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We are posting this article with reservation on a number
of points that the author
highlights, for example: "The Palestinians agreed that
Israel could annex some blocks of settlements...",
which is completely incorrect, only the authors of the Geneva accord
and indirectly some of the PA officials. The vast majority of
Palestinians rejected this agreement especially because of the
annexation and the giving up of the Right of Return.
On
the other hand the author condemns the US Administration and the
congress for violating all UN resolutions , all peace initiatives, even
the "Road Map" that is rejected by most of the Palestinians, Sharon's
land grab...the use of force "This was not just another
"pro-Israel" (or, more accurately, "pro-Israeli right") resolution, but
an effective renunciation of the post-World War II international system
based upon the premise of the illegitimacy of the expansion of a
country’s territory by military force." Noting that the
creation of the Zionist entity came into existence by military force.
Congress to Sharon:
Take All You Want
by Stephen Zunes*
Antiwar.com
"Leading
the opposition to the resolution were Churches for Middle East Peace,
the Tikkun Community, and similar progressive organizations...
The Democrats, like the Republicans, now support the
neoconservative doctrine that places the right of conquest over the rule
of law."
"Congressman Pete Stark of California, one of the nine dissenters,
observed how the resolution did not call on both Israelis and
Palestinians to work together
to
find a peaceful solution to this conflict."
On
Wednesday, June 23, 2004, the U.S. House of Representatives, in an
overwhelming bipartisan vote, endorsed right-wing Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon’s efforts to colonize and annex large sections of the
Palestinian West Bank, seized by Israel in the June 1967 war.
House Concurrent Resolution 460, sponsored by right-wing
Republican leader Tom DeLay, "strongly endorses" the letter sent by
President George W. Bush to the Israeli prime minister in April
supporting his so-called "disengagement" plan. This unilateral
initiative calls for withdrawing the illegal Israeli settlements from
the occupied Gaza Strip, but – far more significantly – would
incorporate virtually all of the illegal settlements in the occupied
West Bank into Israel, leaving the Palestinians with a series of
non-contiguous and economically unviable cantons, each surrounded by
Israeli territory, collectively constituting barely 10% of historic
Palestine. (Even in the case of the Gaza Strip, Sharon’s plan would
allow Israel to control the borders, the ports, and the airspace, as
well as having the right to conduct military operations inside
Palestinian areas at will.)
The vote was
407 in favor of the resolution and only 9 opposed.
The Bush letter so overwhelming supported by the House declares that
"the United States will do its utmost to prevent any attempt by anyone
to impose any other plan."
Indeed, the resolution appears to be part of an effort to short-circuit
last fall’s Geneva Initiative, a comprehensive peace plan
supported by the Palestinian leadership and leading Israeli moderates.
In that proposal, the Palestinians agreed that Israel could annex
some blocs of settlements, but only along Israel’s internationally
recognized borders and only in exchange for an equivalent amount of
territory currently part of Israel that would be granted to the new
Palestinian state. According to public opinion polls, the
majority of Americans – including a majority of American Jews – support
this approach over the Bush-backed Sharon plan so overwhelming endorsed
by Congress.
The resolution does not even make mention of the once
highly-touted "road map" for Israeli-Palestinian peace that the United
States drew up with representatives of Russia, the European Union, and
the United Nations. The "road map" demanded that any growth in
the settlements be frozen and that the remaining outstanding issues,
such as borders and the status of Palestinian refugees be left for
negotiations between the two parties.
Congressman Pete Stark of California, one of the nine dissenters,
observed how the resolution did not call on both Israelis and
Palestinians to work together to find a peaceful solution to this
conflict, correctly observing that "all parties in the process
must work together," something the resolution notably omitted.
Minority leader Nancy Pelosi and Deputy minority leader Steny Hoyer (who
was a cosponsor of the DeLay resolution) refused to place a resolution
cosponsored by Stark (H.R. 479), which applauds Israelis and
Palestinians who are working together to conceive pragmatic, serious
plans for achieving peace and encourages both Israeli and Palestinian
leaders to capitalize on the opportunity offered by these peace
initiatives.
According to Israeli press reports,
Sharon brought
four separate disengagement plans to Washington requiring various
degrees of Israeli withdrawal, but President Bush ended up endorsing the
one which allowed Israel to annex the largest amount of Palestinian
territory.
