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What if Peace Talks "Succeed?"
Many commentators expect the
direct talks between Israelis and Palestinians to fail. But there is a
much worse scenario: what if they "succeed?" The United States appears
determined to push for a framework agreement within a year and both
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Mahmoud Abbas, President
of the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority (PA), are aiming for that
goal. Such an agreement, US peace envoy George Mitchell explained in a 2
September press conference, would be more than a declaration of
principles but less than a peace treaty. In it, the two sides would
reach the "fundamental compromises" necessary for a peace accord. Like
its predecessor, the Obama administration has already indicated that the
accord would still have to be fleshed out and then implemented over the
course of several years -- which virtually ensures that it will be
delayed if not derailed as happened to past peace accords.
If the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and PA were unable to
secure a sovereign state and rights through US-brokered negotiations
with Israel between 1993 and 2000, when they were in a much stronger
position, they are highly unlikely to do so today with such a badly
skewed Israeli-Palestinian power dynamic. Instead, next year is likely
to see a grand ceremony where Palestinian leaders will sign away the
right of return and other Palestinian rights in an agreement that would
change little on the ground. The plan of the PA's appointed prime
minister, Salam Fayyad, to declare a Palestinian state in 2011 could
unwittingly contribute to this outcome by providing the appearance of an
"end of conflict" while the reality remains unchanged. If the rest of
the world sees that the government of "Palestine" is satisfied with
international recognition and a UN seat, they will be happy to move on
to other problems leaving the Palestinians at Israel's mercy.
Such a scenario could sound a death-knell for Palestinian human rights.
The Palestinian people have shown a remarkable capacity to regenerate
resistance and evolve new strategies after suffering harsh setbacks over
the past century. But there may be no recovery this time around. A
"peace agreement" would end the applicability of international law to
the resolution of the conflict; permanently fragment the Palestinian
people; and demobilize Arab and international solidarity.
What can Palestinians do to forestall abrogation of their fundamental
rights and to ensure just peace? In a contribution to the debate around
this question, this brief examines five areas that are key to
Palestinians determined to persevere until rights are realized: unifying
the Palestinian body politic; espousing common goals; applying
international law; using appropriate tactics; and strengthening the Arab
and international movement of solidarity. It concludes with some
suggestions for strategies in each area.
Unifying the Palestinian body politic
A unified body politic is perhaps the most important source of power for
the Palestinian people. However, since the Oslo accords were signed the
PLO has no longer represented the Palestinian refugees and exiles,
while the Palestinian citizens of Israel have been left to fend for
themselves. The PLO has essentially ceased to exist as a functional
organization, and the PA has effectively taken over such functions as
appointing diplomatic representatives overseas. Hamas continues to be
excluded from the PLO and the Hamas-Fatah split further fragments and
erodes the Palestinian political voice.
Beyond the political level, each segment of the Palestinian people faces
tough challenges. Palestinian citizens of Israel, after articulating a
vision of full equality within Israel, now face a harsh crackdown. [1]
Palestinians in Gaza, under siege for four years and geographically
disconnected from the West Bank and the outside world, remain steadfast
in the face of Israeli oppression. Palestinians in Jerusalem are
isolated and face expulsions and home demolitions as Israel continues
its policy of Judaizing the city.
In the West Bank, part of the population, exhausted after repeated
onslaughts, wants to live a normal life even in small enclaves. At the
same time, the popular struggle against Israel's wall and the boycott,
divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement are rooted in the West Bank. It
is not clear which is the stronger force: those that are "co-optable" or
those who resist. What is clear is that the PA is seeking to "manage"
both the popular struggle and BDS, providing funding for some segments
of the former and claiming the mantle of BDS with a limited campaign
targeting the sale of Israeli settlement products.
Palestinian refugees face serious human rights violations in many of the
Arab countries where they are based. Attempts to forge communities of
Palestinian exiles in Western countries have had varying success, but
nowhere have they established the kind of lobby created by American
Jews. The ability of Palestinian exiles to physically reconnect with
Palestine, which many were doing during the 1990s and 2000s, is being
circumscribed by increasingly restrictive Israeli measures.
