Intentional hype? 
The only accomplishment
of the roadmap so far has been the release of detainees
-- at best a dubious achievement. Azmi Bishara warns that
the real issues might be forgotten
Inexplicably, the way a
defeatist mindset challenges reality is by denying its
very existence. Either it sees any attempt to deal with
actual circumstances as capitulation -- as an
internalisation of defeat -- or, under the guise of
pragmatism, it retreats in the face of power, and thus
heightens the arrogance of the powerful.
Some Palestinians and
Arabs promote defeatism, acting as though what we have is
a conflict between evenly matched armies and forces, as
though the struggle against occupation were not a just
cause, and as though Israel were already the victor. Some
Palestinians justify the truce by saying "We have
been defeated." Those who say that we have been
"defeated" are just as wrong as those who
declared that we "triumphed" against Sharon in
Beirut in 1982. Those who claim that we were
"defeated" basically agree with Minister Shaul
Mofaz when he claims that the Palestinians accepted the
truce because Israel was victorious owing to its resolve
to make the Palestinians understand that it was better
for them to give in. But one mustn't read much into the
military advantage occupiers have over those living under
occupation.
Defeatists go out of
their way to point out achievements, and, in doing so,
they rewrite the nation's goals. They forget all about
the people and the cause that gives the political quest
any meaning. However, that does not change the simple
facts: our land has been stolen, our people live under
occupation and our cause is liberation. Now, you may want
to turn the discussion to behind the scenes talk and the
US fascination with this or that personality, and the
occasion in which the US president smiled or even
laughed. You may want to focus on how the US reacts
differently to the matter of the wall in the presence of
Palestinian and Israeli guests. But all that only takes
you away from the real issue. The legitimacy of a
political dialogue, undertaken under conditions of
occupation, is lost amid the hype. A party has been
thrown, the band is playing, and the dance floor is full,
but what exactly is the occasion?
How can we call the
release of Palestinian prisoners, in the manner in which
it took place, an accomplishment? For one thing, Israel
is in the habit of rounding up people as bargaining
chips. The world, naturally, has no time to figure out
that many of the detainees were going to be released
shortly in any case, because Israel never managed to
charge them, not to mention the fact that its prisons are
overcrowded. Presumably, we should be grateful that
Israel hopes the release of the prisoners will increase
the popularity of the new Palestinian leadership among
its own people. "We understand how sensitive the
detainees' issue is for them," is the line commonly
voiced by Israeli officials after talks with Palestinian
representatives.
The goal has thus been
redefined. It is to consolidate the standing of the
Palestinian leadership that is entrusted with following
up on the roadmap. In this sense, the release of
detainees is an achievement. And the White House visit is
another achievement. Why? Because these are flickers of
hope signalling the beginning of a process that intimates
the possibility of an upcoming US-Palestinian honeymoon.
Time was when
Palestinian political quarters boasted that Yasser Arafat
was one of the more frequent international visitors to
the White House. It didn't matter what intimate liaisons
the host was busy pursuing in the Oval Office while the
guest delegations were waiting for their audience. The
honeymoon is now over. While it lasted, the Palestinian
leadership was too busy contemplating the significance of
White House invitations to assess the political gains
achieved from the visits. The more things change, the
more they stay the same.
Since the Palestinians
so unconditionally accepted the roadmap, those who
desperately look for signs of progress amid all the
shenanigans have little to speak of aside from visits
made and funds offered. One particular visit has been
seen as an accomplishment of the existing government, a
boosting of its diplomatic status and international
legitimacy, with the aim of helping it to implement its
part of the roadmap. Aside from that, there is no other
accomplishment. And, unlike Arafat, the new Palestinian
government is well aware of what is going on. Arafat
failed to understand that the aim of the visits was to
reward him for changing and to encourage him to change
more. The visits were not a sign that the White House is
changing, nor that Arafat is becoming a favoured
interlocutor. As soon as Arafat balked at Camp David, his
visiting privileges were revoked.
Needless to say, the
promised funds serve a similar purpose to that of the
visits. For one thing, they should help the new
government to create security services capable of
preserving "law and order". Also, these funds
would help create jobs for some people in an economy
gripped by an appalling recession.
These accomplishments,
all of them geared towards enabling the Palestinian
leadership to survive, have come at a price. This price
is to reduce the Palestinian national project to
accepting a state with limited boundaries and powers. The
rhetoric has been changed from a Palestinian National
Authority on any liberated land, to a state on any
liberated land, to a state within the borders of 4 June
1967 with Jerusalem as capital, to two states for two
peoples with the right of return (regardless of the
contradiction in terms the phrase may contain). Now what
we have is the state of Sharon and Bush. And one of the
conditions to create this state is to admit that
Palestinian resistance is a form of terror that should be
addressed through Palestinian dialogue and Israeli
repression, the hope being that the Palestinian Authority
would be able to impose its control before Israel's
patience runs out.
