Mahmoud Abbas: A Man of Peace Swimming Against the Current
By Nicola Nasser
ccun.org, September 22, 2008
For the first time, since the U.S.-hosted Annapolis conference on
November 27 last year re-launched the Palestinian – Israeli
negotiations, which were interrupted by the Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000
after the collapse of the Camp David trilateral summit, Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas came out for the first time on record in Cairo
on September 6 to "doubt" striking a peace deal with Israel "by the end
of the year because very little time is left;" on September 10 he
reiterated his skepticism in an interview with the Israeli daily Haaretz.
Accordingly he dispelled U.S. President George W. Bush's pledge to reach
such a deal before his term ends and at the same time practically
announced that peace talks have now been frozen for at least a year by
the government changes in Washington and Tel Aviv. Abbas was reportedly
scheduled to hold his last meeting with the Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud
Olmert, in Jerusalem on September 16, one day before Kadima, Olmert's
ruling party elects his successor, ahead of his scheduled meeting with
U.S. President George W. Bush at the White House on September 25. It
seems all the partners to the Annapolis process are trying to strike a
last minute impossible deal or simply saying good by to each other.
Nonetheless Abbas shows all evidence that he is determined to swim
against an overwhelming current to prove that he is the persistent
unrelenting Palestinian partner who will never despair in his pursuit of
peace, even he would pay the price with his own life, despite all the
internal and external odds, nor will he be deterred by the undelivered
U.S. promises to loose trust in Washington.
On September 10 he told Haaretz that, "Even today, I'm convinced that I
would have signed the Oslo Accords. I risked my life for peace and if I
have to pay for it with my life, that's a negligible price. I don't
regret the Oslo Accords. Twenty years before the agreement I believed in
peace with the Israelis, and I still believe in it."
He is still desperately determined to remain committed to his "strategic
option" of a negotiated peace deal with Israel in pursuit of a life-long
hope that would make or break his political career as well as a
Palestinian leadership team, led by him, that has bet everything on a
mirage-like U.S. promises to deliver a Palestinian state on the part of
historic Palestine which Israel occupied in 1967, although Bush's
pledges to former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on April 14, 2004
have so far proved much more stronger strategic commitments than the
U.S. vague promises to Palestinians, and despite the fact that the
overall Israeli policy and every single tactic of that policy indicate a
strategy that clashes head-to-head with the minimum Palestinian national
aspiration for an independent, viable and contiguous state as the basis
for a just and lasting peace.
Not deterred by all indications to the contrary, his determination, it
seems, would never loose hope to agree with those, like King Abdullah II
of Jordan, who believe that the Annapolis opportunity was the last
chance for the Palestinian – Israeli peace process to deliver. He is
determined too not to be held responsible for any collapse of the peace
talks; therefore he ignores Israeli non-commitment and clings to his own
commitments to the letter and soul of the Annapolis understandings.
He is similarly determined not to loose his hope that the United States
could still deliver on its promises. "We are determined to continue
accelerated diplomatic negotiations concurrently with the change of
administration in the United States," Abbas was quoted as saying in
Cernobbio, Italy, on Friday. He appealed to the upcoming U.S.
administration not to waste "seven more years" to resume its peace
efforts. "The new administration should not wait seven years for us to
start negotiations. It should begin immediately as soon as a new
president is in the White House." However, with nothing on the record to
prove the U.S. would be forthcoming, a Palestinian semi-consensus is
ruling out such a possibility as wishful thinking, and Abbas is
similarly swimming against this strong internal current, which has all
throughout opposed the Annapolis initiative as a non-starter.
Peace-making seems so absurd now as to defy all logic and belief, at
least to the majority of the Palestinian people, according to
Palestinian polls, the most recent of which was released on September 7
by the Near East Consulting Company to show that 86% of Palestinians are
frustrated, 43% believed that the conflict with Israel will continue and
a Palestinian state will not be established, 24% of respondents believed
that a Palestinian state will be established within 10-20 years, 18%
within 5-10 years 16% within a year to five years.
The optimistic fanfare Abbas and his team raised following the Annapolis
conference has now boiled down to publicly voiced bitter disappointment
and disillusion; his earlier insistence on time tables and deadlines as
preconditions have now been forgone for the sake of not dooming the
talking process; his threatening repeated warnings that the continued
expansion of the illegal Israeli colonial settlements would spell the
end of negotiations have been replaced by lenient appeals to the same
effect.
