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

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from documentary, Promises

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Posts Tagged ‘mahmoud-abbas’

The Horror: Recognizing Israel Within ’67 Borders, ’500,000 Will Become Occupiers!’

Monday, September 12th, 2011

Ethan Bronner has penned one of his typical “on the one hand-on the other hand” stories about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict which make the conflict out to be a he said-she said dilemma.  But there is one interesting passage in which he describes the reception of the Palestinian plans to bring statehood before the UN this month:

French diplomats are trying to help the Palestinians shape a United Nations resolution that describes statehood on the 1967 lines, along with agreed land swaps with Israel, but slows down bilateral recognition between a Palestinian state and other nations. This is partly aimed at luring the Germans, who are unenthusiastic. Europeans say they believe that their unity in this issue is important.

Israel is horrified. To abandon Oslo, its leaders say, is to destroy any hope of negotiations, because that will rip up the legal basis for talks. If a United Nations resolution defines Palestine as within the 1967 lines, that means 500,000 Israelis will be defined as occupiers in another country. To pre-empt that, there are suggestions here to annex certain areas first or withdraw travel privileges for Palestinian officials in the West Bank.

The horror!  500,000 Israelis become occupiers overnight!  What does Israel think they were before that?  Halutzim (“pioneers”)?  As for annexing parts of the West Bank, that should go over well before an international community which already looks with deep disfavor on some of Israel’s more recent shenanigans on the world stage.

And can you imagine how well this argument from Dennis Ross and his Mini-Me, David McHale, went over with Mahmoud Abbas when they met with him last week:

Having the power to take Israeli officials to the International Criminal Court may sound appealing, they said, but it will not end the occupation and is likely to make it worse.

Someone will have to explain to me how enabling the Palestinians to take potential Israeli war criminals to court will make the Occupation worse?  By forcing Israel to be even meaner and more brutal than it already is?  And do the Americans think that this will scare the Palestinians?  That there is anything more the Israelis can do to make their lives worse than they already are and that will also dissuade them from their course?  Really, Ross.  Who do you think you’re dealing with, here?  A second rate U.S. protectorate (Israel of course, being a first rate U.S. protectorate)?

Abbas Pre-Empts Bibi’s U.S. Visit in N.Y. Times Op-Ed

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

Mahmoud Abbas has pre-empted Bibi Netanyahu’s U.S. visit and May 24th address to a Joint Session of Congress with an eye-opening op-ed in today’s N.Y. Times.  There is some interesting material in it. But the money quote is this:

Palestine’s admission to the United Nations would pave the way for the internationalization of the conflict as a legal matter, not only a political one. It would also pave the way for us to pursue claims against Israel at the United Nations, human rights treaty bodies and the International Court of Justice.

What he’s saying is that recognition of statehood by the UN would allow Palestine and its world supporters to ratchet up pressure on Israel considerably.  This might include imposing sanctions on Israel for continuing an illegal Occupation of a sovereign state’s territory.  This could go a very long way toward strengthening the BDS movement as well.  It might include prosecution of war crimes cases against IDF officers and Israeli leaders as hinted in the Goldstone Report.  The sky’s the limit.

This in turn might place pressure on Israel’s leaders to be more flexible in the positions they adopt in peace talks.  When faced with a choice of recognizing a Palestinian state and withdrawing to 1967 borders, this might seem more palatable than spending a few years awaiting trial at the Hague.  Israel’s generals and leaders, not particularly known for their selflessness, would likely prefer self-preservation to standing on principle and refusing a peace deal if it meant they might spend some of the best years of their lives in a prison cell.

The reverse may be true as well, as some Palestinian militant leaders might find it far more convenient to soften their militancy and political demands rather than being called to the Hague to explain their own attacks on Israeli civilians.

Hamas’ Meshal Offers New Pragmatism, Renounces Violence (For Now)

Saturday, May 7th, 2011

khaled meshal

Khaled Meshal discusses Palestinian unity agreement and Hamas approach toward resisting Occupation (David Degner/WSJ)

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Hamas’ Khaled Meshal offered a newly pragmatic, consensus-driven Hamas approach to its Fatah collaborators and to Israel.  Of course, the proof is in the pudding in these situations and we’ve seen Hamas’ pragmatism wax and wane with the political winds.  But given the overall mood-music in the Arab world and the upcoming campaign for Palestinian statehood at the General Assembly in September, Hamas’ initiative appears promising to say the least.  As others have noted, I’m guessing that Hamas’ increasingly unstable home in Damascus is also forcing it to look outward for friends and allies in places (Ramallah, Washington, Cairo, Brussels) it hadn’t considered.

Here are some of the chief excerpts from Meshal’s remarks:

Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal said his movement will make decisions about how to wage its struggle with Israel, including if and when to use violence, in consensus with more moderate Palestinian factions.

“How to manage the resistance, what’s the best way to achieve our goals, when to escalate and when to cease fire, now we have to agree on all those decisions as Palestinians,” said Mr. Meshaal in an interview with The Wall Street Journal in Cairo.

…The Hamas leader’s comments…suggested a power-sharing agreement signed Wednesday between his militant party and the more moderate Fatah party could significantly change the Palestinian approach toward the peace process.

Mr. Meshaal said that decisions on “negotiations with Israel, domestic governance, foreign affairs, domestic security and resistance and other field activities” against Israel, would all be reached in consensus between Palestinian factions.

If Mr. Meshaal follows through on his pledge, it would mean that Hamas would no longer attack Israel without the agreement of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, the Fatah leader, who has long opposed violence.

