Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
Israeli-US Cornering of Abbas, the Brave
Palestinian Man of Peace
By Nicola Nasser
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 14, 2014
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas stands now at a crossroads
of his people’s national struggle for liberation and independence as well as
of his political life career, cornered between the rock of his own rejecting
constituency and the hard place of the Israeli occupying power and the US
sponsors of their bilateral negotiations, which were resumed last July 29,
despite his minesweeping concessions and backtracking “on all his redlines.”
Unmercifully pressured by both Israeli negotiators and American
mediators, the elusive cause of peace stands about to loose in Abbas a brave
Palestinian man of peace-making of an historical stature whose demise would
squander what could be the last opportunity for the so-called two-state
solution. To continue pressuring Abbas into yielding more
concessions without any reciprocal rewards is turning a brave man into an
adventurer committing historical and strategic mistakes in the eyes of his
people, a trend that if continued would in no time disqualify him of a
personal weight that is a prerequisite to make his people accept his
“painful” concessions. The emerging, heavily “pro-Israel”
US-proposed framework agreement “appears to ask the Palestinians to accept
peace terms that are worse than the Israeli ones they already rejected …
that it would all but compel the Palestinians to reject it,” Larry Derfner
wrote in The National Interest on this February 3. Abbas “rejects
all transitional, partial and temporary solutions,” his spokesman Nabil Abu
Rdaineh said on last January 5, but that’s exactly what the leaks of the
blueprint of the “framework agreement” reveal. Reportedly, the
international Quartet on the Middle East, comprising the US, EU, UN and
Russia, meeting on the sidelines of the Munich security conference last
week, supported US Secretary of State John Kerry’s efforts to commit
Palestinian and Israeli negotiators to his proposed “framework agreement.”
Europe is also tightening the rope around Abbas’ neck. If the current
US-backed framework agreement talks with Israel fail, Europe will not
automatically continue to support the Palestinian Authority,
Israel’s Walla website reported on last January 29. However, The US
envoy Martyn Indyk said on last January 31 that Kerry will be proposing the
“framework agreement” to the Palestinian and Israeli negotiators “within a
few weeks,” but the State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki on the same day
“clarified” in a statement that the “contents of the framework” are not
“final” because “this is an ongoing process and these decisions have not yet
been made.” Historic versus Political Decisions Israeli
President Shimon Peres on last January 30, during a joint press conference
with the envoy of the Middle East Quartet, Tony Blair, said that there is
“an opportunity” now to make “historic decisions, not political ones” for
the “two-state solution” of the Arab – Israeli conflict and that “we are
facing the most crucial time since the establishment of the new Middle East
in 1948,” i.e. since what the Israeli historian Ilan Pappé called the
“ethnic cleaning” of the Arabs of Palestine and the creation of Israel on
their ancestral land. Peres on the same occasion said that he was
“convinced” that Abbas wants “seriously” to make peace with Israel, but what
Peres failed to note was that “historic decisions” are made by historic
leaders and that such a leader is still missing in Israel since the
assassination of late former premier Yitzhak Rabin in 1995, but already
available in the person of President Abbas, whom Peres had more than once
confirmed as the Palestinian peace “partner,” defying his country’s official
denial of the existence of such a partner on the Palestinian side.
Abbas’ more than two – decade unwavering commitment to peace, negotiations,
renunciation of violence and the two –state solution has earned him a
semi-consensus rejection and opposition to his fruitless efforts among his
own people. He is defying his own Fatah-led Palestinian Liberation
Organization (PLO) constituency, let alone his Hamas-led non-PLO political
rivals, who have opposed his decision to resume bilateral negotiations with
Israel and are overwhelmingly rejecting the leaked components of Kerry’s
“framework agreement.” “Abbas is perhaps the last Palestinian leader
today with some measure of faith in the diplomatic process,” Elhanan Miller,
wrote in The Times of Israel this February 3. Palestinian “pressure” is
mounting on him even from members of his own Fatah party and
“his negotiating team crumbled” when negotiator Mohammed Shtayyeh resigned
in November last year. In an interview recorded especially for the
conference of Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies in the
previous week, Abbas “indicated he may not be able to withstand the pressure
much longer,” Miller wrote. “Abbas is in an unenviable position
these days. As negotiations with Israel enter the final third of their
nine-month time frame,” the Palestinian president stands “cornered” between
a Palestinian rejection “and an Israeli leadership bent on depicting him as
an uncompromising extremist,” according to Miller, who quoted the Israeli
Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz as describing Abbas in the previous
week as “the foremost purveyor of anti-Semitic and anti-Israeli venom.”
