A PR stunt which killed thousands and launched a propaganda war that has, so far, lasted a decade. Since 9/11, how far has the US and al-Qaeda been prepared to go to win ‘hearts and minds’ with elaborate media strategies?
Last-minute jitters should not hold up much-needed change.
THE proposed Palestinian statehood bid at the United Nations next month has caused an unpleasant tremor in Israel’s corridors of power.
For decades the mantra of a Palestinian state side by side with the state of Israel has been the only solution given any credence. But now Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is going all out to prevent it, while a long-time supporter in Australia is deciding between a ”no” vote in the UN or abstaining.
Israel argues that the move is unilateral and violates the provisions of the Oslo peace accords between Israelis and Palestinians. There are, however, some 122 nations that have indicated they will vote ”yes” for a Palestinian state, which hardly makes the bid unilateral.
Advertisement: Story continues below
As for violating Oslo – a process that was meant to last for five years but then had negotiations dragging on for 20 – Israel repeatedly breached the provisions with its illegal settlements.
Both the UN and the International Court of Justice have declared the settlement constructions impermissible unilateral acts in clear violation of international law. Nevertheless, Israel has succeeded in transferring more than half a million Jewish settlers into the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank and East Jerusalem.
The statehood bid has jolted Israel out of its long-held dream. Hence the panic-stricken arguments against it.
A comparison with Israel’s own unilateral move in declaring statehood after the UN’s intention to partition historic Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state cannot be avoided. It underscores that Palestine was never a land without a people and that Israel’s existence was imposed on Palestinians, robbing them of their homes and land and destroying their proud and millenniums-old society.
Israel claims a third intifada will be triggered by the statehood bid. But only last month a senior Israeli army commander, Major-General Avi Mizrahi, warned that it was ”Jewish terror” against the Palestinians that would bring on a mass Palestinian uprising.
As attacks on Gaza and in the West Bank mount, a third intifada would be an understandable reaction to the brutal denial of Palestinian rights, not the statehood bid.
As for statehood endangering the economic co-operation between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, that has to be a good thing. The co-operation has done nothing to help the average Palestinian farmer, manufacturer or retailer, profiting rather the elites. As long as the Palestinians are held to the dictates of the Israeli military occupation, Israeli businesses will continue to take advantage of an already weak Palestinian economy held hostage to restrictions of movement, water rations, land confiscations and agricultural violations.
Prime Minister Netanyahu’s mendacious offer of unconditional talks mocks what has been happening on the ground for the past 20 years of fruitless peace talks. It is a double somersault after all his refusals to negotiate. And even as he speaks, the illegal settlement project is proceeding.
Back in 1977, Nahum Goldmann, president of the World Jewish Congress, said: ”Israel has never presented the Arabs with a single peace plan.” Since then, the recently revealed ”Palestine Papers” showed the distance Palestinians were prepared to go to reach a solution. Israel even rejected the Arab peace initiative, which offered Israel fully normalised relations with the Arab world in exchange for a negotiated two-state solution on the 1967 borders.
In contrast, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has repeatedly said his first option is to negotiate – provided Israel complies with international law.
The arguments for and against statehood are many. There is a sense of foreboding in many Palestinians and supporters who see the statehood bid as only further entrenching Israel’s occupation, with no prospect of an intransigent Israel abiding by international law.
Negotiations are, in fact, a ruse to keep the old discredited paradigm of a two-state solution going for as long as it takes Netanyahu to achieve his goal of a Greater Israel.
More than the statehood bid, what threatens the Greater Israel dream is the fast-growing global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. Modelled on the movement that helped bring down apartheid South Africa, BDS is adding to the tremors being felt in the power structures that have enabled Israel to wreak such havoc at home and in the region.
For peace and a just solution, it is time to hold Israel to account.
Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, Ron Prosor, sent a classified cable to the Foreign Ministry last week, stating that Israel stands no chance of rallying a substantial number of states to oppose a resolution at the UN General Assembly recognizing a Palestinian state in September.
Israel Foreign Ministry sources estimate that 130-140 states will vote in favor of the Palestinians
A major question mark remains over the position of the 27 member states of the European Union.
A senior source at the Foreign Israel Ministry, which is busy trying to foil the Palestinian move at the UN, said that so far only five western countries have promised Israel they would vote against recognition of a Palestinian state – the U.S., Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic.
“Most western countries will not be willing to be in the hall and vote against a Palestinian state,” the senior Foreign Ministry source said.
For more details, click here
“Our decision to go to the Security Council does not aim to isolate Israel, nor to confront the United States, rather to achieve our dream of recognition of our sovereign Palestinian state on the territories occupied since 1967, which is only 22 per cent of the area of historic Palestine,” Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said.