Aides to Mr. Abbas said that in closed-door negotiations in Cairo ahead of the signing of the Egypt-brokered reconciliation agreement, Mr. Meshaal said his movement was prepared to adopt a strategy of nonviolent resistance, at least for the time being. “They accept nonviolent resistance. That’s what Meshaal said in closed meetings,” said Nabil Shath, a senior aide to Mr. Abbas who was present in those meetings. “He said ‘we cannot do violence and you do nonviolence. It does not work out.’ “

It’s important to point out that for Hamas (and unlike Fatah), violent resistance and non-violent resistance are strategies and not ends in themselves.  Meshal is clearly saying that for now, it’s most promising for us to turn away from violence, since that is most likely to secure our goals for Palestinian statehood.  But he’s also clearly saying that if non-violence and this current round of peacemaking and nation-building fails, that the movement could very well turn back to violence.

Of course, this will make Bibi and the pro-Israelists howl.  They’ll wag their fingers saying: “You see.  We told you you can’t trust them.  They’re only turning to non-violence out of cynical motives and they’ll return to violence the first chance they get.”  This of course gets things all wrong.  The point is that if non violence gets them where they want to be, then there will be no need for violence.

What Meshal is really saying is that if Fatah honors its commitments, there are free and fair elections, and the General Assembly approves a Palestinian state, then Hamas will have no reason to turn to violence.  To me, this is a patently self-evident pragmatic approach.  Even former Mossad directors like Ephraim Halevy understand it too.  But not the Bibistas.

Pres. Obama has to decide whether he’s going to be a Bibista or whether he’s going to get on the right side of the Arab Spring.  The U.S. is still insisting that Hamas completely renounce violence as a condition of being considered a partner in peace negotiations.  But that’s simply not going to play in Gaza.  And there is no reason it has to.  What Meshal is telling Washington is: “if you produce for us, we’ll be good boys.  If you don’t, we won’t.”  That is the best Obama’s going to get.  If he demands more, then he will end up being bitterly disappointed and we’ll end up with more misery, more wars, and more terror.

Hamas is currently showing pragmatic realism.  Bibi is showing the same old losing cards.  And Obama’s showing nothing.  Where are you, Mr. President?  Stop basking in the glow of being Osama-killer and get down to brass tacks.  Show some leadership.  If he allows the mid-term elections to dictate the same-old, same-old approach to Hamas for fear of appearing soft on terror and hostile to a Likudist Israeli government, he’ll have lost yet another opportunity to play a leadership role in making peace.

UN General Assembly Campaign for Palestinian State Gathers Momentum

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

declaring palestinian stateA new campaign to declare a Palestinian state by the UN General Assembly this coming fall is gathering momentum.  Both supporters and detractors are already in full battle dress.  Israeli president Shimon Peres has already met with Ban Ki-Moon to tell him that such a proposal would be disastrous.  Salam Fayyad and Mahmoud Abbas are scouring European capitals for support for the proposal.  Barring any unforseen developments, it seems clear that supporters would find overwhelming support in the GA.  Unlike in the Security Council, this type of resolution could not be vetoed.  So even if the U.S. or European countries lobbied hard against it, they couldn’t stop it.  The only thing that could is a full court press in which we call in all our chits and attempt to use our muscle to prevent other countries from joining in the effort.  But I doubt even this can stop this train.

Ironically, this would be the same GA which in 1948 voted for Israeli statehood.  All this would mean that Palestinian statehood for the first time has been recognized by an international body.  Once this happens, it puts enormous political pressure on Israel to do the same.  Given that the GA resolution will recognize Palestine within 1967 borders, this will mean that this will be the starting point for any serious negotiation to resolve the conflict.  If Israel temporizes as it has for decades, it can no longer duck responsibility.  Such delay and obfuscation could now be met with legitimate, sustained and muscular international sanctions which might even have the weight of the UN behind them.  It would be at this point that the global BDS movement could combine with UN resolutions to bring overwhelming pressure on Israel to end the Occupation and withdraw from territory conquered in 1967.

Another specter lurks if Israel fails to heed these international resolutions.  There could very well be a third Intifada in which hundreds or even thousands of Palestinians are killed along with scores of Israelis.  We’ve seen the precursor of this with the recent launching of scores of Hamas missiles into southern Israel and counter-attacks which killed 18 Gazans over the past few days.  This would be kids’ stuff compared to what might happen if there was a general uprising in both Gaza and the West Bank against Israel.  It should be noted that the PA leadership of Abbas and Fayyad is quite different to that of Arafat, who orchestrated the first Intifada.  The current leaders are much more quiescent and less prone to support such an insurrection.  But in the right circumstances, if they prove inadequate to the task of mounting a vigorous defense of Palestinian prerogatives, then an uprising might find universal favor within Palestine.

The train of Palestinian statehood is gathering steam and come September will leave the station.  I hope as many nations as possible get on board.  As Curtis Mayfield sang:

People get ready, there’s a train a comin’…
You don’t need no baggage, you just get on board

There ain’t no room for the hopeless sinner
Who would hurt all mankind just to save his own…

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Erekat, Palestinian Cabinet Resign, Election Set

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011
mahmoud abbas

Mahmoud Abbas: what's this nonsense they're talking about democracy and some sort of Revolution? Did I miss that? (EPA)

In a sign of the ripple effect that the Egyptian Revolution is having on its neighbors in the region, virtually the entire rump PA government resigned and Mahmoud Abbas called for new elections.  It’s rather comic because he has had the opportunity to do this since 2006 and only chose now to do so.  Abbas also chooses to hold an election without the participation of his chief rival, Hamas.  The latter refuses to participate in an election while Fatah has refused efforts to reconcile and restore a unified Palestinian government.

