MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The decisive Ehud Barak (One Israel) victory over the hard line Likud-led coalition of Binyamin Netanyahu presents a complex set of challenges and promises within and outside Israel, as well as to the peace process and the future of peace as a whole.

Clearly, the Israeli public had delivered a resounding no-confidence vote in the Netanyahu style of government with all its components: extremism and ideology, the politics of fear, racism, “security” through coercion and intimidation, power politics, militarization, divisiveness, economic regression, and the overall derailment of the peace process. As such, it is a vote of no confidence in the crisis of confidence and the revival of hostility and distrust in the domestic as well as in the regional and global arena.

Such a legacy is indeed a difficult one to undo, let alone to embark on a qualitatively different phase in history capable of charting new maps for the future. Having brought the whole region to the edge of the abyss, Netanyahu has left Barak with the challenge of undertaking a rescue mission that requires daring, foresight, and genuine leadership.

The real question remains in whether Barak is capable of grasping this moment in history, of recognizing its imperatives, and hence of taking the decisions and making the moves required to snatch Israeli and regional realities from the brink of dissolution and conflict.

This is neither the time nor place to address Barak’s domestic challenges including the economic slump with its rising unemployment and receding investment, or the ethnic mosaic of special interests, or the electoral system, or the religious-secular divide.

From a Palestinian perspective, Barak faces multiple challenges and tests pertaining to the peace process and future Palestinian-Israeli as well as Arab-Israeli relations.

It is no secret that the window of opportunity and the scope for quick and decisive action are limited, and that the momentum of victory carries with it only a finite potential for change. It is thus imperative that the proper signals are sent at an early stage and that the indicators for the direction of future relations are in place from the beginning.

It is advisable for Palestinians at this stage not to indulge in the dual extremes of euphoria on the one hand or dark cynicism on the other. Barak is not the savior, friend, ally, or the great white hope for peace. He is not going to deliver Palestinian rights on a silver platter, nor is he going to wave a magic wand and make the compound crises of the peace process disappear. Excessive and unrealistic optimism is the refuge of the desperate or the ignorant.

Nor is Barak a new and improved version of Netanyahu, despite his dire pronouncements on crucial permanent status issues including Jerusalem, settlements, boundaries, and Palestinian refugees. The two-sides-of-the-same-coin assessment is just as simplistic and unrealistic as the sanguine salvation stance.

Now is the time on the Palestinian side for sober analysis, systematic strategies, and confident engagement to exert a constructive influence on the course of future developments. This, of course, presupposes clarity of vision and steadfast adherence to Palestinian rights and objectives as well as to the requirements of a just peace that can lay claim to any kind of permanence and legitimacy.

As the whole world indulges in a collective sigh of relief (as it did in the aftermath of the 1992 elections), it doesn’t mean that the Palestinians should do so as well.

On the contrary. For once again we are faced with the global predisposition to look kindly on the winner of the Israeli elections, the alternative (or predecessor) being so much worse. Once again, the Palestinians are going to be subjected to the pressures of those who had undergone the agony of maintaining the minimal semblance of a peace process while wrestling with the extremism of a Likud-led government in Israel.

Such peace “saviors” are going to see in Barak and his future government the “best hope for peace,” and as such are going to make the Palestinians pay the price for his victory (which they perceive as their own). After all, think of the alternative!

Add to this the fact that the media would also be predisposed to look kindly on the new Israeli government, having gained a respite from the rhetoric and manipulations of a glib, though slippery, ideologically hard line old one. American image-makers (claiming Clintonic and Blairish success) will not be hard pressed to find the appropriate sound byte or attractive side of the profile.

At the same time, the Palestinian image and profile are becoming rather tarnished with the exposure of internal transgressions and violations as well as the absence of the necessary PR polish.

Thus it has become even more pressing for the Palestinian leadership to act simultaneously on regaining its power base and its source of legitimacy by restoring the people’s confidence and support. This can happen only if it carries out the necessary reform based on genuine accountability and commitment to democracy, and if it steers a steady course of self-confident leadership to empower the people by protecting their rights and leading them towards a just peace and not a temporary truce.

