Rice's Final Visit to Israel and Palestine:
Neocons Achieved Nothing, Could Offer Nothing
By Khaled Amayreh
xpis.ps, November 16, 2008
Valedictory hot air
The 24th visit of
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to Palestine-Israel this week
didn't differ much from her previous visits, especially in substance.
Rice, who held meetings with Israeli and Palestinian Authority (PA)
officials, followed by joint press conferences in both West Jerusalem
and Ramallah, essentially regurgitated the same platitudes and false
promises she voiced ever since she assumed the top diplomatic post
nearly four years ago.
Finding virtually nothing to clutch to in
terms of hard achievements in the so- called peace process, Rice put a
brave face on her apparent colossal failure to get Israel to end its
decades-old occupation of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip.
She told PA President Mahmoud Abbas, who seemed to be coming to terms
with the inanity of the process, that the near end of the Bush
administration didn't mean the end of prospects for peace. She added
that she would brief the upcoming Obama administration on the status of
Israeli-Palestinian talks so that the new administration wouldn't have
to start from scratch.
Commenting on the "failure of the sides"
to reach a breakthrough, despite high-level international involvement
and several high-profile peace conferences in the US and Europe as well
as the Middle East, Rice claimed that Israel and the PA were now "closer
to reaching peace than ever before". Some of Rice's Palestinian hosts
and interlocutors couldn't hide their frustration. One official close to
chief Palestinian negotiator Ahmed Qurei remarked: "This woman is just
giving out another dose of lies."
"She may think that we believe
her lies; otherwise, what makes her utter the same lies every time she
comes here?" the man added. The Palestinian official was not merely
voicing his own opinion, but reflecting widespread disillusionment with
Rice's fruitless visits and unfulfilled promises.
Rice
repeatedly promised the PA leadership that the US would see to it that
Israel put an end to settlement expansion in the West Bank, relax its
often draconian restrictions on Palestinian freedom of movement,
removing most, or all, of the estimated 600 military roadblocks
paralysing the Palestinian economy and seriously disrupting Palestinian
life.
Giving Rice the benefit of the doubt, as usual, Abbas
said he would continue to honour "our commitments under the roadmap".
The PA has been unilaterally honouring the Quartet-backed roadmap
by arresting and persecuting Hamas supporters, closing Hamas-affiliated
institutions and establishing an unprecedented close cooperation -- even
collusion -- between the Israeli occupation army and PA security forces
against the "common enemy", which is Hamas. Far from reciprocating PA
measures against Hamas, Israel kept expanding settlements while giving
Nazi- like Jewish settlers virtually free rein to terrorise Palestinians
and vandalise their property, including the olive harvest.
As
for Rice, all she could do was to heap praise on the PA leadership for
"doing the right thing", arguing that the more the PA displayed its
ability to "impose security", the closer Palestinians would be to
creating a democratic state.
Rice seems to live in a world of
her own. In a recent interview with the BBC, Rice said she believed that
the Middle East was a better place for the policies of President Bush,
adding that the US had helped advance the cause of freedom. "The Middle
East is a different place and a better place." Asked to assess the
outgoing US administration's legacy, Rice said she was "especially proud
of the situation in the Palestinian territories".
Proud? In
2006, during the Israeli war on Lebanon, Rice reacted to the widespread
destruction wreaked on Lebanese population centres, including the
dropping by the Israeli air force of 2-3 million cluster bomblets,
enough to kill or maim 2-3 million children, by saying that "Israel has
the right to defend itself". She described the annihilation and maiming
of thousands of Lebanese civilians as representing "the birth pangs of a
new Middle East".
With nothing to report on the status of the
peace process, save the usual babble about "staying the course", and
that "the Palestinian state is around the corner," Rice travelled to
Jenin in the northern West Bank to be briefed by PA security chiefs on
how they succeeded in "re- establishing law and order".
Further,
Rice told her Palestinian hosts there, including US-favoured Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad, that the Palestinian state wouldn't see the light
unless the Palestinians built "strong democratic institutions". She
dutifully ignored the fact that it was the US that sought -- and
continues to seek -- to overthrow the only truly democratically-elected
government in 2006 by enlisting, arming and financing local Palestinian
agents to ignite civil war.
Moreover, Rice reiterated the same
old rhetoric about the American people wanting to see the Palestinians
living in a state with defined borders.
"I have decided to visit
Jenin because it is the first Palestinian town in which Fayyad was able
to achieve security and economic reforms, with international
assistance," she said. Tellingly, Jenin remains one of the most -- if
not the most -- impoverished Palestinian towns, mainly due to the
restrictive measures of the Israeli occupation.
Fayyad, who was
speaking during a joint press conference with Rice at the local hospital
in Jenin, described Rice's visit as "historic". He also heaped praise on
the Bush administration for helping the Palestinian people, ignoring the
scandalous embrace by the Bush government of the most extremist policies
of the Israeli government, including settlement expansion, the building
of the annexation wall, and the continued Judaisation of East Jerusalem.
Fayyad's pro-American stance, especially his preoccupation with
economic advancement rather than achieving freedom for his people from
the sinister shackles of Zionism, doesn't seem to be shared by the vast
majority of Palestinians, including Fatah supporters.
Meanwhile,
the election of the Democratic candidate Barack Obama as president on 4
November was received well throughout the occupied Palestinian
territories. The sigh of relief, which was conspicuous in some
Palestinian quarters, didn't reflect any amount of love of Obama
(especially after his decision to appoint a Zionist extremist, Rahm
Emanuel, as chief of staff of the White House), rather it reflected a
certain "good riddance" sentiment vis-à-vis the Bush administration.
Even Hamas, which is normally distrustful of anything American,
welcomed the election of Obama, calling on the president-elect to show
honesty and even- handedness in his policy in the Middle East.
Whether Obama will exercise honesty and even-handedness towards the
Palestinians remains to be seen. Many Palestinians are reluctant to give
any US president the benefit of the doubt.
"All I can say now is
that I hope and pray that we won't miss Bush. We simply can't take
anything for granted, even with Obama," said one elderly Palestinian
following Obama's victory.
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