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Israeli Smashing of Abbas as the Icon of
Palestinian Non-Violence
By Nicola
Nasser
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 22, 2015
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Indisputably, the 80 year old President Mahmoud Abbas has
established himself internally and worldwide as the icon of Palestinian
non violence. His Israeli peace partners leave none in doubt that they
are determined to smash this icon, which would leave them only with
opposite alternatives the best of which is a massive peaceful intifada
(uprising) against the Israeli occupation. It is true that Abbas
cannot yet be called the Ghandi of Palestine. He has yet to follow in the
footsteps of the founder of modern India and deliver similar national
results by leading a massive popular revolution for liberation and
independence, but his strictly adhered to non violence platform
continues to be the prerequisite for any peaceful settlement of the Arab
Israeli conflict in and over Palestine. For decades, before and
after the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories was completed
in 1967, Abbas has stuck to his belief in negotiations as the only way to
settle the more than a century old conflict. Building on Abbas' legacy,
his chief negotiator, Saeb Erakat, wrote his book, "Life Is Negotiations."
Abbas has all along rejected "armed struggle" and all forms of
violence. He even did his best to avoid popular uprisings lest they glide
into violence. Instead he has unequivocally opted to act as a man of state
committed to international law and United Nations legitimacy. Ever
since he was elected as president he conducted Palestinian politics
accordingly to make his people an integral part of the international
community. His respect to the signed accords with Israel raised backlash
among his own people when he described, for example, the security
coordination agreement with the Hebrew state as "sacred."
Demonising Abbas Nonetheless, the
Israelis are still persisting on an unabated campaign to demonise Abbas,
tarnish his image, undermine his peace credentials and deprive him of any
gains for his people. A Haaretz editorial on Oct. 4 said that the
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was "fanning the flames of
incitement against" Abbas. On Oct. 10, The Times of Israel quoted the
Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon as saying that "We have come a long
way to convince Israeli society that hes (i.e. Abbas) no partner."
Evidently, this is the only way for the Israelis to absolve themselves
from their signed peace commitments. Yaalon's deputy, Eli Ben Dahan,
was quoted on the same day as saying that "Palestinians have to understand
they wont have a state and Israel will rule over them." The
Israeli minister of education Naftali Bennett, speaking to the army radio
on Oct. 11, raised the anti Abbas ante to an adventurous and
irresponsible end game when he said that Abbas' "absence is better."
Bennett left it to the former Israeli ambassador to the United States,
Michael Oren, to explain the raison d'κtre for his call for the "absence"
of Abbas. In a Ynetnews article on Oct. 3, Oren concluded absurdly that
"Abbas poses a danger which may be revealed as strategically more serious
than the tactical dangers posed by (the Islamic Resistance Movement)
Hamas." Former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman was more
forthright when he called on Oct. 12 for Abbas' Palestinian Authority (PA)
in the West Bank to be "overthrown." According to William Booth,
writing in The Washington Post on Oct. 10, "Israeli (Cabinet) ministers
have branded Abbas 'a terrorist in a suit' and 'inciter in chief'. They
mock him as weak," ignoring that their smearing campaign accompanied by
their government's determination to undermine his peace making efforts
is making him weaker internally and render the "two state solution" a
non starter among his people. A poll released by the Palestinian
Center for Policy and Survey Research on Oct. 6 found that 65% of the
public want Abbas to resign and if new presidential elections were held
the deputy chief of the Islamic Resistance Movement "Hamas," Ismail
Haniyeh, would win 49 percent of the votes against 44 percent for Abbas.
The "main findings" indicated a "decline in the level of support for the
two state solution" as 51 percent "opposed" this solution. What is more
important in this context was that "57% support a return to an armed
intifada." International Community Indifference
The Israeli anti Abbas campaign could only be interpreted as a
premeditated endeavour to evade a mounting international pressure for
saving the so called "two state solution." The cancelation of
a visit scheduled for last week by senior envoys of the international
Middle East Quartet upon Netanyahu's request was the latest example of the
world community's helplessness and indifference vis a vis Israel's
sense of impunity against accountability, which empowers the Israeli
occupying power to escalate its crackdown on Palestinians under its
military occupation since 1967. In particular, U.S. President
Barak Obama Administration's "reversals" and "empty promises," in the
words of Peter Berkowitz on Oct. 13, to Abbas as well as the inaction of
the European Union and the other two Russian and UN members of the Quartet
are encouraging Israel in its anti Abbas campaign, thus discrediting the
Palestinian icon of non - violence further in the eyes of his own people
as incapable of delivery to walk away from his non violent path.
