by Prof. Efraim Inbar
Abbas sent a letter to Kerry reiterating his complete opposition to the demand to recognize "Israel as a Jewish state". This was declared a "red line" the Palestinians would not cross.
Thanks to Sefton Bergson for bringing this article to my attention.
The media reported that
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas rejected the peace
proposals submitted by U.S. Secretary John Kerry. The Palestinians
leaked that Abbas sent a letter to Kerry reiterating his complete
opposition to the demand to recognize "Israel as a Jewish state." This
was declared a "red line" the Palestinians would not cross.
This "red line" is not
just about semantics, but the essence of the conflict. The Palestinian
position amounts to denying the Jews the right to establish their state
in their homeland. It also indicates without any doubt that the
Palestinians, despite the conventional wisdom, are not ripe for reaching
a historic compromise with Zionism, the Jewish national revival
movement. A stable peace based on mutual recognition and ending all
demands is not in the cards. The weak PA seems to accept partition of
Mandatory Palestine into two states (perhaps in accordance with the
stages approach championed by the Palestine Liberation Organization),
but it still refrains from accepting the legitimacy of the Zionist
enterprise.
This is in stark
contrast to Israel, which recognized the "legitimate rights of the
Palestinians" back at the September 1978 Camp David Accords, and which
is ready for generous territorial concessions in order to implement a
partition of the Land of Israel/Palestine. The bitter truth is that the
asymmetry in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has not changed for over a
century. In essence, this ethno-religious conflict is not about
territory, although it obviously has a territorial dimension, but about
securing the recognition of the other side to national rights in a given
territory.
Despite the image of
untrustworthiness, Palestinians give great importance to the language
used in the documents they are asked to sign. Yasser Arafat, generally
viewed by most Israelis as an accomplished liar, refused to sign an
agreement in 2000 that included a clause about an end to all demands.
For him the conflict could end only by the eventual demise of Israel.
Similarly, Abbas cannot bring himself to put his signature to a document
which says that the Jews have returned to their homeland. We know that
the perception of Jews being foreign invaders of Palestine is a
fundamental widespread Palestinian attitude, which is instilled in the
younger generations in the PA-run schools.
The entrenchment of
such attitudes is clear also by the lack of a debate among the
Palestinians whether to recognize Israel as a Jewish state. Discussing
Jewish rights to the Land of Israel is not conceivable in the current
intra-Palestinian deliberations. Not even the so-called Palestinian
moderates are calling for a debate among the Palestinians on whether to
recognize the right of self-determination of the Jews in their historic
homeland. Polls of Palestinians do not ask whether Israel should be
recognized as a Jewish state. Normative language mentioning rights and
international norms in Palestinian discourse is reserved for Palestinian
demands only and is never applied in an attempt to understand what
Israelis want.
The efforts of the
Palestinian media to negate the Jewish past and historic links to the
Temple Mount and even the Western Wall all indicate the ideological
commitment to rewrite history. Palestinian archaeology is similarly used
to erase all traces of Jewish presence from the land. Even Koranic
sources mentioning the links of the Jews to the Land of Israel are
ignored. Such Palestinian behavior serves only to prolong the conflict
because it does not teach the Palestinians that Jews are part of the
history of this land. All these acts are intolerable and must stop
before Israel considers signing a comprehensive peace agreement.
It was a mistake not to
insist on recognition of Israel being a Jewish state in the
negotiations with the Palestinians in the 1990s. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu understands well the need for such recognition on the part of
the Palestinians to ensure a historic peace deal and his insistence on
getting it in the framework of a comprehensive settlement is right on
the mark.
Moreover, Palestinians
are different than Egyptians or Jordanians that were not required to
accept Israel as a Jewish state. They have no claims to Palestine, while
it is the Palestinians and the Israelis who fight for the same piece of
land. Since the Israelis recognized Palestinian legitimate rights 35
years ago, it is high time for the Palestinians to learn about the
"other" with whom they are in conflict, and reciprocate if they are
serious about peacemaking.
Professor Efraim Inbar is a
professor of political studies at Bar-Ilan University, director of the
Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies and a fellow at the Middle East
Forum.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=6685
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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