Now, much to the chagrin of progressive and moderate Israelis, Congress
has also chosen to throw its weight behind the most right-wing of the
four proposals.
Most observers –
including leading Israeli military and intelligence officials –
recognize that by leaving the Palestinians with little hope of achieving
a viable state through negotiations, this will only swell the ranks of
extremist Palestinian groups and produce more terrorism. Congress
has rejected this analysis, however, insisting that
Sharon’s land grab will somehow "enhance the security of Israel and
advance the cause of peace in the Middle East."
The resolution calls for the Palestinian "state" that could
eventually emerge to be "based on rule of law and respect for human
rights," but does not call on Israel to respect the rule of law
and human rights, which its occupation forces and colonists – according
to reputable human rights organization in Israel and elsewhere – are
violating on a daily basis. The resolution also repeatedly cites
Palestinian terrorism as the obstacle to peace and security, not the
Israeli occupation and repression that has spawned it.
Furthermore, the resolution calls for the United States to further
strengthen Israel’s military prowess and defends Israel’s right to
launch attacks against Palestinian groups that "threaten Israeli
citizens," which presumably includes settlers and their militias
which have been responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Palestinian
civilians, including large numbers of children.
In supporting this
resolution, Congress has effectively renounced UN Security Council
resolutions 242 and 338,
which call on Israel – in return for security guarantees from its Arab
neighbors – to withdraw from territories seized in the June 1967 war.
All previous
U.S.
administrations of both parties had seen these resolutions as the basis
for Arab-Israeli peace.
These Israeli settlements violate the Fourth Geneva Convention, which
deem it illegal for any country to transfer any part of its civilian
population onto territories seized by military force. UN Security
Council resolutions 446, 452, 465 and 471 explicitly call on Israel to
remove its colonists from the occupied territories. The vast majority of
these settlements that the Bush-Sharon plan seeks to formally annex into
Israel were built after these resolutions were passed.
In an
incredible act of chutzpah, however, the resolution claims that Israel
should not be expected to withdraw from these settlements "in light of
new realities on the ground,"
namely the settlements built in violation of these UN Security Council
resolutions.
Congress, however, apparently agrees with President Bush that
Sharon’s Israel, unlike Saddam’s Iraq, need not abide by UN Security
Council resolutions.
In that clause, the resolution refers to the illegal settlements
euphemistically as "Israeli population centers." More significantly, the
resolution refers to these settlements as being "in Israel," effectively
already recognizing their annexation.
The resolution also insists that supporting the right of Palestinian
refugees to return to their homes in
Israel – or even
in the occupied territories to be annexed by Israel under the
Bush-Sharon plan – would not be "just" or "fair."
The
Bush letter endorsed by Congress effectively destroys the once
highly-touted "road map" and marks the first time in the history of the
peace process that a U.S. president has preempted negotiations by
announcing support of such a unilateral initiative by one party. Both
Israel and the United States continue to refuse to even negotiate with
Palestine Authority President Yasser Arafat, Palestinian Prime Minister
Amhed Qureia, or any other recognized Palestinian leader, on substantive
issues dealing with a peace settlement.
Supporting the resolution were the fundamentalist Christian Coalition,
the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, and other right-wing
groups. Leading the opposition to the resolution were Churches for
Middle East Peace,
the Tikkun Community, and similar progressive organizations.
That the entire House Democratic leadership and all but a handful of
Democrats overall supported the resolution is demonstrative of just how
far to the right the Democratic Party has gone. In short, the
Democrats, like the Republicans, now support the neoconservative
doctrine that places the right of conquest over the rule of law.
More fundamentally, Congress’ effective endorsement of an Israeli
annexation of land it conquered in the 1967 war is a direct challenge to
the United Nations Charter, which forbids any country from expanding its
territory through military conquest. The vote, therefore, constitutes
nothing less than an overwhelming bipartisan renunciation of the
post-World War II international system, effectively recognizing the
right of conquest.
*Stephen Zunes is a professor of Politics and chair of the Peace &
Justice Studies Program at the
University of San
Francisco. He serves as Middle East editor for Foreign Policy in Focus
and is the author of Tinderbox: U.S. Middle East Policy and the Roots of
Terrorism (Common Courage Press, 2003)