by David M. Weinberg
The
Palestinian bid to have the United Nations recognize a unilateral
declaration of Palestinian statehood (upgrading Palestine to a
“nonmember state” at the U.N., probably Thursday) should be subject to a
simple litmus test: Does it bring the two sides any closer to peace?
Unfortunately, the Palestinian leadership’s effort to circumvent direct
negotiations and obtain statehood recognition without coordination with
Israel is a setback for the cause of peace.
The simple fact is that
Palestinian statehood without peace is a recipe for permanent conflict.
A unilateral declaration of independence essentially disconnects the
objective of peace from the obtainment of Palestinian statehood. This is
not simply a new tactic on the part of the Palestinian leadership. It
is an effort to turn the established framework for peace upside-down; to
grab a prize (statehood) without having to compromise (with Israel); to
claim the end result of the much ballyhooed “Middle East peace process”
without having to engage in any process.
Until today, the world
understood that Palestinian statehood could be feasible, and acceptable
to Israel, if it was the result of a peace accord with Israel that
settled all claims in the conflict. The current reckless gambit,
however, ensures that Palestinian statehood will only sharpen conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians, and do so with Israel placed at a
disadvantage.
That, of course, is
exactly Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ purpose: To
ratchet up the conflict. To escalate the Palestinian struggle against
Israel. He is essentially threatening us with legal and political
warfare, that could very well slide into actual conflict. He is,
essentially, threatening us with war.
Abbas stood before the
U.N. General Assembly in September, as if he were appearing before the
International Criminal Court, and argued that Israel is guilty of
numerous crimes, including ethnic cleansing, terrorism, racism, inciting
religious conflict, apartheid, house demolitions, dispossession,
imprisoning “soldiers of freedom,” war, occupation, settlement
colonization, peace obstructionism and much more. These are all exact
quotes. Israel is preparing a new “nakba” (catastrophe) for the
Palestinians, he charged.
Consequently, Abbas
declared, the international community must “compel the government of
Israel to respect the Geneva Conventions” and “impose a solution” (a
Palestinian state) on Israel.
Like the letter that
Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad sent to Prime Minister Netanyahu
in April, Abbas’ text mixes fact with fiction, is maximalist and
threatening, and indicates no real desire to negotiate with Israel or
make true peace with Israel — only to place Israel in the international
dock of criminality.
The April letter and
September speech also clearly outline the bogus diplomatic history on
which the PA is basing itself and its strategy going forward. The
language used is manipulatively taken directly from the texts and
discourse of international law. The PA “seeks the full and complete
implementation of international law” to criminalize and penalize
Israel’s presence “as an occupying power in all of the occupied
Palestinian territory.”
The International
Criminal Court is getting ready to play along with the PA’s strategy.
The ICC’s new prosecutor, the Gambian-born Fatou Bensouda, has said that
“if Palestine is able to pass over the hurdle of statehood (by U.N.
General Assembly recognition as a nonmember state), we will revisit what
the ICC can do” about prosecuting Israel for war crimes against the
Palestinians. The ICC, she said, will not need to wait for another
Palestinian request to begin investigating Israel. (In other words, the
original 2009 Palestinian Authority request to join the Rome Statute is
enough to give the ICC jurisdiction to investigate the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict at its discretion.)
So Abbas is spitting in
Israel’s face and rejecting the very foundations of the only-realistic,
internationally-recognized, pathway to peace: Negotiations with Israel
that settle the conflict and lead perhaps to Palestinian statehood on
terms acceptable to Israel. It is simply scandalous that France,
Britain, Spain and others are lending a hand to Abbas’ reckless and
destructive attack on Israel and the peace process.
In taking this route,
Abbas is, of course, conveniently ignoring the historical record: That
former Israeli prime ministers Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert generously
offered the Palestine Liberation Organization a state on 100 percent of
Gaza and on more than 90 percent of the West Bank with additional land
swaps inside the Green Line — and this was rejected by PA leaders.
Abbas’ treacherous
maneuver also seeks to obscure that plain fact that the PA is far from
being ready for or deserving of statehood. Palestinians are irreparably
split between the Hamas terrorist regime that controls Gaza and the
Fatah-led PA which controls the West Bank. The PA itself has been a
nasty, irresponsible and hostile neighbor to Israel, unwilling to take
responsibility for, or cooperate with Israel in so many vital civilian
areas, from water and waste management to the sharing and development of
archaeological/religious sites. It also is an “authority” that uses
anti-Semitic television broadcasts and official events to demonize
Israel.
There is absolutely no
indication that if the PA becomes a “state” it will be any more
neighborly to Israel. Just the opposite is true; it will become
ever-more belligerent. In such a situation, how dare the international
community foist this new, warlike “state” upon Israel?!
Ramallah’s current path
could very well lead to violence, further empowerment of extremists, or
even the PA’s demise. What is needed to avoid this is a renewed
multilateral effort to the proven combination of state-building,
security cooperation and direct negotiations without preconditions.
The international
community should be encouraging the Fatah leadership to favor concrete
gains on the ground over symbolic, questionable and dangerous gains in
the international arena. In short, responsible Western leaders should be
dragging Abbas down from his rancorous perch high up in the trees of
Ramallah, and voting down tomorrow’s proposal at the U.N.
David M. Weinberg
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=2965
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
The two state solution or concept is not on the mind of most Israelis and the reason for this is clear. The citizens of Israel woke up to the nightmare that their partner in peace is dangerous and for the first time, became aware that PLO leader Mahmoud Abbas and his terrorist organization Hamas aspire to inflict death and destruction on the people of Israel. The Israelis observed his congratulatory remarks to the leader of Hamas after the eight day conflict and this will further push the Israeli public farther right of center. Dr. Ron Breiman professor writes the following: “The public isn't becoming more extreme, it is merely sobering up to reality”.
Now that reality has taken root in the minds of most Israelis, how will the government of Israel handle Abbas attempt to push the UN General Assembly into accepting Palestine as a state? Will Israel cancel the Oslo Accords if the United Nation General Assembly upgrades Palestine as a non-member observer status? It would be a grave mistake if Israel did nothing at all or partially cancelled the accords. Israel must take a courageous stand and cancel the agreement completely and show the world that they honor their agreements.
Let us hope that this time, Israel will demonstrate courage and do the right thing regardless of what the world thinks. Decades ago, the international community once looked at Israel as a fierce lion, young, brave and determined to do what is in the best interest of her people. Now is the time for the government of Israel to take a stand and let the world know that the Palestinian resolution is a clear breach of the underlying principle of negotiations.
“Be careful not to make a treaty with those who live in the land where you are going, or they will be a snare among you”. Exodus 34:12
Abraham Santiago
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