Against this background, it is not clear how, when, or even whether, the
Palestinian people could revive the PLO. Even if there were no
Hamas-Fatah split, the very existence of the PA, its narrow mandate, and
its determination to function within the American ambit militates
against an independent voice for the Palestinians.
Are there signs of other leadership options? The BDS movement launched
by the Palestinian Civil Society Call of 2005 is now being directed by a
BDS National Committee (the BNC) which groups representatives of all
nationalist, Islamist and other political parties as well as civil
society organizations. However the BNC is unlikely, in the near future,
to provide the kind of leadership provided, for example, by the United
National Leadership of the first intifada. The current political splits
and jockeying for power make it easier for Palestinian political and
civil forces to unify around a strategy for rights -- BDS -- rather than
to forge a national leadership.
Espousing a common set of goals<
In the years since the Palestinian National Charter was recognized in
1968 as the common statement of Palestinian goals, there has been a loss
of direction regarding the ultimate objective of the Palestinian
struggle. [2] The PLO gradually shifted from the objective of a secular,
democratic state in all of Palestine to supporting the two-state
solution. This was formalized after the Palestinian National Council
accepted the two-state solution in 1988. It was also "understood,"
although this was never formally stated, that the Palestinian right of
return would have to be implemented within the Palestinian state for
some of the Palestinian refugees with, at best, compensation for the
rest.
No other national documents that set out Palestinian goals emerged until
the 2005 Civil Society Call for BDS and the 2006 Palestinian Prisoners'
Document. However, the Prisoners' Document has not been made
operational, in the sense of being carried forward by one or more
political groups. By contrast, the Civil Society Call is being made
operational through the BDS movement. The Call upholds the Palestinian
right to self-determination and sets three goals: freedom from
occupation, equality for Palestinian citizens of Israel, and realization
of the right of return. Unfortunately, most Palestinians and their
supporters focus on the strategy of BDS rather than the goals of the
Civil Society Call.
The importance of having common goals for a human rights movement cannot
be overstated -- as South Africans can attest. As a revised Oslo-like
process threatens to undermine Palestinian rights, Palestinians and
their supporters must have clear goals to know what constitutes success,
what violates the national consensus, and when to demobilize. Such
goals are even more crucial in the absence of a leadership committed to
Palestinian rights. In this context, clear goals provide a reference
point for Palestinians and enable them to organize effectively.
Today, the 2005 Civil Society Call is the only clear statement of goals
available to the Palestinians that is broadly accepted by a wide swath
of civil and political forces within and outside historic Palestine.
Moreover it is grounded in international law, including the right to
self-determination, and the goals encompass Palestinians under
occupation, in exile, and in Israel. As such, the Call's value goes well
beyond the BDS strategy, effective as this is proving to be.
Upholding international law and human rights
International law and human rights are vital to the just resolution of
the Palestinian conflict. They enable Palestinians to set their goals in
a framework that the international community is pledged, in theory, to
uphold. They also provide some protection against being pressured into
agreements that do not fulfill minimum rights. Indeed, it is significant
that the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion on the
illegality of Israel's wall urged the international community to apply
international law to this conflict. The 2005 Civil Society Call, issued
on the first anniversary of the ICJ Advisory Opinion, responds to this
challenge.
Moreover, applying the discourse of human rights to the conflict is a
powerful, non-violent strategy. It exposes Israel's greatest weakness:
the racist underpinnings of Zionism and its implementation. The values
of universal human rights are much more powerful than the concept that a
group of people is entitled to be privileged by ethnicity or religion,
with no obligation to acknowledge or pay reparations for their
persistent ethnic cleansing of a country's indigenous inhabitants. The
relevance of international law to conflict resolution does not stop at
Palestine's door: It matters to the evolution of humanity at large. By
upholding human rights, the Palestinians help protect this universal
framework from Israeli, US, and other efforts to subvert it.
Using appropriate tactics
Every era calls for appropriate tactics to achieve stated goals.
