Henry Siegman
The Great Middle East Peace
Process Scam
from London Review of Books
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v29/n16/sieg01_.html
When Ehud Olmert and George W. Bush met at the White House in
June, they concluded that Hamas’s violent ousting of Fatah from Gaza – which
brought down the Palestinian national unity government brokered by the Saudis in
Mecca in March – had presented the world with a new ‘window of opportunity’.[*]
(Never has a failed peace process enjoyed so many windows of opportunity.)
Hamas’s isolation in Gaza, Olmert and Bush agreed, would allow them to grant
generous concessions to the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, giving him the
credibility he needed with the Palestinian people in order to prevail over
Hamas.
Both Bush and Olmert have spoken endlessly of their commitment to a two-state
solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict, but it is their determination to
bring down Hamas rather than to build up a Palestinian state that animates their
new-found enthusiasm for making Abbas look good. That is why their expectation
that Hamas will be defeated is illusory. Palestinian moderates will never
prevail over those considered extremists, since what defines moderation for
Olmert is Palestinian acquiescence in Israel’s dismemberment of Palestinian
territory. In the end, what Olmert and his government are prepared to offer
Palestinians will be rejected by Abbas no less than by Hamas, and will only
confirm to Palestinians the futility of Abbas’s moderation and justify its
rejection by Hamas. Equally illusory are Bush’s expectations of what will be
achieved by the conference he recently announced would be held in the autumn (it
has now been downgraded to a ‘meeting’). In his view, all previous peace
initiatives have failed largely, if not exclusively, because Palestinians were
not ready for a state of their own. The meeting will therefore focus narrowly on
Palestinian institution-building and reform, under the tutelage of Tony Blair,
the Quartet’s newly appointed envoy.
In fact, all previous peace initiatives have got nowhere for a reason that
neither Bush nor the EU has had the political courage to acknowledge. That
reason is the consensus reached long ago by Israel’s decision-making elites that
Israel will never allow the emergence of a Palestinian state which denies it
effective military and economic control of the West Bank. To be sure, Israel
would allow – indeed, it would insist on – the creation of a number of isolated
enclaves that Palestinians could call a state, but only in order to prevent the
creation of a binational state in which Palestinians would be the majority.
The Middle East peace process may well be the most spectacular deception in
modern diplomatic history. Since the failed Camp David summit of 2000, and
actually well before it, Israel’s interest in a peace process – other than for
the purpose of obtaining Palestinian and international acceptance of the status
quo – has been a fiction that has served primarily to provide cover for its
systematic confiscation of Palestinian land and an occupation whose goal,
according to the former IDF chief of staff Moshe Ya’alon, is ‘to sear deep into
the consciousness of Palestinians that they are a defeated people’. In his
reluctant embrace of the Oslo Accords, and his distaste for the settlers,
Yitzhak Rabin may have been the exception to this, but even he did not entertain
a return of Palestinian territory beyond the so-called Allon Plan, which allowed
Israel to retain the Jordan Valley and other parts of the West Bank.
Anyone familiar with Israel’s relentless confiscations of Palestinian territory
– based on a plan devised, overseen and implemented by Ariel Sharon – knows that
the objective of its settlement enterprise in the West Bank has been largely
achieved. Gaza, the evacuation of whose settlements was so naively hailed by the
international community as the heroic achievement of a man newly committed to an
honourable peace with the Palestinians, was intended to serve as the first in a
series of Palestinian bantustans. Gaza’s situation shows us what these
bantustans will look like if their residents do not behave as Israel wants.
Israel’s disingenuous commitment to a peace process and a two-state solution is
precisely what has made possible its open-ended occupation and dismemberment of
Palestinian territory. And the Quartet – with the EU, the UN secretary general
and Russia obediently following Washington’s lead – has collaborated with and
provided cover for this deception by accepting Israel’s claim that it has been
unable to find a deserving Palestinian peace partner.