Similar Israeli “political” demonization of an historic figure like Abbas
led Jamie Stern-Weiner, of the New Left Project, writing in GlobalResearch
online on last January 11, to expect that, “It’s possible that Abbas will
get a bullet in his head!” Jamie was not taking things too far in view of
Kerry’s warning, reported by Palestinian Authority (PA) officials, that
Abbas could face the fate of his predecessor Yasser Arafat. Israel’s
chief negotiator, Tzipi Livni, stated on last January 25 that Abbas’
positions are “unacceptable to us” and threatened the Palestinians “to pay
the price” if he sticks to them. “This is a clear threat to Abbas in
person and it must be taken seriously," the PA Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki
told reporters soon after. “We will distribute Livni's statements to all
foreign ministers and the international community. We can't remain silent
towards these threats,” he added. Israeli demonization was not
confined to Abbas; it hit also at Kerry as “hurtful,” “unfair,”
“intolerable,” “obsessive,” “messianic” and expects Israel “to negotiate
with a gun to its head.” US National Security Adviser Susan Rice “tweeted”
in response to convey, according to Haaretz on this February 5, that
“Israeli insulters have crossed the red line of diplomatic etiquette!”
Minesweeping Concessions Abbas’ demonization was the Israeli reward
for the minesweeping concessions he had already made to make the resumed
negotiations a success, risking a growing semi-consensus opposition at home:
* Abbas had backtracked on his own previously proclaimed precondition
for the resumption of bilateral negotiations with Israel, namely freezing
the accelerating expansion of the illegal Israeli Jewish settlements in the
Palestinian territories, which Israel militarily occupied in 1967, at least
temporarily during the resumed negotiations. * Thereafter,
according to Tzvi Ben-Gedalyahu, writing in The Jewish Press on this
February 3, Abbas “has essentially backtracked on all his redlines, except
for” heeding Israel’s insistence on recognizing it as a “Jewish state,”
which is a new Israeli unilaterally demanded precondition that even the
Jordanian Foreign Minister, Nasser Judeh, considered “unacceptable” on this
February 2 despite his country’s peace treaty with Israel. * In his
interview with The New York Times on this February 2, Abbas reiterated his
repeated pledge not to allow a third Intifada, or uprising: “In my life, and
if I have any more life in the future, I will never return to the armed
struggle,” he said, thus voluntarily depriving himself from a successfully
tested source of a negotiating power and a legitimate instrument of
resisting foreign military occupation ordained by the international law and
the UN charter. * In the same interview he yielded to the Israeli
precondition of “demilitarizing” any future state of Palestine, thus
compromising the sovereignty of such a state beforehand. Ignoring the facts
that Israel is a nuclear power, a state of weapons of mass destruction, the
regional military superpower and the world’s forth military exporter, he
asked: “Do you think we have any illusion that we can have any security if
the Israelis do not feel they have security?” * Further compromising
the sovereignty of any future state of Palestine, Abbas, according to the
Times interview, has proposed to US Secretary Kerry that an American-led
NATO force, not a UN force, patrol a future Palestinian state “indefinitely,
with troops positioned throughout the territory, at all crossings, and
within Jerusalem;” he seemed insensitive to the fact that his people would
see such a force with such a mandate as merely the Israeli Occupation Forces
(IOF) operating under the NATO flag and in its uniforms. * Abbas
even agreed that the IOF “could remain in the West Bank for up to five
years” -- and not three as he had recently stated – provided that “Jewish
settlements” are “phased out of the new Palestinian state along a similar
timetable.” * Not all “Jewish settlements” however. Very well aware
of international law, which prohibits the transfer of people by an occupying
power like Israel from or to the occupied territories, Abbas nonetheless had
early enough accepted the principle of proportional land swapping whereby
the major colonial settlements, mainly within Greater Jerusalem borders,
which are home to some eighty percent of more than half a million illegal
Jewish settlers in the West Bank, would be annexed to Israel. This
concession is tantamount to accepting the division of the West Bank between
its Palestinian citizens and its illegal settlers. * Yet, what Abbas
had described as the “historic,” “very difficult,” “courageous” and
“painful” concession Palestinians had already made dates back very much
earlier, when the Palestine National Council adopted in 1988 the Declaration
of Independence, which was based on the United Nations General Assembly
(UNGA) resolution No. 181 (II) of 29 November 1947; then “we agreed to
establish the State of Palestine on only 22% of the territory of historical
Palestine - on all the Palestinian Territory occupied by Israel in 1967,” he
told the UNGA in September 2011. * Accordingly, Abbas repeatedly
voices his commitment to the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, which stipules an
“agreed upon” solution of the “problem” of the 1948 Palestinian refugees.
