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Netanyahu and the Future of the Peace Process
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, March 29, 2009
It seems that the Palestinian-Israeli ‘peace process’ is in
serious jeopardy. At least, this is the immediate impression one gleans from
media reports from Israel. Unlike, Israel’s Kadima and Labor party
‘moderates’, Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu is largely
considered to be a possible impairment to the negotiations aimed at
facilitating a two-state solution. The media story, however, is riddled with
misconceptions and dotted with false assumptions. While Netanyahu
is indeed a rightwing ideologue, he hardly differs, regarding issues
pertinent to the peace process, from his predecessors. More, one fails to
appreciate the risks facing the peace process, considering that there is no
such process. Israel continues with its military onslaughts and illegal
settlement expansion unabated, and the Palestinian Authority of Mahmoud
Abbas continues with what seems as its top political priorities: isolating
Hamas in Gaza and maintaining its reign in the West Bank. So to just
what ‘peace process’ is the media referring? What prospects - for a viable
two-state solution - are still passionately discussed? One earnestly fails
to understand. Equally confusing is the fact that some western
leaders and diplomats maintain a wait-and-see position, hoping that
Netanyahu will respect and maintain the peace process - which doesn’t exist
- as did the Israeli peacemakers before him…who also didn’t exist.
In precarious comments made to The National, Tony Blair, now the envoy of
the UN’s Middle East quartet and the former British Prime Minister, assured
that Netanyahu had indicated his support ‘in principle’ to the two-state
solution, contrary, of course, to Netanyahu’s own assertions. “When asked
whether Netanyahu was supportive of a Palestinian state,” the newspaper
reported, “Blair said: ‘He has always made that clear to me.’” Such
rhetoric, if augmented, could lead to another political ruse, similar to
that maintained by Netanyahu during his few years as Israel’s prime minister
starting in May 1996. Then, new Likud leader Netanyahu narrowly
defeated Shimon Peres in Israeli elections, and had strategically positioned
himself as the Israeli leader who would bring an end to the ‘concessions’
made by his rivals in the Labor party. He also maintained a different façade
before Western media as a peacemaker. It has to be said that the
average Palestinian can almost never spot the difference between that of a
rightwing Likud government, ‘leftwing’ Labor government, or a center-right
Kadima. What Palestinians continue to see are soldiers and tanks,
checkpoints, bulldozers, barbered wire, land confiscation orders and the
same symbols of occupation and domination that never seem to change
regardless of the ideological background or political leanings of those who
rule Israel. Shortly after his inauguration, Netanyahu came under
American pressure to implement long-delayed Oslo deadlines, presenting the
then inexperienced leader with a major predicament. On one hand, he wished
not to raise the ire of the US, which invested much time and resources in
Oslo, and on the other, he wanted to impede any possibility of revival of
the accords. Thus he did what most Israeli leaders would be expected to do
under such dilemmas. He provoked violence. In September 1996, Netanyahu
ordered the opening of a tunnel that ran underneath one of Islam’s holiest
shrines, the Al-Aqsa Mosque, further threatening the already devastated
foundation of the sacred place. His act achieved its very purpose, for it
ignited fury among Palestinians in the occupied territories. Several days of
clashes resulted in the death and wounding of many, mostly Palestinians. The
Israeli government used the incident to underscore Oslo’s failure to meet
Israel’s security needs. While Arafat’s security forces launched
arrest campaigns in the West Bank and Gaza – in an attempt to satisfy
Netanyahu’s demands – The Israeli leader continued settlement expansion and
confiscation of Palestinian land. More on October 28, he approved the
construction of thousands of new units in existing settlements and, later,
the fortification of 33 settlements and construction of 13 new Jewish-only
bypass roads. Yet, in Israel, Netanyahu, despite all of his moves,
failed to satisfy his constituency, and on May 17, 1999, the leader of the
Labor Party, Ehud Barak was elected. Subsequently, Netanyahu resigned from
the Likud leadership. It’s vital to note that Barak’s advent
renewed, once again the peace rhetoric, despite the fact that the new ‘dove’
gave little indication of his willingness to meet the ‘painful concessions’
required in the final status talks. As then US president Bill
Clinton propped up Barak as the Israeli leader who is most capable of
delivering peace, ordinary Palestinians had little expectations, and not
least because of Barak’s own bloody history. In his victory speech, Barak
delineated his peace ‘vision’ to cheering Israelis: “I tell you that the
time for peace has come - not peace through weakness, but peace through
might and a sense of security; not peace at the expense of security but
peace that will bring security. We will move quickly toward separation from
the Palestinians within four security red lines: a united Jerusalem under
our sovereignty as the capital of Israel for eternity, period; under no
conditions will we return to the 1967 borders; no foreign army west of the
Jordan River; and most of the settlers in Judaea and Samaria will be in
settlement blocs under our sovereignty.” Overlook the names and the
titles, most Israeli major party leaders are one and the same; even their
language is equally archaic and confrontational. Therefore, one fails to
appreciate the panic over the ‘future of the peace process.’ As far as Gaza,
for example, is concerned, it matters little whether the over 1400 people
killed in 22 days were blown up by a Likud Revisionist, pulverized by a
Labor dove, or bombed by a Kadima peacemaker, a fact that an envoy like
Blair doesn’t seem to understand. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been
published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world. His
latest book is, "The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's
Struggle" (Pluto Press, London), and his forthcoming book is, “My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza The Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London)
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