This will essentially be a one party election and the West Bank will be a one party rump state.  So much for real democracy.  Abbas is runnin’ scared that the Egyptian model might be embraced in Palestine.  This reminds me of the tribe that believes it must appease the volcano god by tossing a maiden into its maw.  This is cosmetic surgery, designed to fool Palestinians and the rest of the world into believing that Fatah is the democratically elected representative of the people.  But how can it be when it will have virtually no competition?

james steinberg state department

James Steinberg, proudly points to U.S. success in stifling Security Council resolutions which conform with U.S. policy (AFP)

Saeb Erekat’s resignation is a further indication of the failure of Peace Process 1.0.  Any such process predicated on maximum Palestinian flexibility and minimum Israeli concessions along with a mediator heavily tilted toward Israeli interests–that is dead.

On a related matter, the Obama administration, with its announcement that it would proudly and eagerly veto the Security Council resolution condemning settlements, seems not to have learned any lessons from Tahrir Square.  The message conveyed by this veto is: we stand by our allies, even when they behave in ways antithetical to our own policies and values.

Didn’t we just dump a guy for that?

What irks me especially is the pride the U.S. State Department official takes in the fact that the U.S. continually frustrates any attempt to address the evils of the Occupation in the Security Council:

“We have made very clear that we do not think the Security Council is the right place to engage on these issues,” Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg told the House of Representatives’ Foreign Affairs Committee.

We have had some success, at least for the moment, in not having that arise there. And we will continue to employ the tools that we have to make sure that continues to not happen,” said Steinberg.

Imagine the April 6th Youth Movement bringing a resolution to the Security Council condemning Mubarak’s 30 years of venality and oppression of the Egyptian people and a similar statement from a U.S. representative boasting of our ability to game the system so troublesome matters like these are never brought up.  Is this what the Obama administration wishes to be remembered for as its legacy?  That we were Israel’s toady?

Let’s also not lose sight of the fact that this resolution’s wording tracks almost note for note specific U.S. policy on the settlements.  So we’re placed in the incredibly awkward and lame position of vetoing a resolution that diverges not a whit from our pronounced policy against settlements.  I couldn’t have thought of a way to look more stupid on the world stage.  Not to mention that after we struggled so hard to appear relevant during the events in Tahrir Square, for us to recede so quickly into irrelevancy is almost heartbreaking.

The truth is that the Obama administration defends freedom and liberty up to the shores of Tel Aviv.  Beyond that, we’re captive to the Israel lobby here and a set of Likudist-settler interests there.

Goldberg-Ibish: Peace Process Not Lost, Bibi-Abbas Can Still Pull Iron Out of Fire

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011
mahmoud abbas

Abbas: 'I thought these were supposed to be my X-ray lenses allowing me to see through Bibi's bullshit'

Jeffrey Goldberg and Hussein Ibish published an absurd op-ed in today’s N.Y. Times touting the ‘radical’ idea that the peace process isn’t dead, just sleeping.  Given the release of the Palestine Papers over the past few days and their profound impact, signalling the entombment of the current process, they bring to mind two guys sitting on a lawn chair before Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, watching the streaming line of humanity fleeing the advancing storm.  When asked why they didn’t join in the flight they looked up at the sky and said: “Doesn’t look like rain to us.”  Their lawn chairs, without them in them were last seen floating just offshore in the Gulf of Mexico a few days after Katrina blew in.

Readers of this blog will know that I rag on Ethan “Eytan of Arabia” Bronner quite often here.  But Goldberg and Ibish are in a class by themselves. The sheer delusion and nonsense spouted in this column boggles the mind.  I would wonder at the editor who commissioned this piece if I didn’t recall that likely the same editor published similarly wishful nonsense by Benny Morris and others about the Israeli-Arab conflict.  It seems to be a requirement of the position that the op-ed editor periodically has to publish a few embarrassing pieces in order to satisfy the pro-Israel powers that be.

Personally, I wonder whether the idea of publishing this monstrosity came from the authors or the editors; or perhaps they were spurred to do it be some desperate souls in the State Department, Israel’s foreign affairs ministry, or PA headquarters in Ramallah begged them to.

The basic premise of the piece is this: we two moderate, sensible observers of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, one Palestinian, one Jewish, are saying to you that all is not lost.  That the two-state solution is not dead.  The two sides can still salvage this thing.  And now we’re gonna tell you why things are better than you think.  In reality (as in the actual peace process itself), the Goldberg-Ibish proposals tilt very heavily toward Israel and its interests.  Ibish, who is a strong Fatah man, gets very little from his Jewish interlocutor.  In fact, the article appears from its tone and frame of reference to be more the work of Goldberg, with a few concessions to Ibish and the Palestinian cause thrown in for good measure.

To get a real sense of the nonsense, I’ll quote the more egregious passages and then offer a response.  Get a load of this sunshine oratory:

…We have recently seen startling shifts in both Israeli and Palestinian attitudes on the need for compromise. The Palestinian Authority government, led by President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, two of the most conscientious and sober-minded leaders the Palestinian people have had, continues to push forward a remarkable state-building program, and has been innovative in working against violence and incitement.

