Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Published on Friday, July 31, 2009 by Electronic Intifada
Why Obama's Peace Process is Still Going Nowhere
Much of the debate about US
President Barack Obama's push for Middle East peace resembles the
proverbial argument about whether the glass is half full or half empty.
But even a full glass is not very useful if you need to fill an entire
reservoir.
A common assumption is that earlier American administrations were insufficiently "engaged." Obama's early moves, including the appointment of former Northern Ireland mediator George Mitchell as his envoy, have therefore been widely welcomed.
The problem was never a lack of American engagement, but what kind. Indeed, the Bush administration took engagement to unprecedented lengths. It pushed for Palestinian elections, and then when Hamas defeated the US-backed Fatah faction, America attempted to overturn the result. The Bush administration helped arm and train Palestinian militias opposed to Hamas and vetoed a Palestinian "national unity government." It supported the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip and politicized financial aid to bolster Palestinian leaders whose legitimacy, as they have effectively become Israeli quislings, has all but vanished. At the same time, the United States and the Quartet imposed lopsided preconditions for dialogue that they well know Hamas cannot accept.
Absolutely none of this has changed under the Obama administration. Despite lip service about easing it, the United States continues to support Israel's criminal blockade of the Gaza Strip, and like the Bush administration, Obama has never criticized Israel's attack on Gaza despite incontestable evidence of atrocities and war crimes.
America continues to funnel arms and money to Fatah-controlled militias, encouraging them to attack Hamas in the West Bank, sabotaging the possibility of intra-Palestinian reconciliation.
And while the Obama administration and the British government prepare for negotiations with the Taliban in Afghanistan, they intransigently reject talks with Hamas despite that group's electoral mandate, its repeated offers of a reciprocal long-term ceasefire with Israel and its acceptance of a two-state solution.
The Obama administration has used up its first six months negotiating a settlement freeze with Israel (with little to show). At this rate, how long would it take to negotiate the core issues in the century-long conflict resulting from the Zionist effort to transform an almost entirely Arab (Muslim and Christian) country, into a "Jewish state" with a permanent Jewish majority?
The constant focus on process and gimmicks -- like trying to get Arab states to normalize ties with Israel -- has obscured the reality that Obama's stated goal -- a workable two-state solution -- is almost certainly unachievable. The idea of separating Palestinians and Israelis into distinct ethno-national entities has become an article of faith within peace process circles, but rarely are its supporters asked to justify why a "solution" that has eluded them for decades has any merit.
Today, as a result of natural growth, Palestinians form half of the population living in historic Palestine despite decades of expulsion and exile. Within a few years they will once again be the majority. A two-state solution as currently envisaged would leave Palestinians with a state on no more than a fifth of the land, with less of the water and no real sovereignty. Even if Palestinian refugees agreed to return to such a state, there would be no room for them.
Nor would repartition actually separate the populations: no one involved in the "peace process" is talking about removing all, or even most of the half million Israeli settlers implanted illegally in the West Bank -- especially around Jerusalem -- since 1967. There is talk of compensating Palestinians for the land taken by settlers with "equivalent" land elsewhere. But whoever can find land that can "compensate" Palestinians for Jerusalem, would be just as likely to find land that could "compensate" the British for London or the French for Paris.
As for the 1.5 million Palestinian citizens of Israel, a two-state solution would only make their situation worse. Already treated as second-class citizens, they face escalating racist campaigns and a raft of legislation proposing to ban them from commemorating Israel's near-destruction of Palestine in 1948, forcing them to take loyalty oaths, or even to sing the explicitly Jewish Israeli national anthem. If Israel remains an unreformed ultra-nationalist "Jewish state," its Palestinian citizens are more likely to face apartheid conditions at best or ethnic cleansing at worst, than be allowed to live as equal citizens in the land of their birth. Israel's foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman represents the growing number of Israeli Jews who think a Jewish state should be cleansed of non-Jews.
This is why an increasing number of Palestinians, conflict resolution experts, and a small but growing number of Israelis are giving serious attention to the idea of a one-state, or bi-national solution for Palestine/Israel. This would dismantle the current system of Israeli ethno-religious domination and institute a democratic system guaranteeing the civic, political, religious and cultural rights of all citizens and communities.
Although peace process insiders constantly dismiss these ideas as far-fetched, utopian or naive, they continue to gain adherents. After all, similar, but even deeper-rooted conflicts between settler-colonial and indigenous communities were resolved peacefully along such democratic principles in Northern Ireland and South Africa.
