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Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University -
Ran HaCohen
(Dept of Comparative Literature)
Conveniently Forgets Arab Terror When He Scoffs About Israeli
Security Concerns
http://www.antiwar.com/hacohen/?articleid=13362
Occupation by Another Name
by Ran HaCohen
August 27, 2008
Meron Benvenisti in an
excellent article mentions the "success of the propaganda
campaign known as 'negotiations with the Palestinians,' which
convinces many that the status quo is temporary." There's indeed no
better way to describe the ongoing talks between the two politicians
living on borrowed time – Ehud Olmert and Mahmoud Abbas – than as a
pastime orchestrated by the Bush administration. In the past, peace
talks were supposed to lead to a peace agreement, which would in
turn lead to peace; now, not even that little is assumed. What the
negotiations are expected to yield is at best a "shelf agreement" to
be implemented at some vague point in the future, or not. No one
believes such an agreement can be reached, as agreed, by the end of
this year, but even the shelf doesn't really care.
But the show must go on. Last week the papers
announced a great leap forward: Olmert's Israel has submitted a
detailed proposal for the final status. In true negotiations, one
could have said: Now we know what Israel wants. This is not the
case, since everybody knows Prime Minister Olmert is no longer
relevant. So what's the value of the proposal? We don't really know
what Israel wants, but at least we can see what Israel is willing to
say.
This is an important issue in Israeli political
discourse. During the last one-and-a-half decades, this has been a
central point of controversy between the Zionist left and the
radical left. Any honest person has to admit that nothing changed on
the ground, at least not for the better: the occupation, supposed to
be ending since 1993, has been worsening all the time, with the
illegal Israeli settlements growing like a fatal tumor. The radical
left sees this as evidence that Israel has no intention to end the
occupation. The Zionist left, however, has another argument: "Listen
to the way they talk." West Bank and Gaza realities are indeed worse
than ever, but, claims the Zionist left, now even the Israeli
mainstream openly talks about a Palestinian state, and words will
inevitably become deeds – if we just support those good guys who
keep entrenching the occupation while saying they want to end it
(Rabin, Peres, Barak, etc. – even Sharon, who was wise enough to
join the club).
The New, Generous Offer
So let's see what official Israel is ready to
say – not do – these days. The final-status proposal, according to
Ha'aretz, includes the following points:
Now this doesn't sound all too attractive, not
even as a "shelf agreement." Jerusalem is a core issue that hasn't
even been dealt with. Furthermore, as Ha'aretz explains, "Olmert's
proposal for a land swap introduces a new stage in the arrangement:
Israel would immediately receive the settlement blocs, but the land
to be transferred to the Palestinians and the free passage between
Gaza and the West Bank would only be delivered after the PA retakes
control of the Gaza Strip" (emphasis mine). The chances that the PA
ever retakes control of the Gaza Strip are perhaps lower than that
of Hamas taking control of the West Bank, but this only makes the
proposal more attractive for Israel: we take the goods now, but we
pay only after the Messiah comes.
Ha'aretz chooses to include an inevitable
propaganda item in the otherwise informative report: "Over the past
few months, Olmert has approved construction of thousands of housing
units in these settlement blocs, mostly around Jerusalem, and some
are intended for the voluntary evacuees." As always, Israel is
breaching international law and is
building more houses in the illegal settlements – but it is
doing so with only one thing in mind: peace. For sure, the best way
to end the occupation is to build thousands of new Israeli houses in
occupied land. Their construction is (yet more) evidence of Israel's
deep commitment to peace.
Why This Eternal Pessimism?
But still, one may argue, still. Of course
Olmert's proposal will never be implemented. Of course it's
incomplete, dubious, and definitely not generous. But still: Israel
is ready to pledge openly its commitment to the idea a Palestinian
state on 93 percent of the West Bank, plus a 5.5 percent land swap.
Doesn't it mean that Israel finally admits the occupation's days are
numbered? Even one MK for the right-wing Likud Party consequently
accused Kadima of advancing the worldview of the Zionist left: "Any
[left-wing] Meretz faction member could have signed on to Olmert's
proposal." Is there any better evidence for a good proposal than the
attacks from the right wing?
"Security Arrangements"
Not quite. As the report in Ha'aretz very
briefly mentions, "Israel also presented the Palestinians with a
detailed model of new security arrangements under the proposed
agreement." At first, no details were given. Why spoil the peace
party with small technical details? The initial report only
mentioned a demand that the Palestinian state be demilitarized and
without an army, a demand that the Palestinians accept, more or
less. But obviously, the next day the Palestinians were reported to
have rejected Olmert's proposal as "unserious," in full accordance
with the Israeli misconception about the alleged "Palestinian
rejectionism" from 1947 to this day.
One had to wait a couple of weeks to find out
what those unnamed "security arrangements" really meant. Tuesday,
Ha'aretz
reported that "the Palestinians oppose any Israeli military
presence in the territory of a future Palestinian state." Once
again, then, those unreasonable Palestinian demands: why must they
insist on an independent state without an Israeli army presence?!
Surely they know that Israeli soldiers are cute 18-year-old kids who
never do any harm. But that's not the end of it: the report also
states that "For its part, Israel would like to supervise border
crossings, maintain a limited deployment in the Jordan Valley,
continue overflights of the Palestinian territory, maintain early
warning stations on mountain ridges, and hold emergency response
units in Palestinian areas."
Oh, so that's what Israel means by a "two-state
solution": An "independent" "Palestinian" "state" with Israeli
supervision on its borders crossings, full of Israeli soldiers,
Israeli jets, Israeli military stations – and, of course, Israel's
right to send even more soldiers into it in "times of emergency."
Shall we – to expose Israel's true face – suggest mutuality? How
about Palestinian control on Israel's border crossings, a
Palestinian military presence along Israel's Mediterranean coast,
Palestinian jets free to fly over Tel Aviv and Dimona, Palestinian
military stations in Haifa and Ramat Yishay, and Palestinian
emergency response units in Israeli areas? Obviously, such "security
arrangements" are completely incompatible with a sovereign,
independent state.
The Israeli proposal – as its "security
arrangements" reveal – proves once again that Israel is no partner
for peace. On the ground, all that Israel seeks is time to expand
the settlements and strangle Palestinian society, hoping the
"Palestinian problem" will eventually disappear. On the discourse
level, however, things are just as bad. Despite the false contrary
impression cultivated by the Israeli propaganda machine, Israel
clearly rejects the notion of an independent Palestinian state,
other than a Bantustan under total Israeli control. If you wonder
why the Israeli-Palestinian conflict remains unresolved, this is the
simple answer: the two-state solution, proposed by the UN 60 years
ago and endorsed by the Palestinians 20 years ago, is still
unacceptable to Israel's military and political leadership.
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