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           |  | The Strong and the Sweet:
 Celebrating the UN 
	Recognition of Palestine
 
 By Uri Avnery
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 10, 2012 
 
 IT WAS a day of joy.
 
 Joy for the Palestinian people.
 
 Joy for all those who hope for peace between Israel and the Arab world.
 
 And, in a modest way, for me personally.
 
 The General Assembly of the 
	United Nations, the highest world forum, has voted overwhelmingly for the 
	recognition of the State of Palestine, though in a limited way.
 
 The 
	resolution adopted by the same forum 65 years ago to the day, to partition 
	historical Palestine between a Jewish and an Arab state, has at long last 
	been reaffirmed.
 
 
 I HOPE I may be excused a few moments of 
	personal celebration.
 
 During the war of 1948, which followed the 
	first resolution, I came to the conclusion that there exists a Palestinian 
	people and that the establishment of a Palestinian state, next to the new 
	State of Israel, is the prerequisite for peace.
 
 As a simple soldier, 
	I fought in dozens of engagements against the Arab inhabitants of Palestine. 
	I saw how dozens of Arab towns and villages were destroyed and left 
	deserted. Long before I saw the first Egyptian soldier, I saw the people of 
	Palestine (who had started the war) fight for what was their homeland.
 
 Before the war, I hoped that the unity of the country, so dear to both 
	peoples, could be preserved. The war convinced me that reality had smashed 
	this dream forever.
 
 I was still in uniform when, in early 1949, I 
	tried to set up an initiative for what is now called the Two-State Solution. 
	I met with two young Arabs in Haifa for this purpose. One was a Muslim Arab, 
	the other a Druze sheik. (Both became members of the Knesset before me.)
 
 At the time, it looked like mission impossible. “Palestine” had been 
	wiped off the map. 78% of the country had become Israel, the other 22% 
	divided between Jordan and Egypt. The very existence of a Palestinian people 
	was vehemently denied by the Israeli establishment, indeed, the denial 
	became an article of faith. Much later, Golda Meir famously declared that 
	“there is no such thing as a Palestinian people”. Respected charlatans wrote 
	popular books “proving” that the Arabs in Palestine were pretenders who had 
	only recently arrived. The Israeli leadership was convinced that the 
	“Palestinian problem” had disappeared, once and forever.
 
 In 1949, 
	there were not a hundred persons in the entire world who believed in this 
	solution. Not a single country supported it. The Arab countries still 
	believed that Israel would just disappear. Britain supported its client 
	state, the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The US had its own local strongmen. 
	Stalin’s Soviet Union supported Israel.
 
 Mine was a lonely fight. For 
	the next 40 years, as the editor of a news magazine, I brought the subject 
	up almost every week. When I was elected to the Knesset, I did the same 
	there.
 
 In 1968 I went to Washington DC, in order to propagate the 
	idea there. I was politely received by the relevant officials in the State 
	Department (Joseph Sisco), the White House  (Harold Saunders), the US 
	mission to the UN (Charles Yost), leading Senators and Congressmen, as well 
	as the British father of Resolution 242 (Lord Caradon). The uniform answer 
	from all of them, without exception: a Palestinian state was out of 
	question.
 
 When I published a book devoted to this solution, the PLO 
	in Beirut attacked me in 1970 in a book entitled “Uri Avnery and 
	Neo-Zionism”.
 
 Today, there is a world consensus that a solution of 
	the conflict without a Palestinian state is quite out of the question.
 
 So why not celebrate now?
 
 
 WHY NOW? WHY didn’t it happen before 
	or later?
 
 Because of the Pillar of Cloud, the historic masterpiece 
	from Binyamin Netanyahu, Ehud Barak and Avigdor Lieberman.
 
 The Bible 
	tells us about Samson the hero, who rent a lion with his bare hands. When he 
	returned to the scene, a swarm of bees had made the carcase of the lion its 
	home and produced honey. So Samson posed a riddle to the Philistines: “Out 
	of the strong came forth sweetness”. This is now a Hebrew proverb.
 
 Well, out of the “strong” Israeli operation against Gaza, sweetness has 
	indeed come forth. It is another confirmation of the rule that when you 
	start a war or a revolution, you never know what will come out of it.
 
 One of the results of the operation was that the prestige and popularity of 
	Hamas shot sky-high, while the Palestinian Authority of Mahmoud Abbas sank 
	to new depths. That was a result the West could not possibly tolerate. A 
	defeat of the “moderates” and a victory for the Islamic “extremists” were a 
	disaster for President Barack Obama and the entire Western camp. Something 
	had to found – with all urgency – to provide Abbas with a resounding 
	achievement.
 