On Oct. 12 the AFP reported that the "frustrated' Palestinians "have
defied" both Abbas and the "Israeli security crackdown" to launch what
many observers are calling the beginnings of a "third intifada."
To his credit, Abbas proved true to his non violence commitment. Israeli
daily Haaretz on Oct. 11 quoted a senior official of the Israeli Shabak
intelligence agency as telling a cabinet meeting on the same day "that not
only does Abbas not support 'terrorist attacks' but also tells PA security
services to 'undermine' anti-Israel protests as much as possible."
Abbas was on record recently to tell "our Israeli neighbours that we do
not want a security or military escalation. My message to our people,
security agencies and leaders is that the situation must calm down." He
warned against "an intifada which we don't want." On Oct. 6, he publicly
told a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO) that "we want to reach a political solution by peaceful
means and not at all by any other means." The practical
translation of his on record "principles" was self evident on the ground
during the past two weeks of Palestinian rebellion against the escalating
violence of the illegal Israeli settlers of the occupied Palestinian
territories and the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF), especially in eastern
Jerusalem, which so far claimed the lives of more than 25 Palestinians and
at least four Israelis in October 2015. Within the PA security
mandate, violence was practiced by the IOF only and only Palestinians were
killed. Mutual violence was confined to Jerusalem, the area designated "C"
by the Oslo accords in the West Bank and Israel proper, where security is
an exclusive Israeli responsibility. There Abbas has no mandate. Most
victims of both sides fell there and there only Israel should be held
responsible and accountable. One could not but wonder whether
eastern Jerusalem and area "C" of the West Bank would have seen no
violence had Abbas' security mandate been extended to include both areas.
U.S. Secretary of State, John Kerry, who announced on Tuesday plans to
visit "soon" to calm down the violence, should consider this seriously.
Ending the Israeli occupation is the only way to move the situation
"away from this precipice," lest, in Kerry's words, the two-state
solution, "could conceivably be stolen from everybody" if violence were to
spiral out of control. In 1974 late Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat appealed to the UN General Assembly to "not let the olive branch
fall from my hand," saying that he was holding a "freedom fighter's gun"
in his other hand. Abbas embraced the "olive branch" with both hands and
dropped the "gun" forever. In May this year, Pope Francis told
Abbas during a visit to the Vatican: "I thought about you: May you be an
angel of peace." The Jewish Virtual Library's biography of the Palestinian
President vindicates the Pope's vision. It hailed him as "considered one
of the leading Palestinian figures devoted to the search for a peaceful
solution to the Palestinian Israeli conflict... It was Abbas who signed
the 1993 peace accord with Israel. End of Era
Writing in Al Ahram Weekly on Oct. 12, the President of Arab
American Institute, James Zogby, was one only of several observers who
announced recently the "burial" of the Oslo accords. In "fact" Oslo "was
on life support" and "has been dying for years" Zogby said, concluding:
"What happened this week was the final burial rite." The Oslo
accords were the crown of Abbas' life long endeavour. The "burial" of
Oslo would inevitably be the end Abbas' era. Smashing the Abbas
icon of Palestinian non violence would herald an end to his era, dooming
for a long time to come any prospect for a negotiated peaceful solution.
His "absence," according to Gershon Baskin, the Co-Chairman of
Israel/Palestine Center for research and Information (IPCRI), will be
"definitely the end of an era" and "will be a great loss for Israel and
for those who seek true peace." Israelis by their ongoing campaign
of defamation of Abbas would be missing an irreversible historic
opportunity for making peace. However, Abbas will go down in
Palestinian chronicles as a national symbol of non violence, who raced
against time to make what has so far proved to be an elusive peace.
Despite his failure, thanks to Israeli unrealistic dreams of "Greater
Israel," he will be the pride of his people in future in spite of the
current widespread national opposition to his life long commitment.
* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Birzeit, West Bank
of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories (nassernicola@ymail.com).
***
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