Abbas' preconditioning a deal with the Israelis on reaching an agreement
on all and every issue of the final status issues, a precondition which
was recently revived with stress, was met by a cold shower with Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert's proposal for a partial deal agreement that rules
out Jerusalem, ostensibly temporarily until a later stage, but
detrimentally excluding the issue of refugees for good, a deal not to be
implemented but to be presented to Bush then to the United Nations
General Assembly in November, which would bestow on the proposal a UN
legitimacy that would in turn legitimize Ariel Sharon's original draft
of an interim, transitional and long-term temporary Palestinian state on
(42) percent of the West Bank, demarcated by the more than 700km-long
wall Israel is building on the occupied Palestinian territory, termed by
the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as the Wall of Expansion and
Annexation, by Israelis as the "security barrier" and by everyday media
as simply the Apartheid Wall, which the International Court of Justice
in the Hague ruled as "illegal" in July 2004.
Abbas, the PLO and the Palestinian Authority (PA) have officially on
record rejected both Israeli proposals of the transitional state and the
partial agreement. "Jerusalem and the right of return are inalienable
Palestinian rights, too," he confirmed during his recent visit to Cairo.
However this official rejection is defying the Israeli-created facts on
the ground of more than 200 Jewish settlements and outposts, home to
slightly less than half a million settlers, living among two and a half
million Palestinians, but exclusively controlling (37) percent and
restricting the free movement of Palestinians on (21) percent of the
land, all tied inextricably into Israel proper by a massive network of
Israeli-only highways and, ultimately, the "Security Barrier," which all
indicate that the Occupation is no longer "a temporary military
situation" as defined by international law. These facts, together with
the U.S. collusion with the Israeli determination to annex most of them,
especially in Jerusalem, to Israel proper, sweep away whatever
credibility is left to whatever remains of the peace process.
Bush's letter to Sharon was an old proof of the U.S. collusion; the
latest proof was revealed on September 7 by Tayseer Khaled, a member of
the Executive Committee of the Palestinian Liberation Organization's
(PLO), that the U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, in her last
visit to Ramallah, tried to get the PLO's OK for a statehood with
temporary borders and the postponement of negotiating the outstanding
final-status issues.
While rejecting out of hand the notion that peace-making would ever have
a "last chance," Abbas however would accept a "last chance" to resolve
peacefully the inter-Palestinian conflict with Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
If the ongoing Egyptian mediation fails to reconcile the Palestinian
rivals, Abbas will "take all steps and measures to restore Gaza before
the end of this year," he said in Egypt. This impatience with Hamas is
another manifestation of his determination to use the break in
negotiations, brought about by the U.S. and Israeli government changes,
to put his Palestinian house in order ahead of any possible resumption
of talks thereafter.
Within this context Abbas is battling political foes on two fronts,
declaring the Hamas – Gaza front as being his first priority. He is also
involved in a power struggle within his own Fatah party on another
front. Abbas here is allying himself with a U.S. - backed and Israeli –
okayed diverse spectrum of Fatah and non-Fatah politicians who share his
strategy and tactics, with the government of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad
in the forefront. The battle ground revolves now on the renewal of Abbas'
mandate, which terminates on January 9.
This spectrum is evolving as a "third power" between Fatah and Hamas and
is fueling the rivalry between them in the hope of establishing itself
as the alternative to both, but has yet to officially take shape as a
unified party. Both Abbas and this "third" power are mutually exploiting
each other to gain the upper hand both within the ranks of the
Palestinian Authority and the PLO, where there is still very strong
opposition to the strategy of both. This evolving force is fomenting the
power struggle between Abbas and that opposition as much as it is
exacerbating his rivalry with Hamas, cornering him in a very sensitive
but critical showdown with his own party, Fatah. Abbas' bitter battle
with Hamas is smoke-screening the power struggle within Fatah, which
currently evolve around convening both the PLO National Council
(parliament-in-exile) and the sixth Congress of Fatah, both overdue.
However Abbas shows all the determination necessary to put his house in
order, with his sight unwaveringly focused on his peace prize, an
independent, viable and contiguous state, no matter what!
* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in
Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli – occupied Palestinian territories.
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