 Fortunately, Abbas was already on the way to obtain UN 
	approval for the recognition of Palestine as a “state” (though not yet as a 
	full member of the world organization). For Abbas, it was a move of despair. 
	Suddenly, it became a beacon of victory.
 
 THE COMPETITION between 
	the Hamas and Fatah movements is viewed as a disaster for the Palestinian 
	cause. But there is also another way to look at it.
 
 Let’s go back to 
	our own history. During the 30s and 40s, our Struggle for Liberation (as we 
	called it) split between two camps, who hated each other with growing 
	intensity.
 
 On the one side was the “official” leadership, led by 
	David Ben-Gurion, represented by the “Jewish Agency” which cooperated with 
	the British administration. Its military arm was the Haganah, a very large, 
	semi-official militia, mostly tolerated by the British.
 
 On the 
	other side was the Irgun (“National Military Organization”), the far more 
	radical armed wing of the nationalist “revisionist” party of Vladimir 
	Jabotinsky. It split and yet another, even more radical, organization was 
	born. The British called it “the Stern Gang”, after its leader, Avraham 
	Stern”.
 
 The enmity between these organizations was intense. For a 
	time, Haganah members kidnapped Irgun fighters and turned them over to the 
	British police, who tortured them and sent them to camps in Africa. A bloody 
	fratricidal war was avoided only because the Irgun leader, Menachem Begin, 
	forbade all actions of revenge. By contrast, the Stern people bluntly told 
	the Haganah that they would shoot anyone trying to attack their members.
 
 In retrospect, the two sides can be seen as acting as the two arms of 
	the same body. The “terrorism” of the Irgun and Stern complemented the 
	diplomacy of the Zionist leadership. The diplomats exploited the 
	achievements of the fighters. In order to counterbalance the growing 
	popularity of the “terrorists”, the British made concessions to Ben-Gurion. 
	A friend of mine called the Irgun “the shooting agency of the Jewish 
	Agency”.
 
 In a way, this is now the situation in 
	the Palestinian camp.
 
 FOR YEARS, the Israeli government has 
	threatened Abbas with the most dire consequences if he dared to go to the 
	UN. Abolishing the Oslo agreement and destroying the Palestinian authority 
	was the bare minimum. Lieberman called the move “diplomatic terrorism”.
 
 And now? Nothing. Not a bang and barely a whimper. Even Netanyahu 
	understands that the Pillar of Cloud has created a situation where world 
	support for Abbas has become inevitable.
 
 What to do? Nothing! 
	Pretend the whole thing is a joke. Who cares? What is this UNO anyway? What 
	difference does it make?
 
 Netanyahu is more concerned about another 
	thing that happened to him this week. In the Likud primary elections, all 
	the “moderates” in his party were unceremoniously kicked out. No liberal, 
	democratic alibi was left. The Likud-Beitenu faction in the next Knesset 
	will be composed entirely of right-wing extremists, among them several 
	outright fascists, people who want to destroy the independence of the 
	Supreme Court, cover the West Bank densely with settlements and prevent 
	peace and a Palestinian state by all possible means.
 
 While Netanyahu 
	is sure to win the coming elections and continue to serve as Prime Minister, 
	he is too clever not to realize where he is now: a hostage to extremists, 
	liable to be thrown out by his own Knesset faction if he so much as mentions 
	peace, to be displaced at any time by Lieberman or worse.
 
 
 ON 
	FIRST sight, nothing much has changed. But only on first sight.
 
 What 
	has happened is that the foundation of the State of Palestine has now been 
	officially acknowledged as the aim of the world community. The “Two-State 
	solution” is now the only solution on the table. The “One-State solution”, 
	if it ever lived, is as dead as the dodo.
 
 Of course, the apartheid 
	one-state is reality. If nothing changes on the ground, is will become 
	deeper and stronger. Almost every day brings news of it becoming more and 
	more entrenched. (The bus monopoly has just announced that from now on there 
	will be separate buses for West Bank Palestinians in Israel.)
 
 But 
	the quest for peace based on the co-existence between Israel and Palestine 
	has taken a big step forwards. Unity between the Palestinians should be the 
	next. US support for the actual creation of the State of Palestine should 
	come soon after.
 
 The strong must lead to the sweet.
 
 
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