Just one year after the 1967 war, Moshe Dayan, a former IDF chief of staff who
at the time was minister of defence, described his plan for the future as ‘the
current reality in the territories’. ‘The plan,’ he said, ‘is being implemented
in actual fact. What exists today must remain as a permanent arrangement in the
West Bank.’ Ten years later, at a conference in Tel Aviv, Dayan said: ‘The
question is not “What is the solution?” but “How do we live without a
solution?”’ Geoffrey Aronson, who has monitored the settlement enterprise from
its beginnings, summarises the situation as follows:
Living without a solution, then as now, was understood by Israel as the key to
maximising the benefits of conquest while minimising the burdens and dangers of
retreat or formal annexation. This commitment to the status quo, however,
disguised a programme of expansion that generations of Israeli leaders supported
as enabling, through Israeli settlement, the dynamic transformation of the
territories and the expansion of effective Israeli sovereignty to the Jordan
River.
In an interview in Ha’aretz in 2004, Dov Weissglas, chef de cabinet to the then
prime minister, Ariel Sharon, described the strategic goal of Sharon’s diplomacy
as being to secure the support of the White House and Congress for Israeli
measures that would place the peace process and Palestinian statehood in
‘formaldehyde’. It is a fiendishly appropriate metaphor: formaldehyde uniquely
prevents the deterioration of dead bodies, and sometimes creates the illusion
that they are still alive. Weissglas explains that the purpose of Sharon’s
unilateral withdrawal from Gaza, and the dismantling of several isolated
settlements in the West Bank, was to gain US acceptance of Israel’s
unilateralism, not to set a precedent for an eventual withdrawal from the West
Bank. The limited withdrawals were intended to provide Israel with the political
room to deepen and widen its presence in the West Bank, and that is what they
achieved. In a letter to Sharon, Bush wrote: ‘In light of new realities on the
ground, including already existing major Israeli population centres, it is
unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final status negotiations will be a
full and complete return to the armistice lines of 1949.’
In a recent interview in Ha’aretz, James Wolfensohn, who was the Quartet’s
representative at the time of the Gaza disengagement, said that Israel and the
US had systematically undermined the agreement he helped forge in 2005 between
Israel and the Palestinian Authority, and had instead turned Gaza into a vast
prison. The official behind this, he told Ha’aretz, was Elliott Abrams, the
deputy national security adviser. ‘Every aspect’ of the agreement Wolfensohn had
brokered ‘was abrogated’.
Another recent interview in Ha’aretz, with Haggai Alon, who was a senior adviser
to Amir Peretz at the Ministry of Defence, is even more revealing. Alon accuses
the IDF (whose most senior officers increasingly are themselves settlers) of
working clandestinely to further the settlers’ interests. The IDF, Alon says,
ignores the Supreme Court’s instructions about the path the so-called security
fence should follow, instead ‘setting a route that will not enable the
establishment of a Palestinian state’. Alon told Ha’aretz that when in 2005
politicians signed an agreement with the Palestinians to ease restrictions on
Palestinians travelling in the territories (part of the deal that Wolfensohn had
worked on), the IDF eased them for settlers instead. For Palestinians, the
number of checkpoints doubled. According to Alon, the IDF is ‘carrying out an
apartheid policy’ that is emptying Hebron of Arabs and Judaising (his term) the
Jordan Valley, while it co-operates openly with the settlers in an attempt to
make a two-state solution impossible.
A new UN map of the West Bank, produced by the Office for the Co-ordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, gives a comprehensive picture of the situation. Israeli
civilian and military infrastructure has rendered 40 per cent of the territory
off limits to Palestinians. The rest of the territory, including major
population centres such as Nablus and Jericho, is split into enclaves; movement
between them is restricted by 450 roadblocks and 70 manned checkpoints. The UN
found that what remains is an area very similar to that set aside for the
Palestinian population in Israeli security proposals in the aftermath of the
1967 war. It also found that changes now underway to the infrastructure of the
territories – including a network of highways that bypass and isolate
Palestinian towns – would serve to formalise the de facto cantonisation of the
West Bank.