These two guys have had three days to read the damning evidence exposed by the Palestine Papers (which interestingly they call “alleged diplomatic documents”) and yet they still attempt to palm off Abbas as “conscientious” and “sober-minded.”  What are they thinking (if anything)?  Have they been in a Tibetan monastery for the last three days cut off from their Blackberries and PCs?  Or more likely, are they like the little boy who doesn’t like what his mommy is saying, so they just put their hands over their ears and hum loudly so they don’t have to listen to what they don’t want to hear?

Interesting also, that they tout the PA’s “remarkable state-building program,” while ignoring the fact that there is no state, no likelihood that there will ever be a state, no inalienable territory that will comprise this state, no borders recognized for this state, and–given Tzipi Livni’s touting of contemporary Nakba as a solution to Palestinian “overpopulation” within the Green Line–not even a clear notion of what population will comprise this state.  So one might ask: what sort of state are they building?  Where will that state be?  Who will live there?  Who will run that state?  How will they run it?

Goldberg-Ibish reinforce that tired hoary meme that Bibi has done a remarkable turnabout in “embracing” the two state solution:

In Israel, the shift is also startling. Prime Minister Netanyahu — the leader of the Likud Party, which was previously the guardian of the ideology of territorial maximalism — has openly endorsed the creation of an independent Palestine. A majority of Knesset members plainly realize the necessity of a two-state solution. (Even Israel’s truculent foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, has said that he was “ready to quit my settlement home to make peace.”)

It’s rather laughable to claim that Likud was “previously” the guardian of territorial maximalist ideology.  Of course, it still is–in spades.  This passage ignores the fact that Bibi in one speech which was forced upon him by the Obama administration, spoke of the need for a two state solution.  But frankly, I don’t think I’ve ever heard him repeat himself on this subject (except in front of microphones and in the presence of the U.S. president) and he has done absolutely nothing since that vaunted speech to bring such a vision into reality.  Bibi supports the two state solution in the same way that the closet alcoholic swears to his loved ones that he’s sober as a judge.  In other words, he’d like to be sober and he knows that being sober is the healthiest way for him to live.  But he just can’t do it because deep down he’s an addict.  Neither the leopard nor the son of Ben Zion Netanyahu changes his spots.

This is, after all, the same man who in 1995 egged on a crowd that bayed for Yizhak Rabin’s blood shortly before his assassination.  A man who as a junior minister in 1987 publicly advocated expulsion of Israeli Arabs from Israel.  If you believe Bibi supports two states I have a bridge in Brooklyn and ocean front property in Florida to sell you.

Let the nonsense continue:

Mr. Netanyahu, in a quiet way, has also encouraged a greater normalization of life on the West Bank. On his watch, the overall pace of settlement growth has slowed, especially when compared with previous Labor Party-led governments during the years of the Oslo peace process. He allowed the Palestinian flag to be raised in his private residence during a formal meeting with Mr. Abbas, and now employs the diplomatic term “West Bank” instead of the biblical term “Judea and Samaria.” He has also condemned an initiative offered by a group of Orthodox rabbis that sought to forbid Jews from selling or renting homes to non-Jews.

Jeff Goldberg here is simply pimping for Bibi Netanyahu.  There’s no other proper way to describe it.  He’s been doing this for a long time in The Atlantic.  Now he brings it to the august pages of the Grey Lady.  Settlement growth has slowed?  With thousands of new units both being built and in the approval process, Goldberg has the chutzpah to try to pass this off as reasonable?  And Bibi raised a Palestinian flag and used the term “West Bank?”  Got news for ya Jeff.  This is known as a ‘gesture.’  Gestures aren’t meaningful unless accompanied by substance.  In this case, the gestures are devoid of meaning because there is no substance.  As for Bibi’s criticism of the rabbi’s letter…that and a few bucks will buy you a cappuccino at Starbucks.  I can show you 50 equally noxious racist acts or statements that Bibi ignored, including an editorial by three prominent religious nationalist rabbis calling for the creation of extermination camps for Palestinians.  What does this prove?  That Bibi all of a sudden has become an anti-racist?  Or a peace campaigner?  Or even a two-state advocate?

There are, in the column claims presented as established wisdom, which go unexamined.  Like this one:

…No peace treaty will end the conflict so long as Hamas is in power.

What proof do they offer?  None except to say that Hamas adheres to the “uncompromising” Muslim Brotherhood ideology, meaning peace can never be possible.  I guess that neither Ibish nor Goldberg read this week’s eye-opening profile of the contemporary Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt which presented the movement as extremely solicitous of the political establishment to the point of being disdained by the Young Turks who’d left the movement for its vacillation.  In other words, a statement regarding Hamas that may’ve held true in years past doesn’t necessarily hold true today.  Hamas has, in fact, publicly stated that it would allow the PLO to negotiate a peace deal with Israel and that it would accept such a deal if ratified in a national referendum.  That means that Goldberg is willfully falsifying the public record while presenting no evidence that his claim is correct.

Get this spin on the Palestine Papers, which note the almost Quisling-like collaboration between PA negotiators and Israel even in the assassination of Fatah’s own fighters in Gaza:

It is, in part, the high level of Palestinian security cooperation with Israel — involving intelligence sharing and on-the-ground measures — that has reduced violence so significantly.

Well, that’s one way of putting it.  But actually even this claim is false because Israel only cooperates with the PA to the extent that it can enforce Israel’s needs in the West Bank.  When Israel feels the need to go it alone, it simply busts into West Bank villages and cities and carries out security operations that often involve assassinations or even the killing of innocent Palestinians.  So in fact, Israel does what it wishes in the West Bank, the erstwhile home of this new Palestinian state which Goldibish claim Fatah is a-building.  Israeli forces ignore Palestinian sovereignty even in areas where Israel officially concedes that the PA is the sovereign authority.