As George Mitchell surely knows from his experience in Northern Ireland, when two national communities lay claim to the same land and one dominates the other by force, partition only changes the contours of the conflict. It was by dismantling the "Protestant state for a Protestant people" in the north of Ireland and replacing it with a bi-national democracy, increasingly integrated with the rest of the island, that the 1998 Good Friday Agreement ended a conflict long thought to be insoluble.
Neither South Africa nor Northern Ireland offer exact analogies or ready-made blueprints for Palestine/Israel. But to continue to pretend that these working bi-national and one-state models have nothing to teach is to condemn Palestinians and Israelis to decades more of conflict, as diplomats chase mirages and Israel pursues its colonial policies unchecked.
A common assumption is that earlier American administrations were insufficiently "engaged." Obama's early moves, including the appointment of former Northern Ireland mediator George Mitchell as his envoy, have therefore been widely welcomed.
The problem was never a lack of American engagement, but what kind. Indeed, the Bush administration took engagement to unprecedented lengths. It pushed for Palestinian elections, and then when Hamas defeated the US-backed Fatah faction, America attempted to overturn the result. The Bush administration helped arm and train Palestinian militias opposed to Hamas and vetoed a Palestinian "national unity government." It supported the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip and politicized financial aid to bolster Palestinian leaders whose legitimacy, as they have effectively become Israeli quislings, has all but vanished. At the same time, the United States and the Quartet imposed lopsided preconditions for dialogue that they well know Hamas cannot accept.
Absolutely none of this has changed under the Obama administration. Despite lip service about easing it, the United States continues to support Israel's criminal blockade of the Gaza Strip, and like the Bush administration, Obama has never criticized Israel's attack on Gaza despite incontestable evidence of atrocities and war crimes.
America continues to funnel arms and money to Fatah-controlled militias, encouraging them to attack Hamas in the West Bank, sabotaging the possibility of intra-Palestinian reconciliation.
And while the Obama administration and the British government prepare for negotiations with the Taliban in Afghanistan, they intransigently reject talks with Hamas despite that group's electoral mandate, its repeated offers of a reciprocal long-term ceasefire with Israel and its acceptance of a two-state solution.
The Obama administration has used up its first six months negotiating a settlement freeze with Israel (with little to show). At this rate, how long would it take to negotiate the core issues in the century-long conflict resulting from the Zionist effort to transform an almost entirely Arab (Muslim and Christian) country, into a "Jewish state" with a permanent Jewish majority?
The constant focus on process and gimmicks -- like trying to get Arab states to normalize ties with Israel -- has obscured the reality that Obama's stated goal -- a workable two-state solution -- is almost certainly unachievable. The idea of separating Palestinians and Israelis into distinct ethno-national entities has become an article of faith within peace process circles, but rarely are its supporters asked to justify why a "solution" that has eluded them for decades has any merit.
Today, as a result of natural growth, Palestinians form half of the population living in historic Palestine despite decades of expulsion and exile. Within a few years they will once again be the majority. A two-state solution as currently envisaged would leave Palestinians with a state on no more than a fifth of the land, with less of the water and no real sovereignty. Even if Palestinian refugees agreed to return to such a state, there would be no room for them.
Nor would repartition actually separate the populations: no one involved in the "peace process" is talking about removing all, or even most of the half million Israeli settlers implanted illegally in the West Bank -- especially around Jerusalem -- since 1967. There is talk of compensating Palestinians for the land taken by settlers with "equivalent" land elsewhere. But whoever can find land that can "compensate" Palestinians for Jerusalem, would be just as likely to find land that could "compensate" the British for London or the French for Paris.
As for the 1.5 million Palestinian citizens of Israel, a two-state solution would only make their situation worse. Already treated as second-class citizens, they face escalating racist campaigns and a raft of legislation proposing to ban them from commemorating Israel's near-destruction of Palestine in 1948, forcing them to take loyalty oaths, or even to sing the explicitly Jewish Israeli national anthem. If Israel remains an unreformed ultra-nationalist "Jewish state," its Palestinian citizens are more likely to face apartheid conditions at best or ethnic cleansing at worst, than be allowed to live as equal citizens in the land of their birth. Israel's foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman represents the growing number of Israeli Jews who think a Jewish state should be cleansed of non-Jews.