According to George W
Bush, the Palestinian state is the reward -- the light at
the end of the tunnel -- that awaits the Palestinians if
they comply with Israeli and US dictates. But if the
Palestinians do so, they may abdicate their right to
decide on the nature of the state, its borders, the
matter of its coexistence with the settlements, and its
relations with the Arabs. The United States and Israel,
alone, will determine the borders of the future state.
For Israel's part, the
so-called Palestinian pragmatism is a victory for Sharon
and his policies. In the absence of an alternative vision
from the Labour Party (the apartheid wall aside), Sharon
continues to reap the fruits of recourse to force.
Meanwhile, the Palestinians seem to have no clear vision
for attack or retreat. This all suits Sharon just fine,
for despite his underlying security and economic
failures, the Israeli prime minister looks better with
every step the Palestinians take back. The Palestinian
retreat does not seem motivated by tactical
considerations or by unfavourable international
conditions, but by the sheer desire to jettison a
worn-out discourse. That the Arabs beat a scattered and
unjustified retreat on the Palestinian issue following
the Gulf War of 1991 has not improved things. Since the
11 September attacks, Sharon has been desperate to link
Palestinian resistance with terror. His efforts had been
in vain, until the Palestinians gave in to his point of
view.
It is curious how some
people see Israel's satisfaction with recent developments
as a sign of change in its political discourse. Israel's
satisfaction with the current Palestinian leadership is
only a sign of the change in Palestinian political
discourse. As for the mutual dissatisfaction that appears
in media reports as Israeli criticism of Palestinian
leadership, or that is vented in the cancellation of one
meeting or another, it is merely a sign of impatience on
the part of the Israeli government. The Israelis want the
Palestinians to act more promptly to rehabilitate
security services and begin dismantling the armed groups
that the roadmap labels as terrorist. (The Palestinian
leadership has not contested this labelling, judging by
the statements it makes in English.) The Palestinian
leadership has accepted unconditionally the roadmap, in
which they undertake to disarm the resistance, and is
only annoyed when Israel does not give it enough
concessions to take back to the Palestinian people.
The Israelis,
meanwhile, want the Palestinian leadership to show enough
"maturity" to qualify for Israeli concessions
(releasing tax money, freeing detainees, easing the
arrival of monetary assistance, facilitating the
rehabilitation of security services, and handing over the
administration of certain towns). Such concessions would
restore the situation to something resembling what
existed before October 2000, allowing for the creation of
a long-term interim Palestinian state on 40 per cent of
the West Bank, in return for the Palestinians' abdication
of the right of return. Other Palestinian rights would
not be accepted by Israel, of course, but the
Palestinians would not be asked to abandon them for the
coming 15 years or so.
The future will be
decided by the realities of the tense interaction between
the Palestinian state, with its burgeoning security
apparatus and the need to maintain security, on the one
hand, and the Israeli settlements on the other. This
interaction will shape the realities of the next decade
or so. And what we will end up with is a Palestinian
state that does not address even the question of
settlements.
Pragmatists, or those
who claim to be so, warn that unless the Palestinians
take what they were offered in Oslo, and what the roadmap
now offers, time and settlements will leave nothing for
them. They argue that the longer the Palestinians wait
before reaching a deal, the more settlements will be
created. In actual fact, the Palestinians have accepted
what was an offer, and yet settlements have grown on an
unprecedented scale -- redoubling since Oslo. The ongoing
events are not going to reverse this trend.
Unless the promised
Palestinian state resolves the most important elements of
the Palestinian issue, unless it compensates the
Palestinians for the historic injustice inflicted on
them, what purpose exactly does it serve in terms of the
Palestinian national endeavour? Is the current struggle
over the Palestinian state any different from the usual
strain of power struggle anywhere? What the current
struggle has so far done is obscure further the issue of
justice for the Palestinians.
None of
the above has anything to do with whether the struggle is
violent or not. Struggles for power can be violent and
bloody. Struggles for the state could be peaceful, in
conditions where imperialism has run out of steam, or
when public opinion in the imperialist power is
enlightened (the British in India). Struggles can be
violent, radical, and bloody in their methods, but
conservative, reactionary, and "moderate" in
their goals. The question is not about the methods of
struggle against Israeli occupation. These have to be
determined according to the nature of goals, the balances
of power, the type of occupation, and public opinion. For
example, is the occupation a colonial one that intends to
stay on at any cost? What matters is the nature of the
Palestinian national project. The state currently offered
by the Americans and Israelis -- the only one on offer in
the roadmap -- is not a national project of liberation in
any sense. This is the proverbial forest hidden behind
the trees, the story lost in media hype, the image
blurred by excessive detail.
Al-Ahram Weekly.©2003

A Palestinian
discourse
By Professor Mazin
Qumsiyeh
Jordan Times, Friday, August 8, 2003
..The past week in the
saga of the Palestinian struggle for freedom was little
discussed in the news. The unilateral ceasefire by
Palestinians continues but the 3 month clock is ticking.