These are the realities on the ground that the uninformed and/or cynical blather
in Jerusalem, Washington and Brussels – about waiting for Palestinians to reform
their institutions, democratise their culture, dismantle the ‘infrastructures of
terror’ and halt all violence and incitement before peace negotiations can begin
– seeks to drown out. Given the vast power imbalance between Israel and the
Palestinians – not to mention the vast preponderance of diplomatic support
enjoyed by Israel from precisely those countries that one would have expected to
compensate diplomatically for the military imbalance – nothing will change for
the better without the US, the EU and other international actors finally facing
up to what have long been the fundamental impediments to peace.
These impediments include the assumption, implicit in Israel’s occupation
policy, that if no peace agreement is reached, the ‘default setting’ of UN
Security Council Resolution 242 is the indefinite continuation of Israel’s
occupation. If this reading were true, the resolution would actually be inviting
an occupying power that wishes to retain its adversary’s territory to do so
simply by means of avoiding peace talks – which is exactly what Israel has been
doing. In fact, the introductory statement to Resolution 242 declares that
territory cannot be acquired by war, implying that if the parties cannot reach
agreement, the occupier must withdraw to the status quo ante: that, logically,
is 242’s default setting. Had there been a sincere intention on Israel’s part to
withdraw from the territories, surely forty years should have been more than
enough time in which to reach an agreement.
Israel’s contention has long been that since no Palestinian state existed before
the 1967 war, there is no recognised border to which Israel can withdraw,
because the pre-1967 border was merely an armistice line. Moreover, since
Resolution 242 calls for a ‘just and lasting peace’ that will allow ‘every state
in the area [to] live in security’, Israel holds that it must be allowed to
change the armistice line, either bilaterally or unilaterally, to make it secure
before it ends the occupation. This is a specious argument for many reasons, but
principally because UN General Assembly Partition Resolution 181 of 1947, which
established the Jewish state’s international legitimacy, also recognised the
remaining Palestinian territory outside the new state’s borders as the equally
legitimate patrimony of Palestine’s Arab population on which they were entitled
to establish their own state, and it mapped the borders of that territory with
great precision. Resolution 181’s affirmation of the right of Palestine’s Arab
population to national self-determination was based on normative law and the
democratic principles that grant statehood to the majority population. (At the
time, Arabs constituted two-thirds of the population in Palestine.) This right
does not evaporate because of delays in its implementation.
In the course of a war launched by Arab countries that sought to prevent the
implementation of the UN partition resolution, Israel enlarged its territory by
50 per cent. If it is illegal to acquire territory as a result of war, then the
question now cannot conceivably be how much additional Palestinian territory
Israel may confiscate, but rather how much of the territory it acquired in the
course of the war of 1948 it is allowed to retain. At the very least, if
‘adjustments’ are to be made to the 1949 armistice line, these should be made on
Israel’s side of that line, not the Palestinians’.
Clearly, the obstacle to resolving the Israel-Palestine conflict has not been a
dearth of peace initiatives or peace envoys. Nor has it been the violence to
which Palestinians have resorted in their struggle to rid themselves of Israel’s
occupation, even when that violence has despicably targeted Israel’s civilian
population. It is not to sanction the murder of civilians to observe that such
violence occurs, sooner or later, in most situations in which a people’s drive
for national self-determination is frustrated by an occupying power. Indeed,
Israel’s own struggle for national independence was no exception. According to
the historian Benny Morris, in this conflict it was the Irgun that first
targeted civilians. In Righteous Victims, Morris writes that the upsurge of Arab
terrorism in 1937 ‘triggered a wave of Irgun bombings against Arab crowds and
buses, introducing a new dimension to the conflict.’ While in the past Arabs had
‘sniped at cars and pedestrians and occasionally lobbed a grenade, often killing
or injuring a few bystanders or passengers’, now ‘for the first time, massive
bombs were placed in crowded Arab centres, and dozens of people were
indiscriminately murdered and maimed.’ Morris notes that ‘this “innovation” soon
found Arab imitators.’
