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Fussing over a red herring
Ghada Karmi
Published in
Al-Ahram Weekly
on 22 - 02 - 2001
By Ghada Karmi*
WAR CRIMES: Ariel Sharon is not known as the bulldozer for nothing. His reputation for ruthlessness was built on such feats as destroying Palestinian homes and lives
Blaming the Palestinians for their problems has been a weapon in the
Israeli
arsenal ever since the beginning of the conflict. To cite but a few examples: there is no Palestinian state today because the Arabs rejected UN Resolution 181 of 1947, which offered them a state of their own; the Palestinians lost their homes in 1948 because they obeyed their leaders' orders and ran away; it was their terrorist attacks in 1996 which ousted the peace-loving Shimon Peres and brought the right-wing Netanyahu to the
Israeli
prime ministership; and so on. Most recently, Palestinians are being held responsible for
Israel
's problems too. The opinion is prevalent that Ariel Sharon's election as
Israel
's new prime minister is the result of Palestinian rejection of Ehud Barak's "generous concessions" during the Camp David negotiations.
Writing in the Guardian on 8 February,
Israeli
novelist Amos Oz delivered himself of this view in bitter and accusatory tones. He laid the blame squarely on the shoulders of Arafat, who had inexplicably turned his back on the
Israeli
leader's brave initiative, thus confirming once again Abba Eban's famous judgement that "the Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity." Nowhere in Oz's article was there the faintest awareness of what had actually happened during the Camp David negotiations, or of the failure of seven years of "peace-making" before that, which had tightened
Israel
's control over all aspects of Palestinian life, or of the brutal reality of an
Israeli
military occupation with no end in sight. This peculiar
Israeli
denial is in line with the other vicious calumny, that the Palestinians deliberately put their children in the line of fire just to give the
Israeli
army a bad name.
This campaign of disinformation has to be exposed for what it is: a deliberate attempt to evade
Israel
's own responsibility for the breakdown of the peace process and the subsequent killing of nearly 400 Palestinians, many of them children. The claim is that
Israel
offered 95 per cent of the West Bank during the Camp David negotiations and sovereignty over East
Jerusalem
and the Haram Al-Sharif. If that had been true then we might perhaps have wondered at the strength of Palestinian reaction, but it is not. The problem is that no one, including Amos Oz, knows for sure what
Israel
did offer. But this did not stop the plethora of leaks, American-inspired reports and second-hand speculation from painting a rosy picture.
At the beginning of January, the Palestinian negotiating team explained why it could not accept the American-mediated
Israeli
proposals, summarising them as vague, undefined and concerned mainly with general principles.
Israel
produced no maps to show its exact territorial plans for the West Bank or
Jerusalem
. No one was clear on what basis the "95 per cent" of the West Bank had been calculated, since the original borders have been gerrymandered and redrawn repeatedly to accommodate Jewish settlements and extend
Israeli
control over East
Jerusalem
. But what did emerge was that
Israel
would keep at least 10 per cent for its existing settlements and another 10 per cent for "security needs," in addition to having an army presence in the
Jordan
Valley. What land in
Israel
would be swapped to compensate the Palestinians for this was not specified. There were suggestions that this might be toxic waste land. The West Bank would not be contiguous but divided into three cantons separated by Jewish-only roads. The allocation of water and other resources did not even feature in the talks.
The formulations on East
Jerusalem
were equally unsatisfactory. Both sides would have control of their own areas. The Haram Al-Sharif would be under Palestinian sovereignty, but not the Western Wall and its adjoining parts.
Israel
could excavate "behind the Wall," that is, under the Haram, but the Palestinians could not.
Israel
's sovereignty would also extend to geographically undefined "religious sites." There is nothing here to support the claim, now constantly reiterated by
Israelis
and their sympathisers, that Barak ceded sovereignty over "the Temple Mount." All
Israeli
withdrawals, moreover, would be phased over three years, with the
Israeli
army presence on the
Jordan
Valley maintained for a further three years after that.
What these American-
Israeli
proposals really amount to is this: a non-contiguous territory on an undefined percentage of the West Bank; a retention of the majority of Jewish settlements; some sharing of control over East
Jerusalem
and the Haram Al-Sharif. But above all, it means a legitimisation of the acquisition of territory by force, contrary to UN Resolution 242, which the US affects to respect. The resulting truncated, divided entity offered to the Palestinians is a far cry from the effusive claim of
Israelis
that Barak made generous concessions which the Palestinians casually threw away. It seems not to strike Western commentators as ludicrous that returning something of what you stole to its rightful owners should be seen as a concession. Boasting that Barak had offered more than any other
Israeli
leader before him may be true but is even more ludicrous. It is like stealing �1,000 from someone to whom you offer �100 back; he rejects it and so your son increases the offer to �150, saying it is better than that of his father; and when the man rejects this too, your son gets angry at his ingratitude.
In fact, the concessions were all on the other side: in return for this dubious offer, the Palestinians were required to end forever their claims against
Israel
, including the right of return, affirmed by every law and held sacred for decades. It was this cynical
Israeli
disregard for the legitimate Palestinian demands of an end to occupation and a viable independent state that led to the Intifada.
And it is occupation that is the crux of the problem. The fuss over Ariel Sharon's election is a red herring -- a diversion from dealing with the immediate basis of the conflict, which is that an army of occupation continues to subjugate a whole population, plunder its resources and deny it a normal, independent life. International law is clear on the issue:
Israel
must vacate the territories acquired in 1967, including East
Jerusalem
; all its settlements are illegal, as are its numerous acts of human rights abuses against the Palestinians. Like all occupied peoples, the Palestinians have a right to resist the occupation by all means at their disposal. This essential fact is in danger of being bypassed in the froth over the
Israeli
elections and
Israeli
domestic politics. Is Sharon worse than Barak? What of the man's character, his past and future? Will he relinquish Jewish settlements as Begin did? Can he form a coalition government and how long will he be in office?
The Arabs must not be sucked into this soap opera. They must resist the temptation to play the
Israeli
game and refocus attention on the basic problem: that Palestinians are an occupied people resisting an illegal occupation that is a historical anachronism in the 21st century. It is an enterprise which should elicit the sympathy and support of the whole world.
* The writer is chair of the Palestine Community Association in the UK.
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