MIFTAH
Wednesday, 24 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

April seems to be an intensive month in peace process diplomacy.

Following a meeting between US President Clinton with Israeli PM Barak, Washington witnessed another summit between Palestinian President Arafat and the American President.

Within the region, Jordanian King Abdallah II made a trip to the Israeli port of Eilat for a quick meeting with Barak, followed a few days later by a visit to the Palestinian city of Ramallah for a meeting with Arafat.

In the meantime, Syrian Foreign Minister Farouq Share’ took off to Paris for a meeting with French Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine, and to present French President Chirac with a message from Syrian President Hafez Assad.

President Arafat also flew to Paris for a meeting with Chirac, followed by a visit to Lisbon to meet with the Portugese presidency of the EU, to be followed by a visit to London for a meeting with British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

Arafat’s major trips are usually preceded and followed by a stop in Cairo for consultations with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and his team, Amr Moussa and Osama el-Baz.

Not to be outdone, UN Secretary General dispatched his envoy Terrye Larsen for a rapid tour of the region, while European Union Representative Miguel Angel Moratinos pursued his usual shuttle diplomacy.

Egyptian, Lebanese and Syrian leaders as well have been involved in double and multiple diplomacy concerning the Syrian track, following the failed Geneva meeting between Clinton and Assad.

Foreign diplomats, envoys, and dignitaries have been making double calls on the Palestinian and Israeli leaderships to assess (and assist in) motion on all tracks.

The agenda for this hectic pace of diplomacy includes the following:

On the Palestinian track, the subject of outstanding interim phase issues (including third-phase redeployment, release of prisoners, economic issues, the northern safe passage, etc) has taken a back seat in favor of final status issues.

It is worth noting, however, that Barak, as a gesture of “good will,” is considering giving the Palestinians an “advance” on the third phase of redeployment in the form of the Jerusalem suburb of Abu Dis—a village which the Israelis hope to pass off as a substitute for the real Jerusalem.

It is also ironic that Barak, whose hands are dripping with Palestinian blood and whose military history is loaded with assassinations and murder, has refused the release of Palestinian prisoners who (in the course of resistance to the Israeli occupation) have been sentenced for killing Israelis.

The major negotiations are the upcoming final status talks to be resumed in Eilat on April 30.

Having formulated an unworkable and unacceptable hard-line stance on Jerusalem and the refugee issue, Barak is trying to circumvent these central issues by proposing further postponement.

Any deferment would give Israel a free hand to create prejudicial facts and prejudge the issues as it had done throughout the interim phase.

Barak also hopes to “sell” the Israeli acceptance of the idea of the Palestinian state in return for the annexation of Palestinian West Bank land and extending Israeli extraterritoriality in the form of settlements, while maintaining illegal Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem.

Such maneuvers are certain to destroy any chances of reaching an agreement—whether framework or final.

On the Lebanese track, Barak is hoping to gain international acceptance of and participation in the unilateral Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon as scheduled by July 2000.

The UN’s positive response to the implementation of resolutions 425 and 426 (however belatedly) requires an international rather than a multinational force, as well as a full withdrawal to the internationally recognized boundaries of Lebanon (Israel having none).

If Israel hopes by such a withdrawal to drive a wedge between the Lebanese and the Syrian tracks, it should be pointed out that political, economic, and security relations between those countries are much more complex and interconnected than to be so easily severed.

Nor would such a unilateral withdrawal effectively resolve all outstanding issues, particularly questions of prisoners, water, compensation, and Lebanese villages.

Nor would this withdrawal deprive Syria of the Lebanese negotiating “card,” as Barak supposes, particularly in relation to Lebanese resistance and Hizballah.

The Syrian agenda is firmly rooted in Syrian priorities and interests, and for the Syrian track to witness a breakthrough requires an Israeli commitment to full withdrawal from all occupied Syrian territory to the June 4, 1967 boundaries, including the shores of Lake Tiberias.

Normalization with any Arab country, particularly the neighboring states, is a product of genuine and just peace agreements embedded in international law. It is neither a prerequisite for peace nor an exercise of the imagination to superimpose a hypothetical future on an unstable and turbulent present.

On all Arab tracks, the question of Palestinian refugees remains of paramount importance as a key to internal and regional stability.

The Jerusalem issue is also central to any resolution that hopes to gain Arab adherence, legitimacy, and permanence.

Ultimately, all paths to peace lead to the Palestinian track and the core issues on the agenda of final status talks.

The question remains if Israel has the political will required to take the necessary decisions in compliance with international law.

This is the true test of peace—the transformation of the mentality of occupier (with all its distortions and arrogance of power) into that of a responsible and realistic peace partner.

No amount of diplomatic activity or involvement can produce concrete or substantive results unless it brings about such a transformation and hence compliance.

 
 
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