MIFTAH
Thursday, 25 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Ehud Barak’s coalition is a strange creature indeed.

Elected primarily in protest (and disgust) at Netanyahu’s domestic policies and hard line (and high handed) manipulation of the peace process, Barak was expected to rise up to the challenge, mandate, and peace platform that the Israeli public had sought.

Instead of stressing the difference, Barak immediately began to emulate his ill-fated predecessor in many aspects, most notably in his handling of the peace process and his policies and attitude towards the Palestinians.

Granted that the packaging may be more acceptable to the West, specially those “democratic” or “socialist” governments that found in Barak their natural ally and the savior of peace—or at least a relief from the crude tactics of Netanyahu.

The substance, however, has not been that different.

Barak proceeded to set up a coalition government with irreconcilable, built in contradictions on the misguided notion that he can be the leader of “all Israel,” (with the exception of the Palestinian Israelis, of course).

By attempting to be all things to all people, he has adopted a policy of pandering, neutralization, lowest common denominator, and ultimately of ineffectual leadership and self-negation.

The creature he has constructed has several legs pulling in different directions. At best, it will remain immobile; at worst it will disintegrate.

However, while the head is still trying to decide which pull is the strongest at the moment, the peace process is itself beginning to show signs of disintegration and collapse.

First, the appointed minister of housing and construction, Yitzhak Levy, is a Mifdal extremist whose ideological absolutism has made him an instrument of settler designs and expansion, in direct contravention of any peace platform, legality, or even pragmatic requirements.

Thus while Barak pointedly looks the other way (or grants silent approval), Levy has indulged in an unprecedented settlement campaign that left Barak boasting to the settlers that he had done more for them than any Likud leader, including Netanyahu, and without any furor or negative repercussions.

The five Mifdal Knesset votes seem to count more than any partnership for peace with the Palestinians.

With this in hand, Barak also proceeds to neutralize the “peace camp” in Israel. Shas, it seems, with its religious domestic agenda, must be bought off at the expense of Meretz.

Of course Barak can take the political vote of One Israel (26 members), the Center Party (6 MK’s), and Meretz (10 MK’s) for granted. As a “peace” leader, he can then proceed to sell them short in exchange for pay-offs to Shas (17 MK’s) and the Mifdal (5).

Secular Meretz seems to be dispensable in the domestic agenda. Shinui (6) is even more dispensable, having remained outside the coalition from the beginning.

Likud’s racist attitude toward the Palestinian Israelis (the “Israeli Arabs”) has also extended to the Ashkenazi Labor party. Barak seems to be still suffering from the “non-Jewish votes don’t count” syndrome.

The 9 Palestinian MK’s belonging to Arab parties are totally excluded from the executive structure, not counting the 3 members of Labor and Meretz.

The Russian votes of Yisrael Ba’aliya (4) of course count—never mind their anti-peace stance so long as their socio-economic and ethnic agenda is met.

With this mosaic of illogic, Barak is involved in a mad scramble to appease the hardliners and to meet their demands (economic, religious, social) at the expense of his natural constituency (that he allows himself to take for granted) and the peace process.

Having given the settlers and other extremists inordinate powers through domestic negotiations and blackmail, he then protests at the difficulty of his task in the peace process.

The US then jumps to do his bidding, becoming the apologist for and interpreter of Barak’s coalition constraints in the democracy that is Israel.

Both Syrian President Hafez Assad and Palestinian President Arafat were given an earful, by the President of the US no less, on the need to be understanding and to modify their negotiating policies to accommodate Barak’s need to maintain his coalition.

The price to be paid for maintaining the Barak government is in the form of Syrian land and overall Palestinian rights—with the added bonus of violating international law.

No government has that kind of credit. More importantly, Palestinian and Arab public opinion will not be deceived or co-opted, especially on such vital issues as those on the agenda for final status talks.

Symptomatic of Barak’s habit of creating his own monsters is the recent episode of the handover of the three villages in the vicinity of Jerusalem, Abu Dis, Bethany, and Sawahreh.

Already under Palestinian administrative control as Areas “B,” these villages should have been automatically transferred to PNA security control as areas “A” last year in accordance with the agreements.

Having procrastinated and haggled over the third phase of redeployment and all the requisite withdrawals, and having broached the subject timidly and apologetically with the hard line right wing in Israel, Barak succeeded in maneuvering himself into a corner.

If the implementation of a minute part of a stage that is part of a phase in the interim agreements is to be presented each time before the Knesset for approval, then the peace process is automatically open-ended and unsustainable.

It is also hostage to the blackmail of the anti-peace forces in Israel who would demand a price for every step of implementation.

The implementation of signed agreements should be carried out smoothly, automatically, swiftly, and efficiently--the greater the fanfare and protestations, the greater the opposition and the difficulty.

Perhaps by blowing the issue out of all proportion Barak was trying to play up his domestic difficulties as a negotiations maneuver; he succeeded, however, in shooting himself in the foot. The pain may be real, but the sympathy is not readily available.

Given also the volatility and instability of conditions in Palestine (as expressed in this week’s confrontations and tragic loss of life), the time has come for the Israeli government to understand that it does not have an open time frame and that the realities on the Palestinian side of the fence have to be factored into their calculations.

Implementing all outstanding interim issues has become imperative. The plight of Palestinian prisoners and the enormous public support and sympathy that the detainees enjoy must not be ignored. The Barak government has failed this test as abysmally as its predecessor.

The same applies to settlement activities and to collective punitive measures including house demolitions. These have become real tests of the policies and intentions of the Barak government.

Barak cannot continue to plead “weakness” (as in the tenuous fabric of his coalition) as a justification for further delays and abrogation of responsibility.

Perhaps the time has come for him to take sides in his domestic partnerships and to form a “strong” coalition for peace that would do justice to his electorate (rather than to the electorate of the extreme parties).

The Israeli Palestinians and the secular peace camp are just as (if not more) legitimate partners as those who subjugate peace to their narrow agendas of self-interest.

The time has come also for Barak to stop exploiting the “weakness” of the Palestinians.

The power of the weak and the oppressed has always been in their legal, moral, and human dimensions.

In this case the “strength” of the Palestinian people is in their undefeated will and in their indispensable role as the key to a comprehensive peace.

Ironically, if “strong” Israel pleads weakness for its undermining of the peace process and its integrity, then “weak” Palestine claims the strength of will and the power of justice for its non-capitulation.

 
 
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