Now let’s deal with the “galvanizing” steps Bibi could take to open Palestinian eyes to the beneficence of their Israeli neighbor.  I swear to you this is what Goldberg is claiming will flood Palestinian hearts with gratitude: allowing Palestinian security forces to develop “advanced counter-terror” capabilities.  And he has another remarkable suggestion: Bibi should actually allow the PA to rule territory that Israel itself has conceded it will control in a future peace settlement.  Wow, I stand humbled before the brilliance and self-evidence of this proposal.  That Goldberg should have the temerity to incorporate this into his column as something that would make Israel look like good guys to Palestinians is astonishing.

There are something like two, maybe three serious, even shocking points in this essay which actually criticize Israeli policy and attitudes.  They should be noted both in being fair (or as fair as possible) to the authors and in marking how even an Israel partisan like Goldberg can sometimes (though rarely) embrace surprisingly progressive positions.  Goldibish actually warn Bibi that his “economic peace” proposals for the West Bank are insufficient because they don’t address political dimensions of the conflict.  This point is actually so spot-on that I’m half-tempted to attribute it to Ibish rather than Goldberg.  But who knows where wisdom comes from these two?

Notable too is that the two seers also call for an attenuated (they call it “modified and limited,” whatever that means) settlement withdrawal:

…No Palestinian state will emerge on a West Bank blanketed with settlements…A modified and limited, but very public and systematic, withdrawal of settlers from remote or particularly confrontational settlements, especially from the so-called outposts that even Israel considers illegal, would have a powerful effect on Palestinian perceptions about Israel’s long-term intentions.

…We believe even a modest effort by Israel to reverse the pattern of settlement growth could strongly improve conditions for negotiations — and improve Israel’s sinking image.

So Goldibish would have us believe that Palestinians will shower Israel with rose petals if it would forcibly remove a few Hilltop Youth and their settlements, all the while building thousands of new housing units in East Jerusalem and environs?  As for Israel’s “sinking image,” it will take a lot more than cosmetic gestures to improve that.

In the following passage, the two begin with a remarkable (for Goldberg) admission that the theft of Palestinian land in East Jerusalem is inadmissible.  But they end on a note that is so weird and discordant as almost to wipe out the benefit of what they wrote first:

…The forced removal of Palestinians from their homes in East Jerusalem to make way for settlers simply cannot continue….Israel has no future as the occupier of Palestinians who don’t agree to be occupied. One hopes that Mr. Netanyahu shares that insight, although one must also recognize that politically he has every incentive to remain ambiguous.

What in heaven’s name does this mean?  In one breath you call on Bibi to recognize that Israel cannot be an occupier or thief of Palestinian land and in the very next one you say that it’s understandable that Bibi remains ambiguous on this score.  Why?  Even Ariel Sharon told the Israeli public that Israel had “conquered” the Territories, a term the far-right NEVER uses.  If the Israeli right’s patron saint can say it why can’t its junior pledge?

I think it’s awfully rich that Ibish, who is pro-Fatah through and through, actually signs onto an op-ed which criticizes a policy of the Fatah-led PA.  Not only that, but he criticizes davke a PA initiative that is one of the more promising it has attempted–securing recognition of an independent Palestinian state from other nations.  Ibish actually and astonishingly calls that a bad idea:

Things have been further complicated in recent weeks as several Latin American states have recognized the Palestinians and upgraded the diplomatic status of their missions. Many Israelis are discomfited by this. The P.L.O. should be as clear as possible that these efforts do not constitute an end-run around an American-brokered negotiated agreement, but are an adjunct to both negotiations and the state-building program.

Oh the poor, poor Israelis who’ve been ‘discomfited’ by other nations recognizing Palestine.  Doesn’t your heart just go out to them?  Actually, very few Israelis I know or have heard from are discomfited by this.  What Goldberg really means to say is that his buddy Bibi and the latter’s government has gotten its nose way bent out of joint by this.  It’s a big slap in the face to them.  You see, they thought they could stick it to the Palestinians and that the ol’ geezers would have no recourse but to grin and bear it.  Bibi didn’t reckon that there was still an ounce of fight in the old dogs in Ramallah.  And it irks the Israeli prime minister that he can’t get his way and stop this nonsense.

So someone tell me why these acts of recognition shouldn’t be an end run around the dead U.S. brokered peace negotiations?  Is there any sentient being besides these two who believes there even is such a process extant?

I think it’s mighty white of Goldberg to tell us what the Palestinians believe about any number of issues, including this one:

Palestinians understand, of course, that at the end of the day, their independence depends on one country, Israel, more than any other, since it is Israel that controls the land that would comprise their state.

You know, something tells me that the notion that the fate of Palestine or the Palestinian people depends on Israel may just be part of what got Palestinians into the mess that they’re in in the first place.  That’s why Palestinians and the rest of the peace movement are moving to alternate forms of resistance like BDS and the diplomatic recognition campaign.  Forms that don’t depend on Israel for anything.  Forms that demand that Israel change and impose penalties if it doesn’t.

You didn’t think we’d get out of this thing without the required denunciation of BDS did you?  What surprises me (but only a bit) is that a Palestinian would actually attack BDS.  But I guess this tells you something about Hussein Ibish and his bona fides:

THERE are…Palestinian initiatives that are completely counterproductive. Continued threats to unilaterally declare independence are pointless and provocative. Support for boycotts against all Israeli products and companies also serve only to convince Israel and its supporters that the Palestinians seek its elimination.

