virtually zero) as the new U.S. ambassador there, Christopher R. Hill. And both were key players in some of the greatest diplomatic flops of the last 20 years. Hill was point man for North Korea nuke negotiations during the Bush administration. And Ross, an early and ardent Obama backer, has lots of experience in Mideast peace efforts, having been a key player in the Clinton administration’s failed effort to broker a deal.

For the humorless or overly literal among my readers, the title of this post refers to sticking a stake in Dennis Ross’ political career, not his physical person.

Mitchell Puts the Screws to Bibi Over Settlements

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Some [Israeli] officials expressed disappointment after Tuesday’s round of meetings in London with George Mitchell, Obama’s envoy to the Middle East. “We’re disappointed,” said one senior official. “All of the understandings reached during the [George W.] Bush administration are worth nothing.”

Another official said the U.S. administration is refusing every Israeli attempt to reach new agreements on settlement construction.

Defense Ministry chief of staff Mike Herzog…spoke to Mitchell and his staff about understandings reached by former prime ministers Ehud Olmert and Ariel Sharon with the Bush administration on allowing continued building in the large West Bank settlement blocs. He asked that a similar agreement be reached with the Obama government.

Meridor spoke of the complexities characterizing the coalition headed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and said Washington’s demands of a complete construction freeze would lead to the dissolution of the Netanyahu government.

The Israeli delegates were stunned by the uncompromising U.S. stance, and by statements from Mitchell and his staff that agreements reached with the Bush administration were unacceptable. An Israeli official privy to the talks said that “the Americans took something that had been agreed on for many years and just stopped everything.”

–Haaretz, Obama to Give Two Years to Mideast Breakthrough

YESSSSS!

Mitchell Slapdown: Refuses Netanyahu Demand That Palestinians Recognize Israel as Jewish State

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Recently, I wrote about a Shimon Shiffer Yediot report claiming that Rahm Emanuel confirmed Obama’s intention to create a Palestinian state during his first term. The story also revealed that Obama had gotten tough with Bibi and that he would continue to tighten the screws by cancelling a planned D.C. first meeting. Some of my readers felt I was being unduly optimistic about Obama’s backbone and his ability to rein Bibi in.

But today’s Haaretz report that George Mitchell slapped down Bibi’s demand that the Palestinians first accept Israel as a Jewish state BEFORE he will negotiate with them, makes me believe my original hunch was right:

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s demand that the Palestinians recognize Israel as the state of the Jewish people as a condition for renewing peace talks is unacceptable to the United States, the State Department said during special envoy George Mitchell’s visits over the weekend to Ramallah and Cairo.

…Mitchell’s talks also seem to indicate that the United States does not accept Netanyahu’s position that the renewal of negotiations should be postponed until the Iranian nuclear threat is removed.

The rightist demand that the PA recognize Israel as a Jewish state is of course a ridiculous pose.  In essence, it demands that the Palestinians give up any negotiating leverage BEFORE negotiations begin.  It means entirely giving up the Right of Return BEFORE negotiations begin.  And it means giving up those important principles BEFORE getting ANYTHING in return from the Israelis.

It may be true that the U.S. cannot impose a settlement on the Israelis.  But I foresee a possible analogy to the process of breaking a wild horse.  The animal is too proud and strong to break.  But eventually, you close off enough avenues of escape and finally make it realize it has only one real choice and that is to do what you wish it to do.  Mitchell’s rebuke is but one more splash of cold water in Bibi’s face, attempting to make him realize that he will be on a short leash and that the administration will not allow him to freelance for the benefit of his rightist constitutency.

No doubt you’ve heard the Chinese curse: “May you live in interesting times.”  Well, these are most interesting times and somehow I don’t feel cursed at all.

Bibi Netanyahu: Lies, and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Netanyahu: Likud-led government wouldn’t build new settlements

A Likud-led government would not build new settlements in the West Bank but would allow for natural growth, Likud chairman Benjamin Netanyahu told Quartet envoy Tony Blair Sunday, in an apparent attempt to calm the international community before this week’s arrival of George Mitchell, the newly appointed U.S. envoy to the Middle East.

“I have no intention of building new settlements in the West Bank,” Netanyahu told Blair in a meeting Sunday. “But like all the governments there have been until now, I will have to meet the needs of natural growth in the population. I will not be able to choke the settlements.”

Netanyahu also said he plans to work to advance negotiations with the Palestinians quickly and to focus on economic development.

“Every moment of stagnation isn’t good, and I plan to deal with the Palestinian issue very intensively,” he said.

How does he lie? Let me count the ways. If anyone reading this truly believes he will not permit the building of new settlements they really should have their head examined. And even if we take him at his word he certainly will not stand in the way of settlers creating their own “facts on the ground.” That is, illegal settlements which somehow over time become legal ones as they’re absorbed into the Occupation regime.

I’ve talked here about the charade of “economic development” being the Bibi-style solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Only in the mind of an Israeli right-winger can there be a purely economic solution to the conflict. When all the world, and especially the Palestinians will tell anyone who cares to listen that the essence of this conflict is not economic (though there are terrible economic consequences as a result), and its not even primarily religious (though again their are religious elements). It IS primarily political and only a political settlement involving political compromise and creation of a political entity called Palestine on Israeli land occupied since 1967 (with minor adjustments) will resolve it.

As far as I’m concerned, Netanyahu thinks he’s still playing the games that all Israeli prime minister’s play with foreign diplomats and negotiators.  We tell you one thing with a wink and nudge, then go about doing precisely what we want.  It reminds me a bit of a cancer patient who’s just been given his diagnosis and told he needs to cut out cigarettes.  He swears to the doctor he will and as soon as the latter leaves the room he invites all his friends to join him as he lights up, saying to them: “Another one isn’t going to kill me.”  Well, guess what–it will.

I hope to God when George Mitchell meets with Netayahu later this week he will splash some cold water on the otherwise delusional Netanyahu and tell him that the U.S. view of his “economics” pitch is that it is decidedly a non-starter.  If Netanyahu wants Israel to die of cancer let’s tell him he’s not going to do it under our care.  We’ve got to tell Israel to go cold turkey.  It’s the only way.