But, in the meanwhile, nonviolent direct action initiated
by Palestinians with international support was met with
Israeli violent attacks on Monday and Friday. On Monday
six peace activists were injured (two Palestinians, two
Americans, one Scottish, one British, and one Israeli).
On Friday, three Palestinians and eight Internationals
were wounded when Israeli forces opened fire on them with
rubber coated steel bullets. Scores of Palestinians were
arrested in various parts of the West Bank as Israel
intensified its occupation. Hundreds of Palestinian
political prisoners went on a hunger strike and in one
prison, prisoners rebelled and were put down brutally,
injuring several. The first phase of the so-called roadmap calls for an
Israeli settlement freeze. Yet, only yesterday Israel
announced new housing units to be built in settlements in
Gaza and an Israeli Zionist group calling itself Peace
Now reported that the more settlement `outposts' were
built than dismantled in front of the foreign cameras.
Building continued in colonial settlements and bypass
roads throughout the occupied areas. Currently 400,000
settlers live in the areas illegally occupied in 1967.
The Israeli government also just approved $170 million
for expansion of the apartheid wall that surrounds
Palestinian towns and cities and separates people from
their farms and lands and from the Jewish colonies built
on confiscated Palestinian lands. At 650 kilometres, it
is nearly five times longer and has much more concrete
and height than the Berlin Wall.
To add insult to injury,
the Israeli Knesset this week passed a law decried by
International human rights groups as racist. It is added
to 20 laws that discriminate against Palestinian citizens
of the Jewish state. The law says that Palestinians
married to Israeli citizens would not get Israeli
citizenship (and thus must either live apart or leave the
country). This law applies to Palestinians marrying
Israeli citizens but not any other national marrying an
Israeli.
On the eve of Sharon's
visit to Washington (call it a photo opportunity), much
was made of the easing restrictions and
dismantling checkpoints. The facts are that three
checkpoints were removed out of a total of 168 Israeli
checkpoints. There was essentially no change in freedom
of movement for the Palestinians. Most still are
separated from their work, schools, or even hospitals by
a network that Dr Jeff Halper describes as a matrix of
control. The matrix of control consists of a network of
settlements, bypass roads, walls, checkpoints, fences,
ditches and moats. According to Halper and Israeli human
rights groups, the function of this system is
strangulation and impoverishment, to take Palestinian
land, and to force them to leave. It has little or
nothing to do with Israeli public security.
Security as defined by Israeli leaders has
always been a ruse for Palestinian land taken without
protest for Israeli colonisation. All land confiscation
is final. Israel never slowed down, let alone reverse,
its colonisation. Palestinians owned more than 94 per
cent of the Holy Land in 1947 and today those remaining
own less than 10 per cent of the Holy Land. Palestinians
were ethnically cleansed by various means over the
intervening period. Those thinking that Israel would ever
allow a sovereign Palestinian state (even on the 22 per
cent of Palestine that is the area occupied in 1967)
simply have not studied the history of the Zionist
movement and its evolution. The path resulting in the
so-called Oslo accords, was judged flawed by Amnesty
International because it ignored human
rights. So now, even a roadmap that is far more
flawed (and also does not mention human rights) is being
violated daily with impunity by Israeli actions.
Palestinians need to
soberly reflect on this state of affairs. The Palestinian
National Initiative, to which I subscribe, seeks peace
based on justice and human rights. Justice and human
rights are also enshrined in International Law, ranging
from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
4th Geneva Convention, to the countless UN resolutions
that have been adopted (181, 194, etc). We recognise not
only our own strengths and weaknesses but our past
accomplishments and our responsibilities to future
generations. The Palestinian struggle has also become the
lightning rod for all disenfranchised people fighting for
equality and justice.
There is a key to the
persistence of the Palestinian struggle despite the
incredible oppression and conspiracies of silence,
collusion, and obfuscation over the years. Simply put,
Palestinians know their cause is just and is not lost. As
long as there are children born to Palestinian households
at home or in the Diaspora, they will go home and
Palestine will be free someday. Fifty-five years of
repression is a small segment in human history; one
British-French war lasted 120 years and the Crusaders
occupied Jerusalem for 88 years. The fact that Israelis
and Internationals are finally joining the liberation
struggle (and being injured in the process) should give
us hope that we are getting very close. Apartheid walls,
racism, and separation did not work in South Africa and
will not work in the Holy Land. The 21st century as the
age of information is beginning to show its power in
undermining the house of lies that is built to justify
colonisation and oppression. Such oppression hurts all
humanity and has repercussions for all countries. As
Palestinian-Americans, we hold a special burden as $5
billion of our taxes are plundered every year by a
Congress supporting Israeli apartheid.
Just as slowly and as
surely as water seeping through mud and rocks makes a
desert oasis, truth will find a way through to
create a bright future in the middle of the harsh
reality.
The writer is a
Palestinian American associate professor at Yale and
co-founder of the Palestine Right to Return Coalition and
AcademicsForJustice.org. He contributed this article to
The Jordan Times.
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