You almost want to give Goldberg credit for embracing at least one small part of BDS with the following statement, until you realize that it’s formulated in such a way that Goldberg actually doesn’t have to embrace what he appears to embrace:

It is understandable that Palestinians are supporting boycotts of products made in settlements, however, since the settlements are illegitimate and must not be legitimized.

In other words, this sophistry allows Goldberg to say that he understands Palestinians who resort to settlement boycott, but he doesn’t himself.  How’s that for weaseling?

The touching conclusion of this bi-national manifesto calls for a “softening of hearts.”  I really had to take out a handkerchief and dab my eyes it was so moving:

The other step is even more difficult to achieve, because it requires the softening of hearts…

Imagine, then, what would happen if Mahmoud Abbas were to visit Israel and tell Israelis he acknowledges that they have national and historical rights on the land between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea, and that he understands their suffering. And imagine what would happen if Benjamin Netanyahu were to visit Ramallah, acknowledge Palestinian suffering and also Palestinian national and historical rights, particularly to a country of their own, on their native land.

Parse this carefully now.  He’s expecting Abbas to go to Israel and tell Israelis that they have the right to realize the Betar dream of a Zionist state between the Jordan and the Sea.  Note that Goldberg doesn’t say here that Abbas should recognize Israel’s right to exist within the Green Line or 1967 borders, but within the expanded Greater Israel borders of the Jordan to the Mediterranean.  Why again (sorry for invoking the deity twice in this post) in heaven’s name would any Palestinian leader endorse the views of Jabotinskyian Revisionism?

Again, the fact that a Palestinian-American who supposedly supports Palestinian national rights would sign on to such an articulation boggles the mind.  But I don’t pretend to understand what may be going on in Hussein Ibish’s mind.

Finally, note what Goldberg asks Bibi to do: he would go to Palestine and tell the natives he’s mighty sorry for their suffering, but that if they expect any relief they’ll have to get it from the other guy, and not him.  In other words, no mention of Nakba (God forbid).  No mention of Return.  Yes, you guys suffered.  And here’s what we Israelis are prepared to do for you: drumroll please…You go live with Abbas over there and leave us alone.

Again, that’s mighty white of him.  But somehow I have a sneaking suspicion it ain’t gonna mollify anyone.  So there you have it.  What passes for wisdom from the greatest Palestinian and pro-Israel minds the NY Times op-ed page can muster.

Palestine Papers: Herzl Suggested Jews Resettle in Uganda, Condi Suggested Palestinians to Argentina

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011
condi rice

Condi: Israel will accept the return of this many Palestinian refugees--the rest...to Argentina

I swear, the longer I watch this Israeli-Palestinian conflict the more the nutty ideas of the past impose themselves on the present.  Many Zionists don’t know or admit that Herzl had no particular romantic affinity for Palestine as the homeland of the Jews.  He thought it could just as easily be Uganda and wrote as much.  Fortunately for him (not so fortunately for Palestinians though), more traditional Jewish Zionists persuaded him that only the real Zion would do as the future homeland.

Now comes word that Condi Rice played a similar card in U.S. negotiations with the Palestinians:

Condoleezza Rice, secretary of state under George Bush, suggested in 2008 Palestinian refugees could be resettled in South America. “Maybe we will be able to find countries that can contribute in kind,” she said. “Chile, Argentina, etc.”

The only thing I can say on Condi’s behalf is that at least her boss was elected (sorta).  What’s Abbas’ excuse?  He’s a leader without a mandate.  Where does he get off accepting the shameful compromise of accepting a total to 10,000 Palestinian refugees resettled in Israel over a ten-year period?  Even the Geneva Initiative foresaw a larger number than that.  Where do they get the unmitigated gall to think that this would be acceptable to the Palestinians?  How did they ever think they could sell this?  Did they think that the U.S. showering Palestinians with billions would assuage the sting of giving up virtually their entire national dream?

Astonishingly, the Palestine Papers also show that Mahmoud Abbas himself accepted the Israeli narrative on the Right of Return:

“On numbers of refugees, it is illogical to ask Israel to take 5 million, or indeed 1 million. That would mean the end of Israel.”

“The end of Israel.”  The very mantra of Bibi Netanyahu in dissing ROR.  And what business should it be of Abbas as erstwhile leader of Palestine to be concerned primarily with the welfare of Israel?  If Israel could take in a million Russian Jews in a short period, it can take in a few hundred thousand (and not a million as Abbas imagines) Palestinian refugees who might insist on returning to Israel over generous financial compensation for their suffering and resettlement within Palestine proper.  This guy has his priorities screwed up and has forgotten, if he ever knew, who he represents.

It is not surprising that during negotiations Israel did everything possible to deny any responsibility for Palestinian refugees (the Nakba of course wasn’t mentioned).  But the utter sophistry of the arguments and the enthusiasm with which even the Bush flunkies advanced them in addition to the Israelis, is shocking.

I find it laughable that the Fatah goons have attacked and taken over Al Jazeera’s Ramallah studio.  Attack the messenger why don’t you instead of the real bane of your existence.  It wasn’t Al Jazeerah who sold out the Palestinian patrimony.  It was their own “leaders.”  If they want to to see the real enemy, take a look in the mirror.

The rogues’ gallery unfortunately now must include Tzipi Livni who, in discussing the issue of the expulsion as a violation of international law said the following pearl:

Livni told Palestinian negotiators in 2007 that she was against international law and insisted that it could not be included in terms of reference for the talks: “I was the minister of justice”, she said. “But I am against law – international law in particular.”

