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Has
Ehud Olmert suddenly been seized with the spirit to negotiate with the
Palestinians? Of course not. The disengagement plan, as laid out by
Ariel Sharon, contained by way of introduction a "proposal" to the
Palestinian leadership to sit down and talk with the purpose of coming
to an agreement over a permanent solution, or a long-term interim
solution should the Palestinian leadership be unprepared to voice the
ideological concessions it had already made in practice. Sharon was, in
effect, telling the Palestinian leadership to make up their mind. Either
they could find a solution through negotiations or Israel would impose
one unilaterally. This carrot and stick technique is as old as the
hills. Nor is there anything new in the way the Israelis use it against
the Palestinians, which is to force feed them the stick or beat them
with the carrot.
Sharon
told the Palestinian leadership that if it wanted to negotiate it had to
fight terrorism. That was the only way to get the roadmap off the ground
preparatory to negotiations over the creation of a Palestinian state.
But to Sharon, the difference between a unilateral solution imposed by
Israel and a negotiated solution was that under the former Israel could
squeeze the Palestinian state into 40 to 50 per cent of the West Bank,
whereas through negotiations the Palestinians might succeed in getting
70 per cent of that area. There is no doubt about which solution Sharon
preferred. Since 1988, when the disengagement with Jordan took place,
Sharon had been pushing to transform the Jordanian solution into the
Palestinian solution: Palestinian self-rule -- now called statehood --
on the same densely populated area of the West Bank that would have been
handed over to Jordan under the Elon plan, with the remainder of the
West Bank annexed by Israel.
Since
the collapse of Camp David and the eruption of the second Palestinian
Intifada, and even more so following the evacuation from Gaza, Israeli
public opinion has increasingly converged on the unilateral imposition
of borders. The Centre Party reflects this general mood; though not a
majority party none of the other coalition members have produced an
alternative.
Olmert
favours a unilateral solution for two reasons. First, like Sharon, he
does not see a Palestinian leadership willing to accept the maximum
Israel is prepared to offer. Second, his party, and to an extent his
coalition, supports the unilateral option. So what has changed?
True,
Sharon has vanished from the scene. But this has only increased Olmert's
commitment to Sharon's scheme. And the Palestinian people have elected a
legislative assembly with a huge Hamas majority. Disengagement from Gaza
did not produce the predicted results. The refusal of the Israeli
leadership to negotiate with the previous Palestinian government
ultimately strengthened the hand of those most committed to Palestinian
principles or, from the Israeli perspective, the most extremist
elements. It is now feared that disengagement from the West Bank will
expand and enhance the influence of the new Palestinian government.
The
Zionist left, which had supported unilateral disengagement from Gaza,
opposes unilateral action in the West Bank. More important, though, is
the growing influence of right-wing forces within the Israeli military
establishment. Their views were expressed by Giora Eiland in Haaretz
of 4 June. If Israel gave up Gaza too quickly to be compensated
properly, he said -- though what more compensation it could want beyond
Bush's letters of guarantee to Sharon is unclear -- then disengagement
from Gaza would be a disaster. Israelis are much more emotionally
attached to the settlements in the West Bank than they were to
settlements in Gaza and the political cost of dismantling them would be
high. In addition, any Palestinian state to emerge on the West Bank
under Hamas would be extremely volatile, economically, socially and
politically.
Eiland
therefore calls for a "comprehensive solution". But don't get him wrong;
he's not referring to the Arab peace initiative. Rather, his idea is to
bring Jordan and Egypt on board in talks where the possibility of land
exchanges in the Sinai and to the east of the Jordan River could be
discussed as part of an overall solution involving the Palestinians,
together with Egypt and Jordan, though with no mention of Syria, of
course. The details of his suggestions are not important. The
significance lies in the reflection of how uncomfortable some military
circles in Israel are with the haste with which politicians are coming
up with political solutions to one of the world's most obdurate
problems.
The
Palestinian leadership Sharon had instructed to do its part of the
roadmap first in order to qualify to negotiate with Israel is now
sitting in. At the same time the international community cannot envision
the economic blockade of Palestinians lasting forever. But in order to
lift it there has to be a Palestinian body to channel funds to, and if
that body is regarded as good enough to support financially then
certainly it must be good enough to negotiate with.
Israel,
at this delicate phase in the US confrontation with Iran, cannot afford
to annoy the Europeans. Whether Washington opts for economic sanctions
or military action against Tehran, it needs an international coalition,
with Europe on board and some level of understanding with Russia and
China, so they don't actively obstruct Washington's plans. And Israel
knows, without having to be told, that its greatest strategic threat
comes from the direction of the Gulf, an area Israel had always wanted
the US to place at the top of its priorities even before the occupation
of Iraq.