“The government of Israel and the U.S. offered us absolutely nothing that would allow us to resume negotiations,” he said. “All they offered was more settlements and Judization, day after day. So when we felt that the road of reasonable, acceptable and legitimate negotiations is close, we said we are going to the UN.”
For more details, click here
By Fareed Zakaria, Published: May 25
From www.washingtonpost.com/opinions
Conventional wisdom is fast congealing in Washington that President Obama was wrong to demarcate a shift in American policy toward Israel last week. In fact, it was Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu who broke with the past — in one of a series of diversions and obstacles Netanyahu has come up with anytime he is pressed. He wins in the short run, but ultimately, he is turning himself into a version of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, “Mr. Nyet,” a man who will be bypassed by history.
Here is what Netanyahu’s immediate predecessor, Ehud Olmert, said in a widely reported speech to the Israeli Knesset in 2008: “We must give up Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem and return to the core of the territory that is the State of Israel prior to 1967, with minor corrections dictated by the reality created since then.” Olmert, a man with a reputation as a hard-liner, said that meant Israel would keep about 6 percent of the West Bank — the major settlements — and give up land elsewhere. This was also the position of Ehud Barak, Israel’s prime minister during the late 1990s.
The Bush administration did not have a different position, as statements from the president and Condoleezza Rice make clear. Here is George W. Bush in 2008: “I believe that any peace agreement between them will require mutually agreed adjustments to the armistice lines of 1949 to reflect current realities and to ensure that the Palestinian state is viable and contiguous.” (The 1949 armistice lines is another way of saying the 1967 borders.)
Or consider this statement from last November: “[T]he United States believes that through good-faith negotiations, the parties can mutually agree on an outcome which ends the conflict and reconciles the Palestinian goal of an independent and viable state, based on the 1967 lines, with agreed swaps, and the Israeli goal of a Jewish state with secure and recognized borders that reflect subsequent developments and meet Israeli security requirements.” That’s not Obama, Bush or Rice, but a statement jointly issued by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Netanyahu on Nov. 11, 2010.
Today, Netanyahu says that any discussion of the 1967 borders is treason and that new borders must reflect “dramatic changes” since then. So in three years, an Israeli prime minister’s position has gone from “minor corrections” to “dramatic changes.” Netanyahu’s quarrel, it appears, is with himself. Yet we are to think it is Obama who has shifted policy?
Why did Netanyahu turn what was at best a minor difference into a major confrontation? Does it help Israel’s security or otherwise strengthen it to stoke tensions with its strongest ally and largest benefactor? Does such behavior further the resolution of Israel’s problems? No, but it helps Netanyahu stir support at home and maintain his fragile coalition. And while Bibi might sound like Churchill, he acts like a local ward boss, far more interested in holding onto his post than using it to secure Israel’s future.
The newsworthy, and real, shift in U.S. policy was Obama publicly condemning the Palestinian strategy to seek recognition as a state from the U.N. General Assembly in September. He also questioned the accord between Fatah and Hamas. Obama endorsed the idea of a demilitarized Palestinian state, a demand Israel has made in recent years. Instead of thanking Obama for this, Netanyahu created a public confrontation to garner applause at home.
Netanyahu’s references to the “indefensible” borders of 1967 reveal him to be mired in a world that has gone away. The chief threat to Israel today is not from a Palestinian army. Israel has the region’s strongest economy and military, complete with an arsenal of nuclear weapons. The chief threats to Israel are from new technologies — rockets, biological weapons — and demography. Its physical existence is less in doubt than its democratic existence as it continues to rule millions of Palestinians in serf-like conditions — entitled to neither a vote nor a country.
The path to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been clear for 20 years. Israel would cede most of the land it conquered in the 1967 war to a Palestinian state, keeping the major settlement blocks. In return, it would get a series of measures designed to protect its security. That’s why the process is called land for peace. The problem is that Netanyahu has never believed in land for peace. His strategy has been to put up obstacles, create confusion and wait it out. But one day there will be peace, along the lines that people have talked about for 20 years. And Netanyahu will be remembered only as a person before the person who made peace, a comma in history.
In 2009, Egyptian entrepreneur Ahmed Abu Haiba launched the world’s first-ever Islamic music channel. Based in Cairo, 4Shbab branded itself as “Islam’s Own MTV”. In its first few months on air, the channel shocked thousands of viewers and enthralled thousands more.
Pop goes Islam can be seen from Wednesday, April 13, at the following times GMT: Wednesday: 2000; Thursday: 1200; Friday: 0100; Saturday: 0600; Sunday: 2000; Monday: 1200; Tuesday: 0100; Wednesday: 0600