Underlying Israel’s efforts to retain the occupied territories is the fact that
it has never really considered the West Bank as occupied territory, despite its
pro forma acceptance of that designation. Israelis see the Palestinian areas as
‘contested’ territory to which they have claims no less compelling than the
Palestinians, international law and UN resolutions notwithstanding. This is a
view that was made explicit for the first time by Sharon in an op-ed essay
published on the front page of the New York Times on 9 June 2002. The use of the
biblical designations of Judea and Samaria to describe the territories, terms
which were formerly employed only by the Likud but are now de rigueur for Labour
Party stalwarts as well, is a reflection of a common Israeli view. That the
former prime minister Ehud Barak (now Olmert’s defence minister) endlessly
describes the territorial proposals he made at the Camp David summit as
expressions of Israel’s ‘generosity’, and never as an acknowledgment of
Palestinian rights, is another example of this mindset. Indeed, the term
‘Palestinian rights’ seems not to exist in Israel’s lexicon.
The problem is not, as Israelis often claim, that Palestinians do not know how
to compromise. (Another former prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, famously
complained that ‘Palestinians take and take while Israel gives and gives.’) That
is an indecent charge, since the Palestinians made much the most far-reaching
compromise of all when the PLO formally accepted the legitimacy of Israel within
the 1949 armistice border. With that concession, Palestinians ceded their claim
to more than half the territory that the UN’s partition resolution had assigned
to its Arab inhabitants. They have never received any credit for this wrenching
concession, made years before Israel agreed that Palestinians had a right to
statehood in any part of Palestine. The notion that further border adjustments
should be made at the expense of the 22 per cent of the territory that remains
to the Palestinians is deeply offensive to them, and understandably so.
Nonetheless, the Palestinians agreed at the Camp David summit to adjustments to
the pre-1967 border that would allow large numbers of West Bank settlers – about
70 per cent – to remain within the Jewish state, provided they received
comparable territory on Israel’s side of the border. Barak rejected this. To be
sure, in the past the Palestinian demand of a right of return was a serious
obstacle to a peace agreement. But the Arab League’s peace initiative of 2002
leaves no doubt that Arab countries will accept a nominal and symbolic return of
refugees into Israel in numbers approved by Israel, with the overwhelming
majority repatriated in the new Palestinian state, their countries of residence,
or in other countries prepared to receive them.
It is the failure of the international community to reject (other than in empty
rhetoric) Israel’s notion that the occupation and the creation of ‘facts on the
ground’ can go on indefinitely, so long as there is no agreement that is
acceptable to Israel, that has defeated all previous peace initiatives and the
efforts of all peace envoys. Future efforts will meet the same fate if this
fundamental issue is not addressed.
What is required for a breakthrough is the adoption by the Security Council of a
resolution affirming the following: 1. Changes to the pre-1967 situation can be
made only by agreement between the parties. Unilateral measures will not receive
international recognition. 2. The default setting of Resolution 242, reiterated
by Resolution 338, the 1973 ceasefire resolution, is a return by Israel’s
occupying forces to the pre-1967 border. 3. If the parties do not reach
agreement within 12 months (the implementation of agreements will obviously take
longer), the default setting will be invoked by the Security Council. The
Security Council will then adopt its own terms for an end to the conflict, and
will arrange for an international force to enter the occupied territories to
help establish the rule of law, assist Palestinians in building their
institutions, assure Israel’s security by preventing cross-border violence, and
monitor and oversee the implementation of terms for an end to the conflict.
If the US and its allies were to take a stand forceful enough to persuade Israel
that it will not be allowed to make changes to the pre-1967 situation except by
agreement with the Palestinians in permanent status negotiations, there would be
no need for complicated peace formulas or celebrity mediators to get a peace
process underway. The only thing that an envoy such as Blair can do to put the
peace process back on track is to speak the truth about the real impediment to
peace. This would also be a historic contribution to the Jewish state, since
Israel’s only hope of real long-term security is to have a successful
Palestinian state as its neighbour.
Henry Siegman is director of the US/Middle East Project and a research professor
at the Sir Joseph Hotung Middle East Programme at SOAS. He was a senior fellow
on the Council on Foreign Relations from 1994 to 2006.
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