Certainly the use of armed struggle was a valid and effective tactic in
the early days of the Palestinian national liberation struggle. However,
the value of armed struggle today is something that needs to be
subjected to dispassionate examination. In particular, if the goals are
stated in terms of international law then Palestinians must also uphold
this in their choice of tactics. It should first be emphasized that
under international law Palestinians have the right to resist
occupation, including armed resistance. Yet under the same set of laws,
deliberately targeting civilians can constitute a war crime, as most
recently articulated in the UN-commissioned Goldstone report, no matter
which party (Israel or the Palestinians) does so and what weapons are
used.
Furthermore, the use of weapons puts Palestinians in the arena where
Israel is strongest and they are weakest. It enables Israel to use the
security argument to obscure its crimes. And weapons do not target
Israel's most serious weaknesses -- its claim to ethnic and religious
superiority and its refusal to acknowledge its responsibility for past
and ongoing Palestinian dispossession. It is worth noting that during
the first Intifada, the Palestinians were able to achieve successes
similar to the armed struggle of the PLO a quarter of a century earlier:
putting the question of Palestine on the map, and attracting a powerful
international solidarity movement, official and non-governmental.
Today, civil resistance and BDS, coupled with international solidarity,
are strengthening the Palestinians and weakening Israelis.
Among the strategies used in the struggle for human rights, the
Palestinians urgently need to identify the most effective ways to stay
on the land of Palestine. The non-violent popular struggle against
Israel's wall in the occupied West Bank has scored some successes and
has renewed grassroots leadership in an echo of the first Intifada (see Jamal Juma's policy brief).
However, Israel is still relentlessly carving up the West Bank and
depopulating the Jordan Valley and East Jerusalem, as it is the Negev
and other areas where Palestinians are the majority inside Israel.
Without Palestinians on the land of Palestine, as Israel knows only too
well, the Palestinian cause will be impossible to sustain.
Strengthening Arab and international solidarity
For decades, the PLO and PA have not reached out to Arab peoples in an
organized fashion, largely content to deal with Arab governments. Nor
did they nurture the diplomatic support of the non-aligned movement and
other friendly countries, at a time when Israel was actively wooing
African and Asian states, or strengthen strategic ties with friendly
European and post-Soviet Union countries. Arab sympathies remain with
the Palestinians but few have any sense of how they can help.
Palestinian refugees and exiles can play an important outreach role to
Arab peoples, without interfering in internal Arab affairs. At the same
time, in seeking solidarity Palestinians must stand in solidarity with
Arabs on issues of concern to them.
The international solidarity movement of civil society is being rapidly
revived through the popular struggle and BDS, as well as the outrage at
Israel's attacks on Gaza, on the Freedom Flotilla, and other trampling
of international law. New forms of state support are emerging in
countries like Turkey and Malaysia. A peace deal that does not fulfill
Palestinian rights risks defusing this mobilization, as happened to the
powerful international solidarity movement of the 1980s, which used to
fill the halls of UN during the annual conference on the question of
Palestine. Recommendations
In each of the areas addressed above, strategies have emerged or are
needed to sustain the struggle to fulfill Palestinian human rights. Some
examples and suggestions are given below.
- Unifying the Palestinian body politic. Alongside efforts to foster national unity and to revive the PLO, there is a need for increased investment in activities that bring Palestinians together across borders without neglecting any segment of the Palestinian people, in exile, under occupation, and in Israel. There is also need to further invest in the Palestinian capacity to remain steadfast on the land and in exile, while recognizing that those who live on the land of Palestine have a greater ability to influence the Palestinian future. Palestinians in exile also need to use every possible means to remain in physical contact with the land of Palestine and find ways to counter the many tactics Israel uses to prevent them.
- Espouse common goals. Palestinians should disseminate the goals of Civil Society Call as widely and as clearly as possible to compatriots everywhere, explaining the value of the BDS strategy but also drawing attention to other strategies that can uphold these goals, for example nurturing relations with the peoples of Arab host countries. And they should communicate the goals as widely as possible to international civil society so that it remains mobilized until they are achieved. Further, Palestinians need to be prepared to issue public statements and take appropriate actions to inform world governments that any agreement that does not meet these goals will be rejected -- and resisted -- by the majority of the Palestinian people.
