MIFTAH
Tuesday, 2 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Those who hoped that the outcome of the recent Israeli general elections would create better conditions for resuming the long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian talks must feel deeply let down. Despite the fact that last week’s results were hardly different from most observers’ expectations, many Palestinian Authority officials, in particular, opted to explore that option.

President Mahmoud Abbas had threatened to dissolve the authority and hand its keys over to Netanyahu if after the elections the Israeli premier continued to shun the peace negotiations.

Clearly, and as anticipated, the Israeli electorate has over the years been steadily moving to the right, but we should make no mistake attributing the total failure of the so-called peace process to just that. The reality is that there has always been consensus in Israel on one course of action with respect to the Zionist colonisation of all Palestine, a reality many tend to overlook. Both the left and the right in Israel agree on what does not leave the minimum conditions for making any peace negotiations between the two sides meaningful.

The Israeli-Palestinian political equation has been constantly changed in Israel’s favour. Every time the Palestinian Authority agreed to give up more of its legitimate national rights to make room for some compromise to rescue the negotiations, Israel rushed to fill the space by further expanding its territorial and political ambitions. The steady erosion of rights and positions on the Palestinian side was fully matched by the equal escalation of Israel’s demands. That is the invisible parallel process that has been taking place on the ground under the cover of the fake negotiations conducted within the so-called peace process.

For Israel, the two processes should run together, as they were when negotiations were going on. Only when Israel was asked to stop settlement construction, in other words, to stop the process of colonising most or all of Palestinian lands, did Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu abandon the other peace process, deciding to proceed on his own.

All the Palestinian Authority is asking now, with some support from the international community, is that Israel agree to a limited settlement construction freeze, so that negotiations can be resumed. Although that does not sound too much to ask, Netanyahu has been totally opposed to constant pressures to meet this requirement from prominent world powers, particularly the US, with whom Israel’s relations have been strained as a result.

Israel started colonising the Arab lands its armies invaded and occupied in June 1967 on three fronts: Egypt, Syria and Palestine (the West Bank, including Jerusalem and Gaza), right after that war was over. Except for Egypt, from where Israel had to withdraw its armies and settlers as a result of the Camp David Peace Treaty in 1978, and for Gaza, where then Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon decided to end Israel’s occupation and colonisation in 2005, the settlement programme on Syrian and Palestinian lands remains operating.

Admittedly, the Arab position, with respect to the settlements, was hardly clear cut or consistent. There were protests and condemnations, but without teeth. There were appeals to the United Nations and the UN passed numerous resolutions opposing the settlements, but none was ever implemented. Israel faced no consequences, nor was it ever subjected to any form of sanction as a result of its continued aggression and violations of international law.

One may say many things against president Anwar Sadat’s peace initiative that shocked the Arab world in 1977. One basic element of his approach, though, was drastic. He made it very clear that not one grain of sand of the Egyptian land would be left un-liberated if there were to be agreement. Sadat insisted on recovering all occupied Egyptian land, as well as removing all settlements, and that was the result of his unwavering position. The Egyptian president was subjected to exhausting pressures otherwise, but remained firm. Taba was indeed delayed, but Egypt fought a 10-year successful legal battle to regain its occupied territory to the last “grain of sand”.

The other Israeli withdrawal example, from Gaza, was different. Israel decided to unilaterally evacuate its soldiers and settlers from the strip because that occupation turned at some point costly, a huge security burden and untenable.

The lesson here is that the only way to combat illegal Israeli colonisation of occupied Arab land is to confront Israel with clear and consistent positions with implied consequences; and/or to make the occupation burdensome.

Since the Madrid peace conference, 22 years ago, this was hardly the Palestinian or the Arab position. The Arabs have failed, over the years, to firmly demand that all Israeli settlements be removed as a prerequisite for any subsequent peace agreement. That was not only left murky and vague, but, worse, it made major concessions to Israeli expansionism by endorsing the principle of border alterations and land swap, often referred to by PA President Abbas, which is meant to allow Israel to annex large settlement blocs built on the West Bank and around Jerusalem.

Neither did the Oslo Accords of 1993 demand the removal of the Israeli settlements as a basic condition for ending the conflict, or even for negotiating a settlement. Oslo left that for the final status phase, which was to follow after five years, during which the settlement construction doubled.

The repeated demand that Israel only stop building simply addresses, and verbally, additional aggression on Arab land, without any mention of what has been colonised already: more than 40 per cent of the West Bank, with Jerusalem almost encircled by Jewish settlements.

Because Israel is fully aware of the real Arab/Palestinian position on this issue, not the usual official clichés, it does not take protests seriously, and one must admit, with much pain, that neither the Arab nor the Palestinian position on the total removal of all settlements has ever been serious or adequately stated.

The current Israeli election results may have disappointed some peace enthusiasts, but that is not where they should place their blame. They should revise their positions instead.

Israel has enough proof by now that whatever facts it created and continues to create on the ground on Palestinian land are there to stay. They have American, Arab, Palestinian and other “international community” assurances that future peace agreements will not require major territorial concessions. It is in Israel’s interest, therefore, to build as much as possible before restarting any negotiations. That is why Israel is so opposed to agreeing to a building freeze, although Netanyahu may agree to simultaneously negotiate and build settlements.

The goal should not be strictly limited to restarting negotiations so that the promoters of the peace process industry be spared the embarrassment of inaction. The terms of reference should be first revised and redefined. Those who need to do that most are the Palestinians and the Arabs. They should stop asking for a settlement freeze. What should be put on the negotiating table is the entire settlement enterprise as an aggression and serious violation of international law.

Waiting for the results of Israeli, or American, elections in the hope that they may produce miracles is like hanging our hopes on “ropes of air” as we say in Arabic. Our cause deserves better.

 
 
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