[NYTr] Abunimah: The show goes on ... and on
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Oct 16 14:06:03 EDT 2007
The Guardian - Oct 16, 2007
http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/ali_abunimah_/2007/10/the_show_goes_on_and_on.html
Comment
The show goes on ... and on
By Ali Abunimah
The "Middle East Peace Process" is like one of those big budget
Broadway extravaganzas; they go on for years, but with each revival the
cast changes. What may seem like a tired production to some
nevertheless manages to remain fresh to the gullible throngs willing to
hand over the price of admission.
Unlike a few hours of theatrical escapism, however, the producers of
the Middle East Peace Process hope that the audience will actually
believe that what they are viewing on stage, whether performed in
Madrid, Oslo, London, Washington or Sharm al-Sheikh is real-life and
even has the potential to end the conflict caused by a century of
western-supported Zionist colonisation in Palestine.
In the latest revival, Condoleezza Rice plays the US secretary of state
determined to bring the long-running conflict to a close with skilful
diplomacy designed to put in a place a "process" eventually leading to
a two-state solution. George Bush, tired of being typecast as a
warmonger, tries on the role of lame-duck president who spent years
enabling Israeli colonisation, but who, with an eye on his legacy, is
now committed to peacefully ending the conflict once and for all.
Other key actors include Mahmoud Abbas, a colourless quisling whose
only power base is the American and Israeli guns that keep him
installed in his Ramallah Green Zone - filling in for the late Yasser
Arafat as leader of the Palestinians, and Ehud Olmert, understudy to
Ariel Sharon who left the stage unexpectedly.
Special guest star Tony Blair, who just completed a long and
controversial run as prime minister of a marginal European power, hopes
that by joining the peace process cast as "Quartet special envoy" he
can breathe life into a flagging career.
Once in a while, reality bursts on to the stage to disrupt the show -
and that has happened again just as the producers are getting ready to
take it on tour to Annapolis, where President Bush plans to hold a
meeting of key leaders some time this autumn.
Last week, just after Abbas's representatives met with Israeli
counterparts to try to hammer out a "declaration of principles" to
unveil at the Annapolis meeting, the Israeli army announced the
expropriation of almost 300 acres of Palestinian land near occupied
East Jerusalem for the purpose of expanding the already massive
Jewish-only settlements which bisect the West Bank and render a
contiguous Palestinian state impossible. Since the peace process began
in 1993, Israel has confiscated an area equivalent to the size of
Washington, DC, for the construction of Jewish-only colonies fully
confident that none of the actors on stage will lift a finger to stop
it.
Rice feigns frustration: "Frankly it is time for the establishment of a
Palestinian state," she said at a press conference with Abbas. "We
frankly have better things to do than invite people" to the Annapolis
meeting "for a photo op". Yet she will be lucky if she even gets that.
Already the meeting date is likely to be pushed back, not only because
of accelerated Israeli colonisation, but because despite the spin there
is no fundamental agreement between the Israelis and Palestinians on
the details of what a two-state solution would look like. As I have
argued elsewhere and in my book, One Country, peace through partition
is an unachievable fantasy.
What's more, none of the players has the credibility or strength to
negotiate on behalf of those whom they purport to represent. Abbas and
his unelected cronies are seen by many Palestinians as petty
collaborators determined to do all they can to retain their place at
the master's table. Despite an overwhelming desire among Palestinians
for unity, Abbas, blackmailed and bribed by the EU and US, refuses to
talk to Hamas to heal the rifts caused by the efforts of Fatah militias
armed and supported by Israel and the US to overturn the results of the
January 2006 election won by Hamas. There can be no serious peace talks
without Hamas on board.
Olmert, who is fending off multiple criminal corruption probes, heads a
coalition that depends for its majority on Jewish racists who cannot
countenance peace and equality with Palestinians under any
circumstances. Last week, Tony Blair met with one of those coalition
leaders, deputy prime minister Avigdor Lieberman who heads the
proto-fascist Israel Beitenu party. According to Ha'aretz, Lieberman
told Blair that any solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict "has
to include Israel's Arab citizens as well, when the basis for an
agreement should be a land swap and a population transfer." In other
words, there can be no peace without the expulsion of over one million
Palestinian citizens of Israel. Lieberman has repeatedly promised to
bring down the government if Olmert even discusses "core issues" at
Annapolis such as borders, settlements and the rights of Palestinian
refugees expelled by Israel.
Ha'aretz did not record Blair's reaction to this renewed call for
ethnic cleansing from a senior Israeli official. (How would Blair have
reacted if Ian Paisley had publicly declared that there could be no
peace in Northern Ireland without the expulsion of all Catholics from
the Six Counties so that Protestant supremacy could be perpetuated?)
But it is a measure of how bankrupt the process is that EU and US
officials meet willingly with avowed ethnic cleansers of Lieberman's
calibre (presumably on the basis that he is elected) and yet refuse to
deal with Hamas, the democratically-elected representatives of
Palestinians under occupation. Hamas leaders have repeatedly offered
Israel a long-term ceasefire and negotiations exactly on the Northern
Ireland model that led to the Belfast Agreement of which Blair is so
proud.
Blair is apparently unable to understand that what ended the conflict
in Northern Ireland was not his charm, but the acceptance by all
parties of the fundamental principle of equality among all people
regardless of ethno-religious identity and the progressive reform of
state institutions, like the police, that had been nothing more than
sectarian militias in official uniforms, just as the Israeli police and
army that steal land for Jews are nothing more than thuggish sectarian
militias with uniforms.
In Palestine-Israel, this means abrogating all laws in Israel that
systematically privilege Jews and harm non-Jewish citizens, ending
Israel's military tyranny in the Occupied Territories, and allowing
refugees to return home. Nothing like that will be on the agenda in
Annapolis which is why the effort will fail.
[Ali Abunimah is co-founder of The Electronic Intifada and author of
"One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse."]
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