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           |  | Palestinian-Israeli Peace-Making:
 Failure, 
	  Sham, and Fake
 
 By Nicola Nasser
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 23, 2012
 
 
 
 Peace-making without Mediators
 A surplus of mediators have been 
	  around all the time, including the heavy weight Quartet of the UN, U.S., 
	  EU and Russia, as well as heaps of terms of reference of UNSC resolutions, 
	  bilateral signed accords and “roadmaps,” in addition to marathon bilateral 
	  talks that have left no stone unearthed, international as well as regional 
	  conferences were never on demand to facilitate the “peace process,” which 
	  has been lavishly financed to keep moving.
 
 However the Palestinian 
	  – Israeli peace-making is still elusive as ever as Samuel Beckett’s 
	  “Waiting for Godot” has been, without a glimpse of light at the end of the 
	  endless tunnel of Israeli military occupation of Palestinian territory and 
	  people.
 
 Palestinian – Israeli peace-making has been for all 
	  practical reasons on hold since 2000, and bilateral peace contacts have 
	  been dormant since Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu came to power in 2009 
	  except for a failed five-round “exploratory” talks hosted by Jordan last 
	  January.
 
 The latest indirect exchange of letters between 
	  Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and PM Netanyahu and the joint 
	  statement issued by their corriers pledging mutual commitment to peace are 
	  no less misleading: “No peace No War” is still the name of the only game 
	  in town, which is in fact the ideal prescription for the implosion or 
	  explosion of an unsustainable status quo in the Israeli – occupied 
	  Palestinian territories.
 
 And the almost twenty-year old U.S.-led 
	  and EU-financed “peace process” is still a non-starter for any feasible, 
	  credible or sustainable peace-making in any foreseeable future.
 
 Failure of the “peace process” to deliver is proof enough that it is 
	  inherently infertile, but most importantly it is proof enough that there 
	  has never been any serious mediation, or the mediators themselves were 
	  only either managing a process instead of trying to solve a conflict, were 
	  unqualified, or the parameters of their approach were the wrong ones.
 
 The end result however is that all mediators have failed and it is the 
	  time to acknowledge their failure and to make room for other options, like 
	  sending back the file of the Palestinian – Israeli conflict to the United 
	  Nations, which was responsible for creating the conflict in the first 
	  place when the UN General Assembly adopted the non-binding resolution No. 
	  181 for partitioning Palestine in 1947, which triggered a series of Arab – 
	  Israeli wars, thus undermining its own main mission as the organization 
	  created for the sole purpose of maintaining world peace.
 
 Since 
	  1947, the “two-state solution” has been on the agenda. Sixty five years 
	  on, none is closer to that end. The U.S. and EU conduct over those years 
	  has been in effect to reinforce the “one state solution”, i.e. Israel.
 
 Olivia Ward speculated in the Canadian “The Star” on May 1 that the 
	  “one-state solution to Mideast peace may arrive by default,” but she might 
	  not have anticipated it to be a bi-national, bilingual and bi-religious 
	  one state for Israelis and Arab Palestinians, Arabic and Hebrew and Jews 
	  and Muslims, which is a recipe for apartheid in view of the prevailing 
	  balance of power in favor of Israeli Jews in historic Palestine.
 
 I wonder whether U.S. Rep. Joe Pitts (R-Pa.) was completely out 
	  of touch with a major foreign-policy reality or was he satirically 
	  sarcastic when he responded to a constituent last April by a letter 
	  calling for peace negotiations between deceased Palestinian leader Yasser 
	  Arafat and former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who has been in a 
	  coma since 2006?!
 
 The UN option is obviously what President Abbas 
	  is left to try now as the only option available for a man of peace like 
	  him, and this is exactly the door which the U.S. administration is 
	  determined to close; for this purpose, according to Esther Brimmer, the 
	  Assistant Secretary for International Organizations Affairs, in Miami on 
	  April 24 this year:
 
 “Over the past several months, we have engaged 
	  in a global diplomatic marathon to oppose the Palestinian” option, 
	  “because, … the United States strongly opposes efforts to address final 
	  status issues at the United Nations rather than in direct negotiations,” 
	  which Brimmer’s country failed to mediate, revive and resume through the 
	  terms of the last three presidents who collectively failed to deliver on 
	  their promises to the Palestinians to conclude negotiations on final 
	  status issues in 1999 (Bill Clinton), in 2005 (George W. Bush), in 2008 
	  (G.W. Bush again) and within two years of his assuming office (Barak 
	  Obama).
 
 Not to honor U.S. promises and pledges to Palestinians 
	  could only be interpreted as out of bad faith, bad management of the 
	  “peace process” or failure to deliver, which all dictate, as another 
	  option, a change of course and that the US monopoly of the sponsorship of 
	  peace-making should be discarded and replaced by more efficient peace 
	  makers, or that the current U.S.-led peace mediators should be replaced by 
	  peace enforcers.
 
 Aaron David Miller of the Woodrow Wilson 
	  International Center for Scholars noted on May 11 that, “The only three 
	  breakthroughs in the history of Arab-Israeli peacemaking - involving 
	  Israeli deals with the Egyptians, Jordanians, and Palestinians - came 
	  about through secret diplomacy in which Washington wasn't even involved.” 
	  Miller stopped short of saying that the U.S. and Quartet mediation is no 
	  more needed.
 
 The International Crisis Group, in an executive 
	  summary on May 7, 2012, concluded that the U.S.-led mediation efforts have 
	  “become a collective addiction, … And so the illusion continues,” adding: 
	  “All actors are now engaged in a game of make-believe: that a resumption 
	  of talks in the current context can lead to success; that an agreement can 
	  be reached within a short timeframe; that the Quartet is an effective 
	  mediator, …” On April 26, the American Jewish newspaper “Algemeiner” 
	  described the “Middle East Quartet” as “An Institutionalized Failure.”
 
 Israel, U.S. and the Quartet mediators are all winners in this 
	  “make-believe” non-delivering mediation; the Palestinian people are the 
	  only losers.
 
 Palestinians have had enough and now saying enough is 
	  enough: Peace is a mirage, peace-making is a failure, peace process is a 
	  sham, peace mediators are a fake, and if all the parties involved can 
	  enjoy the luxury of “addiction” to the status quo, Palestinians cannot; 
	  their survival is at stake.
 
 * Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab 
	  journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied 
	  Palestinian territories. 
	  nassernicola@ymail.com
 
 
 
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