This is why an increasing number of Palestinians, conflict resolution experts, and a small but growing number of Israelis are giving serious attention to the idea of a one-state, or bi-national solution for Palestine/Israel. This would dismantle the current system of Israeli ethno-religious domination and institute a democratic system guaranteeing the civic, political, religious and cultural rights of all citizens and communities.
Although peace process insiders constantly dismiss these ideas as far-fetched, utopian or naive, they continue to gain adherents. After all, similar, but even deeper-rooted conflicts between settler-colonial and indigenous communities were resolved peacefully along such democratic principles in Northern Ireland and South Africa.
As George Mitchell surely knows from his experience in Northern Ireland, when two national communities lay claim to the same land and one dominates the other by force, partition only changes the contours of the conflict. It was by dismantling the "Protestant state for a Protestant people" in the north of Ireland and replacing it with a bi-national democracy, increasingly integrated with the rest of the island, that the 1998 Good Friday Agreement ended a conflict long thought to be insoluble.
Neither South Africa nor Northern Ireland offer exact analogies or ready-made blueprints for Palestine/Israel. But to continue to pretend that these working bi-national and one-state models have nothing to teach is to condemn Palestinians and Israelis to decades more of conflict, as diplomats chase mirages and Israel pursues its colonial policies unchecked.
© 2009 Electronic Intifada
- Posted in
Comments are closed

23 Comments so far
Show AllIsrael has encouraged and allowed the West Bank to be dotted by colonies and cut to pieces by connecting roads, and divided the so-called "security fence." If there is any party that has made a two-state solution impossible, it's the state of Israel.
The US supports expansionism and rejects any and all attempts at reconciliation. That's how you expand empires, not by agreeing to share.
Hoa binh
The article is true.
How can there be a Palestinian State divided by Gaza in the North and dozens of cut off colonies around Jerusalem?
Impossible. So lets cut the crap.
There are two keys for peace and that is Palestinians uniting and negotiating a contiguous border and to press for the equal rights of non-Jews in Israel.
They need to do both and the US needs to push it with the Boycott.
A push for Equal rights of Jews and all non-Jews in Israel is the political key for peace in the Mideast and the World.
Shalom
The Palestinians are not asking for national health insurance. They want their freedom and they want statehood. The United States cannot deliver that, broker that or offer it as a gift out of our Greater Glory. The only thing the USA is good for these days is the cunning genius of the scam.
Yes, I think Israel and the War machine have allowed by media control to always narrow the question like they do with "terrorism".
We need a 2 pronged strategy for peace now... Israel needs to be charged in the UN, for its Apartheid system.
I think if you asked some Palestinians, you would find that they want more than just their freedom and a state, they want World Peace too.
"They want their freedom and they want statehood. The United States cannot deliver that, broker that or offer it as a gift out of our Greater Glory."
What would happen if we withdrew our billions of dollars of aid to Israel, condemned them for war crimes, and sanctioned them over their nukes?
One wonders what the chances are that this well written article will end up in the Op Ed section of the New York Times.
Yep, the NY Times doesn't publish "terrorists".
None or little chance of it being published in the MSM.
The Mid-East "peace process" has been a sham from the very beginning. Nothing will come of the Obama initiative. The situation will continue to get worse, mostly for the Palestinians but, in the long run, also for Israel.
If I remember Obama correctly back in the primaries, in his desperate attempt to win, he played kissyface with AIPAC and never turned back. You're correct about Israel. I think both sides are losing each other out.
PS: You were correct about the Hindu vs Muslim thing. My apologies. Sorry I'm not great at foreign policy as there's enough in this country to worry about. :(
Is Israel trying to replace all the tons and tons of depleated uranium that it dropped into that overcrowded death camp called Gaza?
JERUSALEM, July 31 (Xinhua) -- Israel wants to build a nuclear power plant without signing the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which needs assistance from the United States, local news service Ynet reported Friday.
Israel has recently sent the requirement to the U.S. government for getting its approval, but receiving no response so far, the report said.
A U.S. diplomat said at a UN meeting in May that the Obama administration expects Israel to join the NPT.
Let us get this straight Israel is a nuclear, chemical, biologically armed Rouge State that is/has perpetrated war crimes, crimes against humanity, threatened and attacked its neighbors, practices apartheid, occupied and built on land illegally taken in wars of aggression etc etc.
But the USA invaded Iraq ---- invaded Iraq on Israel's behalf ? ? ? ?