The US
relationship with Europe is far too shaky to serve as a foundation for
an international coalition against Iran, especially following the
exposure of the many lies that led to the war with Iraq. When
Condoleezza Rice returned home to her boss, downcast after meeting
European prime ministers in Berlin, Bush furnished her with some
"positive" suggestions that she could take back to her European
counterparts when she met them again in Vienna. One of these ideas was
that Washington would negotiate with Iran if Iran halted its uranium
enrichment operations. In other words, only by demonstrating that it was
willing to talk with Iran could the US obtain a European consensus.
Those
same Europeans cannot understand Israel's current boycott of the
Palestinian president, or even its current drive to unilateral action.
(Nor, for that matter can anyone in Arab governments who openly or
tacitly support the American drive against Iran, and Hizbullah, and the
conspiracy against the Lebanese resistance).
The
Palestinian cause pops up frequently in the context of international
coalitions as a public relations ploy. This applies even to Arab
countries, which give the West advice on how to make the right gestures
in order to win over public opinion, or at least to assuage its anger,
until deals can be struck over the real strategic issues. So, a meeting
will be held and an agreement will be reached over arrangements to
facilitate the influx of money and goods. Moreover, unlike the last
meeting between a Palestinian leader and an Israeli head of state, the
next one will take place in a convivial atmosphere and the two sides
will agree on a mechanism for resuming negotiations -- that is, until
the Iranian crisis has passed.
In the
meantime, Israel is keeping up its military operations in the West Bank
and Gaza. In other words, it is continuing to make an assault here,
escalate friction there, in its undeclared "low intensity" war against
the Palestinians. Finally, the Israeli army made public (see Haaretz
of 30 May) the fact that its forces have been inside Palestinian
territory in Gaza for weeks, in the course of which it has waged a
systematic campaign of assassination and murder, mass arrests and
missile bombardment.
The
assassinations in Sidon fall under the heading of the same undeclared
war, as does the pre- planned retaliation to the Lebanese resistance's
response to these assassinations.
The
Lebanese resistance refuses to become accustomed to the covert war being
waged against it and by responding is letting people know that Israel is
waging such a war. For as long as the war remains undeclared, as long as
people grow accustomed to it, then the world can continue to treat
Israel as though nothing is out of the ordinary. In Palestine, by
contrast, a state of emergency has become the rule, as Walter Benjamin
would have put it, to which we might add that Israel wants the people to
get used to it.
Israel
is continuing to wage its war after having drummed the world into
clamping an economic stranglehold on ordinary Palestinians who now have
to repent their political choices if they want to breathe again, and all
because of the declared positions of their elected government, which
will do nothing to alter Israel's determination to press ahead with its
own unilateral schemes.
In
wartime, governments take actions they would never dare to take in
ordinary circumstances. Israel is behaving like other governments do
when at war. It has refused entry to Palestinians returning home for the
summer holidays. It has taken residence permits away from residents in
Jerusalem. It has clamped down the stranglehold so tightly that
Palestinians cannot even squirm without their warden's permission. It is
raising the stakes it wants the Palestinians to pay. Either it will reap
these in political gains or it will create an atmosphere inimical to
negotiations and conducive to unilateral actions that will not only be
regarded as normal but as progress.
Israel's war is taking place against a backdrop of regional preparations
for an attack against, or at least broad based boycott of, Iran if it
doesn't halt uranium enrichment. These preparations entail testing the
strength of the Lebanese resistance, not just in terms of arms but also
in terms of manpower and support inside Lebanon. This, too, is part of a
more far reaching plan should the US set its mind on a particular course
of action in the region. Such a decision is difficult to take given the
situation of US forces in Iraq. It is difficult to take in view of the
failure of US plans for Lebanon. But whatever decision Washington takes
Israel is front and centre, doing its utmost not to embarrass Washington
in front of its allies but also, because of the connections between
Iran, Syria and Lebanon, pushing hard in a very specific direction.
Israel
is also goading the Palestinians into internal strife. It believes that
this is the best way to ensure one of two outcomes: unilateral
disengagement as the result of chaos in Palestine or the emergence from
the pressure pot of a Palestinian leadership prepared to "not miss yet
another historic opportunity" and to accept a state within the borders
proposed by Sharon and currently proposed by Olmert, borders narrower
than those proposed by Clinton in Camp David.
The
Palestinian-Palestinian dialogue may be simply a way to gain time for
some. However, for the Palestinians there are very good reasons why it
should succeed and why the participants must summon the will to make it
succeed. First, Israel has nothing to offer any of the parties
participating in the dialogue as long as none of the parties join forces
with Israel against the other Palestinian factions. Second, it is in the
interests of the Palestinian people to form a government of national
unity. Third, Israeli practices need to be confronted on all fronts. The
Palestinians must avoid being lured into civil strife at all costs. The
last thing the Palestinians need are more innocent victims, greater
attrition of their morale and actions that play solely into the hands of
the occupying power. |