…She made clear that what might have seemed to be a joke was meant…seriously by using the point to argue against international law as one of the terms of reference for the talks and insisting that “Palestinians don’t really need international law”.

Where else but in Israel (and perhaps Zimbabwe and a few other despotic states) could you have a justice minister express overt disdain for the law?

Further, as I wrote yesterday, Livni specifically advanced Avigdor Lieberman’s proposal to forcibly redraw the international boundary so that Israeli Palestinian villages would be expelled from Israel and annexed to Palestine.  Those Israeli citizens expelled from Israel would naturally have no recourse and not be consulted about the forced transfer.  This is refined Kahanism for which Livni should (but won’t be) ashamed.  She can deny it all she wants but the papers don’t lie.

As I wrote yesterday, liberal Zionists have long had a romance with Tzippi as the anti-Bibi.  They believed when she left Likud at Sharon’s behest that she had somehow shed her Irgun family legacy.  They hoped she might turn out to be as pragmatic as Ariel Sharon appeared to become just before his death.  How wrong they were.  And this should lay those illusions to rest.

Even George Mitchell, who I’d preferred to see as the good guy in the Obama administration compared to the blantantly pro-Israel Dennis Ross, conveyed to the Palestinians that Obama was reneging on a major Bush era pledge to the Palestinians.  Condi Rice had affirmed that any agreement would use 1967 borders as a basis for any proposed land swaps.  Mitchell told Erekat that the new administration felt bound by nothing agreed to by Bush, even something as elemental as 1967 borders.

In fact, the lead Palestinian negotiator threatened to tell Israeli TV that its audience should feel proud of its leader’s outmaneuvering of both Abbas and Obama:

Erekat: I am planning to go on Israeli channel 10 to say one thing: congratulations Mr. Netanyahu. You defeated President Obama. You defeated Abu Mazen… if it’s my word against theirs in your Congress and your Senate, I know I do not stand a chance.

In this particular case, Erekat is precisely right.  And Obama has allowed Bibi to make him and Abbas look the fool.  It’s shameful really that it’s come to this due to Obama’s futile policy.  But it has.

The NY Times’ Eytan of Arabia (Ethan Bronner) has weighed in from the Delphic heights with his ‘penetrating analysis,’ as always favorable to Israel.  But frankly I’m shocked that Bernard Avishai, known as a probing critic of the Occupation and Israeli policy, has proven so tone deaf about this particular issue:

“They [the Palestine Papers] focus on Palestinian concessions without presenting the other side of the negotiations. The Palestinians were going to get a great deal for their concessions.

Yes, they were going to get a Bantustan shorn of all land settled by Israel in Jerusalem post-67 short of Har Homa.  The only major West Bank settlement Israel planned to abandon was Kiryat Arba.  Israel would get Maaleh Adumim, French Hill, Gilo, Ramat Shlomo, even parts of Sheikh Jarrah (see proposed map).  Israel planned to ‘console’ the Palestinians for their loss of this land by “bequeathing” them Israeli Palestinian villages whose citizens never wanted to be expelled from Israel in the first place.  It would’ve been a game of three-card Monte.  What was the PA going to get for their trouble?  What major concessions?  A state?  Yes, but what kind of state?  A truly independent state able to function on its own with contiguous territory?  Not so much.

Al Jazeera Blockbuster: PA Gave Away the Store, Israel Still Wasn’t Interested

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

erekat bigger jerusalem
Al Jazeera and The Guardian are jointly publishing the summary of a treasure trove of documents revealing the extraordinary extent to which the PA was willing to sacrifice a huge chunk of the Palestinian national patrimony and agenda for the sake of peace. While Israel (and to an extent, the Bush administration) essentially said: “That’s nice. But not enough.”

This will literally knock your socks off.  The documents (linked below in discreet articles) reveal:

The scale of confidential concessions offered by Palestinian negotiators, including on the highly sensitive issue of the right of return of Palestinian refugees.

• How Israeli leaders privately asked for some Arab citizens to be transferred to a new Palestinian state.

• The intimate level of covert co-operation between Israeli security forces and the Palestinian Authority.

• The central role of British intelligence in drawing up a secret plan to crush Hamas in the Palestinian territories.

• How Palestinian Authority (PA) leaders were privately tipped off about Israel’s 2008-9 war in Gaza.

As well as the annexation of all East Jerusalem settlements except Har Homathe Palestine papers show PLO leaders privately suggested swapping part of the flashpoint East Jerusalem Arab neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah for land elsewhere.

Most controversially, they also proposed a joint committee to take over the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount holy sites in Jerusalem’s Old City – the neuralgic issue that helped sink the Camp David talks in 2000 after Yasser Arafat refused to concede sovereignty around the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa mosques.

…The concession in May 2008 by Palestinian leaders [would have] allow[ed] Israel to annex the settlements in East Jerusalem – including Gilo…

abbas hamas

You sure don't, baby. But every other Palestinian and the world now will.

Palestinian negotiators practically bragged to the Israelis about how much they were willing to give up for the sake of peace:

…The chief Palestinian negotiator, Saeb Erekat, as giving Israel “the biggest Yerushalayim [the Hebrew name for Jerusalem] in history”

But nothing was enough for Israel.  It apologetically said it appreciated the Palestinian sacrifice but:

…The offer was rejected out of hand by Israel because it did not include a big settlement near the city Ma’ale Adumim as well as Har Homa and several others deeper in the West Bank, including Ariel. “We do not like this suggestion because it does not meet our demands,” Israel’s then foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, told the Palestinians, “and probably it was not easy for you to think about it, but I really appreciate it“.