Amazing how the tail can wag a dog that big & seem to move so little.
Follow the money, but see which way it goes. US funds Israeli arms, not the reverse.
Convenient, those Israelis: they draw fire.
I like the moniker, btw.
The one state solution is the best approach. When Israelis argue against it, it clearly reveals their racism.
Why do we continue to send millions in aid to Israel if they sabotage peace by "facts on the ground", viz. settlement expansion?
What exactly do the Palestinians have to trade? If Israel falls they'll just go after Spain, Italy and Greece.
Any word about the 10,000 rockets and mortar bomb the Hamas fired on Israeli civilian targets?
How about mentioning the ethnic cleansing Arab committed against the Middle Eastern Jews?
This is a one sided, double standard, article. The author advocates the idea that the Jews are all evil, and the Arabs are all saints.
the usual in other words. nevermind the fact that Israel exceeds the standards of all other middle eastern countries.
Nice try, Letto. Now go back to your desk at the Ministry of Disinformation.
Doctor! Come quick! Get the tranks and nets; Letto's out!
Pardon my quibbling, but there appears to be a spelling error in this post.
The post reads, "Obama's peace process." Given the context, the author must have intended, "Obama's piece process."
With this apparently small alteration, we can answer coherently thuswise:
- He's blowing Iraq to pieces
- He's blowing Afghanis to bits
- He's blown a piece out of Pakistan
- Good luck finding places it fits
- He smiles at a piece of Honduras
- He's gotten a piece of GM
- He turned back a piece of Los Angeles
- 0bama is getting a piece.
Perhaps we should treat the process as "blowing," but I suppose I have quibbled enough.
Hmmm
First to address the 10000 "rockets + mortar"; How many have actually hit anything? how many actual injurys let alone deaths over the last 30 years have they caused? More Palastinian women and children have been killed in the last 2 years than all the alleged "rocket + mortar" attacks combined. I say alleged because evidence is available that points a finger back at Israel as the actual people launching many of the "attacks" Time after time over the years these "attacks" have occured exactly at the right time to maximize their benefit, not to the Palastinians but to Israel. I don't believe in that many "coincidnences" that always benefit one side.
Bottom line is that Israel is now, and has been fighting a delaying action until such time as return of any significant or valuable piece of land in the West Bank is impossible. And of course in the mean time Israel is busy murdering men, women and children on a weekly basis. Israel isn't looking for "peace" they are looking for time to complete the destruction of an entire indigenous population. They are getting close now. And they are doing so using methods that are strikingly similiar to Nazi Germany. You see to Israel it isn't about the people its all about stealing the land, the water, the offshore oil and gas, in other words its all about the money and if your not jewish well....screw you.
Israeli Zionists are merely tools of empire as it was the Rothschilds and other banking families who have created and manipulated the zionist movement from it's inception... First by creating the economic and political conditions that created the pogroms against the labor-organizing Jews in eastern Europe and Russia during the rule of the Tzarists, while Rockefeller & Morgan & The House of Rothschild were funding the industrialization of turn-of-the-century Russia... Then using the Jews as scapegoats to crack down on the labor organizers throughout europe as well, culminating in the NAZI fascist regime... The same corporatist Bankster families that funded both sides of the American civil war, Bougouis factions of the French Revolution, and Hitler's rise to power... Exploited the Jews desire for a "homeland", which fit in nicely with the imperialist ambition of colonizing Palestine and develop the Suez Canal, to seize control of and eventually change the geo-ploitical landscape of the mid-east... Terrorist groups like the Stern Gang and Khazar immigrants began driving out the local populations from Palestine long Before WWII, and Rothschild and other Zionists were encouraging Ersatz Israel long before the atrocities of the Nazi Death Camps...
The blueblood bankster elite also created the CFR, the CIA, the NSA and the WB/IMF/WTO global financial institutions after WWII... as well as the Bank of International Settlements and the Federal Reserve system back in the WWI era... Israel has since become a strategic militarized ally of the British & American imperialist ambitions, which largely involves oil, gas, water, and real estate...
The autocratic ruling Arab royal families in the middle east are also bought or controlled by the militaristic-economic hegemony...
The Bankster Elite thrive on exploiting the tensions between ethnic groups, and profit on the weapons they sell to all sides of the conflicts...
This is why there are so many parallels between Nazi Germany and Israel and the Bush regime... They are all following the same fascist playbook given by the same globalist banksters...