Israel is on record that the return of these refugees to their homes
according to the UNGA resolution No. 194 (III) of December 11, 1948 is a
non-negotiable redline, thus rendering any such “agreed upon” solution a
mission impossible. Abbas concession to such a solution is in fact
compromising the inalienable rights of more than half of the Palestinian
population. On September 29, 2012, Abbas “once again” repeated
“our warning” to the UNGA: “The window of opportunity is narrowing and time
is quickly running out. The rope of patience is shortening and hope is
withering.” Out of Conviction, Not out of Options Abbas is
making concessions unacceptable to his people out of deep conviction in
peace and unwavering commitment to peaceful negotiations and not because he
is out of options. One of his options was reported in an interview
with The New York Times on this February 2, when Abbas said that he had been
“resisting pressure” from the Palestinian street and leadership to join the
United Nations agencies for which his staff “had presented 63 applications
ready for his signature.” In 2012 the UNGA recognized Palestine as
an observer non-member state; reapplying for the recognition of Palestine as
a member state is another option postponed by Abbas to give the resumed
negotiations with Israel a chance. Reconciliation with Hamas in the
Gaza Strip is a third option that Abbas has been maneuvering not to make
since 2005 in order not to alienate Israel and the US away from peace talks
because they condemn it as a terrorist organization. Suspension of
the security coordination with Israel is also a possible option, which his
predecessor Arafat used to test now and then. Looking for other
players to join the US in co-sponsoring the peace talks with Israel is an
option that Abbas made clear in his latest visit to Moscow. “We would like
other parties, such as Russia, the European Union, China and UN, to play an
influential role in these talks,” the Voice of Russia quoted him as saying
on last January 24. Israel’s DEBKAfile in an exclusive report on
last January 24 considered his Moscow visit an “exit from the Kerry peace
initiative,” labeling it a “diplomatic Intifada” and a “defection” that
caught Kerry and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu “unprepared.”
Abbas’ representative Jibril al-Rjoub on January 27 was in the Iranian
capital Tehran for the first time in many years. “Our openness to Iran is a
Palestinian interest and part of our strategy to open to the whole world,”
al-Rjoub said. Three days later the London-based Al-Quds al-Arabi daily
reported that Abbas will be invited to visit Iran soon with the aim of
“rehabilitating” the bilateral ties. The Central committee of Fatah, which
Abbas leads, on this February 3 said that al-Rjoub’s Tehran visit “comes in
line with maintaining international relations in favor of the high interests
of our people and the Palestinian cause.” Opening up to erstwhile
“hostile” nations like Iran and Syria is more likely a tactical maneuvering
than a strategic shift by Abbas, meant to send the message that all Abbas’
options are open. However his strategic option would undeniably be
to honor his previous repeated threats of resignation, to leave the Israeli
Occupation Forces to fend for themselves face to face with the Palestinian
people whose status quo is no more sustainable. Speaking in Munich,
Germany, Kerry on this February 1 conveyed the message bluntly:
“Today’s status quo, absolutely to a certainty, I promise you 100
percent, cannot be maintained,” Kerry said of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. “It is not sustainable.” Last November, Kerry warned that Israel
would face a
Palestinian "third Intifada" if his sponsored talks see no breakthrough.
The loss of Abbas by resignation or by nature would for sure end
Kerry’s peace mission and make his warning come true. * Nicola
Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the
Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
[email protected]
|
|
|