- Applying international law. Palestinians need to invest in education and awareness-raising around the relevant human rights principles and conventions that apply to this as well as to other conflicts such as the US invasion and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. It is also important to frame messages in terms of universal rights and values that are easily grasped by people everywhere.
- Applying appropriate tactics. There is a need to initiate wide-ranging discussions about the effectiveness of various options for resistance, especially among youth. It is also important to engage the energies of Palestinians of all ages who have been excluded from the political process so that they can make a tangible contribution to the struggle by identifying tactics relevant to their local contexts that help to achieve the common goals.
- Strengthening Arab and international solidarity. In addition to the kind of outreach and education described above, Palestinians need to make time to understand the struggles their supporters face at home -- including racism, poverty, and inequality -- and find ways to support them.
- The suggestions are intended to contribute to and encourage debate. Whether there is a "peace agreement" or Israel continues to impose its military and political will to derail an agreement, it is imperative that Palestinians discuss, formulate and communicate the best strategies to achieve their goals. Otherwise this latest "peace process" may succeed in terminally demobilizing the Palestinian struggle for rights.
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7 Comments so far
Show AllWhat can Palestinians do?
What anyone who wants to really change things does - buy US politicians.
LOL... man what you been smokin? that's the war on the back burner.. In case we need a war in a hurry!
>^^<
and did you bring enough smoke for all of us?
The talks should be suspended NOW. The Israeli moratorium on settlement building ended yesterday. The bulldozers are rolling again.
Hamas should be leading the talks. At the very least, they need to have representatives involved in any negotiations.
BDS works! We can all help stop the occupation by boycotting all corporations who profit from it. Check out this website:
http://www.whoprofits.org/index.php
Also demand that your employer or university divest from these major U.S. corps. profiting from the occupation:
General Mills (Pillsbury)
Coca Cola
Bobcat Co.
Chevrolet
Hewlett Packard (HP)
Caterpiller
Volvo
Ace Hardware
Blockbuster
Motorola
RE/MAX
Siemans
These corporations have the blood of the occupation on their books. Boycott them, and contact them to let them know you're boycotting them. Refuse to support anyone or any group that invests in these corporations.
Settlement activity has co-opted 42% of the occupied West Bank:
http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/2010/
09/2010927101321933715.html
What if Peace Talks "Succeed?"
What if hell freezes over?
IMHO both have about the same chance of occurring in my lifetime...
The PA (Fatah) needs a peace treaty with Gaza and Hamas, before anything can be agreed with Israel.
They should do this now before they waste any more time and lose more land.
Professor Lawrence Davidson
“President” Abbas is a heartily disliked fellow who helped usurp power from the legally elected government of Palestine. The United States under George Bush Jr. helped him do so. Thus, the Abbas’s regime, internally supported by little else than the remnants of Fatah, is now in control of the West Bank and cooperates with the Israeli occupation army. Given such an historical record Abbas cannot “stand for his people in front of the world” except in the propaganda picture painted by his American ally. Abbas’s regime is wholly dependent on U.S. and European money and American weapons and military training.
We can surmise two probable reasons why Abbas is presently sitting at the table with the Israelis: One – the Obama administration has twisted his arm, perhaps by threatening to abandon him if he does not “negotiate.” They probably hope they can pressure him into signing a “peace” deal that no other Palestinian leader would ever touch. What “courage” Abbas has, at least to this point, does not go so far as to stand up to the Americans on whom he is so dependent. Two – the Obama administration has promised him support, whatever that might mean. This same level of dependency means Abbas must conveniently forget history–that such promises coming from Washington have always been worthless.
http://www.intifada-palestine.com/2010/09/president-obamas-ahistorical-world-dr-lawrence-davidson/
Nice to see an article that focuses on what can be done and how people can support Palestinians instead of simply bewailing that much too familiar litany of Israeli outrages.Bottom line, Palestinians have human rights, we ignore their needs in peril of our own.