Its discourse must be candid and courageous in addressing its constituency, the Israeli leadership and public, and the world at large. While capitalizing on the sympathy it acquired during the Netanyahu ordeal and its willingness to “play ball” with the imperatives of global diplomacy (even to the point of self-negation and internal distortion), the Palestinian leadership must not allow itself to be taken for granted or to be stifled by the laurels heaped upon the Barak victory.

New democratic elections, a new and credible government, qualified negotiating teams, and a confident negotiations strategy are among the most pressing requirements.

Barak, on the other hand, is also being closely observed to see whether a political butterfly or a moth will emerge from the cocoon of his military past.

Another crucial question is whether he will emphasize and celebrate the difference from the previous government or whether he will blur it in favor of a diluted continuation of its destructive policies. Both the tests and indicators are numerous.

These include the nature of the government he is in the process of forming. Is his “broad-based” approach a foundation for a bold and firm peace strategy, or is it the feeble lowest-common-denominator consensus for an even feebler or spurious peace? Should he include the Likud, will he sacrifice peace for the sake of appeasement? And how will he deal with the “peace camp” and the Arab parties in forming his coalition?

His most immediate test in damage control, or even in the elimination of the volatility bequeathed by Netanyahu, would be in his settlement policy. Will he put an immediate and decisive end to all settlement activities and begin defusing the bomb of land confiscation and demographic transformation that threatens to explode at any moment?

As for Jerusalem, Barak can restore some stability and confidence by adhering to Peres’s letter to Holst on Jerusalem institutions, while signaling a complete break with the previous government’s aggressive and abrasive assault on the city, which had threatened to provoke dangerous confrontations.

Another crucial behavioral and moral test will be in his handling of the collective punitive measures imposed on the Palestinian land and people. The policy of siege and closure must cease, allowing the Palestinians their right to freedom of movement and unhampered access to Jerusalem and all other areas of Palestine. All measures that have induced and enhanced economic deprivation and subjugation must be abandoned in favor of a vigorous plan for reconstruction and development in Palestine. Human pain and suffering as instruments of political power and blackmail in the form of house demolitions and the continuing agony of Palestinian political prisoners must also cease.

The politics and language of inclusion and parity needto be overtly articulated as the effective antidote to the previous government’s racist rhetoric and policies of occupation and threat.

In the context of the peace process, an immediate and unequivocal implementation of all signed agreements will begin the process of rectification and will infuse the process with both the momentum and integrity required to pursue the objective of peace. Any procrastination, evasion, or prevarication will only contribute to the deterioration and potential breakdown of the process as well as of confidence.

As for permanent status issues, a clear commitment to the agreed agenda is essential as opposed to the ideological declarations that are alarmingly reminiscent of Likud absolutism.

It is also important for Barak to declare his willingness to negotiate these issues on the basis of international legality and the agreed terms of reference. This should be done in the context of a revitalized and active process that recognizes the rights of both parties and that openly seeks to find equitable solutions. All prejudicial and preemptive measures must stop, and an atmosphere conducive to confidence and peace must be restored.

The presentation and recognition of Palestinian statehood as a component and requisite for peace, stability, security, and prosperity must replace Netanyahu’s misplaced priorities and distorted concept of peace and Palestinian rights.

Finally, the requirements of reaching a comprehensive peace necessitate the reinvigoration of the Syrian and Lebanese tracks simultaneously with the Palestinian track. Any attempt at playing off one against the other or exacting concessions from one at the expense of the other will only backfire. Enhancement and integration are the operative terms for achieving a comprehensive, lasting, and legitimate peace.

Needless to say, the challenges are enormous and so is the political and moral will required to face them. No test of history has ever been easy. But the choice here is clear. The collision course steered by Netanyahu is still open. So is the alternative and authentic path for reconciliation and peace.

Netanyahu’s negative lesson has demonstrated how peace can become hostage to extremism and violence. The tragic lesson of the late Yitzhak Rabin has shown how violence can backfire and can fill any time slot created by prolongation and delay.

While the Palestinian people on the whole are willing to suspend judgment and to give Barak and the new Israeli government the benefit of the doubt and the chance to chart a new course, time remains of the essence. Reality cannot be put on hold. Nor can the peace process afford further unraveling. It is not the future that holds the answers, but rather it is genuine leadership that holds the key to a better future. The options are still open.

 
 
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