Oh and you remember all that hope liberal Zionists (and even me I confess) harbored that Tzipi Livni offered a pragmatic alternative to Bibi and that SHE could and would negotiate a settlement if offered power–all smashed to bits by revelations like this.  Tzipi was no better than Olmert nor Bibi.  She just talked nicer and sounded more reasonable.

Here is the overall summary of the tone of the documents by the Guardian reporters:

The overall impression that emerges from the documents, which stretch from 1999 to 2010, is of the weakness and growing desperation of PA leaders as failure to reach agreement or even halt all settlement temporarily undermines their credibility in relation to their Hamas rivals; the papers also reveal the unyielding confidence of Israeli negotiators and the often dismissive attitude of US politicians towards Palestinian representatives.

So let’s try to assess the meaning of this bombshell.  The PA is toast and this former PLO representative says as much in this Guardian column.  Perhaps it will still retain support in the West Bank, which is its base.  But Fatah leaders were willing to give away the store and get virtually nothing in return.  What’s more, even the huge amount it offered wasn’t enough.  Israel wanted it all.

barak pinocchio

Barak as Pinocchio proclaiming "no partner" (Biderman)

Israel had a partner all along.  But it was the Palestinians who had no partner.  Israel’s motto: “Peace on our terms, or no terms.”  Israel acted as if it had won WWII and could dictate terms to the vanquished foe.  Olmert and Israelis may live to regret that they didn’t make peace on these unbelievably generous terms.

In terms of Palestinian leadership, these papers prove the bankruptcy of the notion that an unelected rump Palestinian entity can negotiate a satisfactory deal on behalf of the Palestinian people.  The Bush administration and Israeli policy to torpedo the 2006 elections and stand in the way of Hamas-Fatah reconciliation has been a disaster.  The only way to find an accomodation acceptable to the majority of Palestinians is with a representative elected body that ratifies such negotiation results.

If Abbas and his cronies had any honor they’d resign en masse and leave Israel to resume full Occupation of the West Bank (or barring that negotiate a real resolution with real Palestinian leaders).  But the current PA leaders are as survival oriented as Bibi.  They show no devotion to Palestinian national ideals just as Bibi et al show little commitment to anything resembling values or principles.  They just want to keep their fingers in the pie.  For Palestinians an increasingly small, miserly one.  For Israelis an increasingly larger and tastier one.

And can you believe that Israel had the temerity to ask the PA to accept forced transfer of Israeli Palestinian citizens to the new Palestinian state, Avigdor Lieberman’s population transfer (aka expulsion) agenda?

The documents are a boon for Hamas, which has always prided itself on steadfastness to the Palestinian national agenda.  Hamas will appear the only Palestinian movement which hasn’t compromised with Israel, the only one which wasn’t willing to sell its people out for a mess of porridge.  Even if you hate Hamas, you will have to admit it comes out of this smelling like a rose.  And who do we have to blame for this?  Bush and Olmert, no one else.

Olmert is shown to be a total liar when he trumpeted claims that he made the Palestinians a generous offer of 92% of Palestine, which they refused.  Actually, it was Olmert who couldn’t or wouldn’t deliver.

The new development augurs poorly for any serious peace efforts by the Obama administration.  You now have an even more intransigent Israeli government in power than the one to which all these concessions were offered.  And you have a PA which will be mortified that it was exposed with its pants down.  Peace talks are dead.  Dead as a doornail.  Bibi wins big time.  He can now go about building, occupying, assassinating and engaging in war with virtually any party he wishes as long as he wishes.  He holds the cards.  The PA and Obama got bupkis.  And how will the other Arab governments in the Middle East react to American diplomacy used so haphazardly and to such little effect?

But perhaps, just perhaps not all is lost.  There are initiatives that will be strengthened by this failure.  All the alternative peacemaking efforts such as BDS will look even more attractive than ever since they are not tarnished by politicians’ dithering and compromises.  But even more important, I think the idea of an imposed settlement looks not only feasible, but perhaps the only hope.  I can foresee the Quartet, EU and UN Security Council devising a settlement with the input, but not veto power, of the parties and imposing it on them along with provisions that offer security to both sides.  It’s becoming clearer and clearer that this is not an option, but rather a necessity.  The last hope.

For those who like inside baseball, who spilled the beans?  Who leaked these documents?  My money says it was one of the members of the Palestinian negotiation support unit (NSU), a special British-funded entity that provided research, analysis and strategic background for the Palestinian side in its negotiations with Israel.  The Guardian says that many members of this unit have quit, growing disaffected by the sheer magnitude of what their bosses were willing to concede while getting little or nothing in return.  One of these individuals would have a strong motive to embarrass the PA negotiators.  Also, it appears that the bifurcated nature of the NSU (working for the PA but funded by Britain) allowed for mixed allegiances not necessarily fully committed to the PA interests.

In effect, the Guardian may’ve inadvertently blown the cover of the leaker with this statement:

The bulk of the documents are records, contemporaneous notes and sections of verbatim transcripts of meetings drawn up by officials of the Palestinian negotiation support unit (NSU), which has been the main technical and legal backup for the Palestinian side in the negotiations.

Read all the Guardian’s Palestine Papers and an overview of all Guardian stories written about the Papers.  Al Jazeera provides a different lens on the same documents.

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