A Palestinian Wrong Way To Peace: Pointing In One Direction Of Palestinian Struggle
14 March 2011
By Nicola Nasser
When allowed to turn freely, the metaphoric
Palestinian compass points in one direction -- that of
Palestinian struggle. But most of the time, someone is
interfering with this compass, rigging it to other
directions, as in the case of the continually failing
peace process.
Now, with much of the Arab world up in arms against
its autocratic rulers, the Palestinian compass is
given another nudge, also in the wrong direction. The
Palestinian public is seething, and yet Palestine
Liberation Organisation (PLO) officials are telling us
that the only way forward is through more
negotiations. The "peace process", we're told, is the
only thing worth saving from the current sea of Arab
discontent.
It's all topsy-turvy in the land of discontent. A Day
of Dignity has been called to presumably restore unity
in Palestinian ranks. Most likely it will lead to
further disunity. Allow me to elaborate.
The Day of Dignity, held on 11 February, was not meant
to end occupation but to terminate Gaza's spirit of
civil defiance. "Say no to division and occupation and
yes to national unity," is the slogan another group of
organisers chose for planned protests on 15 March. On
that day, the PLO plans to call for new presidential,
legislative, and local elections in the hope of
regaining enough credibility to pursue its favourite
goal, that of negotiating for peace. The organisers
tell us that they want a Palestinian state by next
September. How many times have we heard this before?
WAFA, the PLO-run news agency, is trying to give the
impression that this is the only path available to the
nation. We're either going to negotiate for peace, or
we'll protest and then negotiate for peace. If there
is a point to this argument, I don't see it.
Does anyone remember why the current split in
Palestinian ranks happened? It all started when PLO
officials, the endemic believers in peace, refused to
honour the outcome of democratic elections held in
2006. So much of current dilemma is due to the simple
inability of the PLO to reconcile peace with
democracy.
So far, we've had a peace process that wasn't so much
about ending the conflict as it was about managing
it.
The kind of negotiations we've been having, as Rashid
Khalidi, the prominent Columbia University professor
said, were never about self-determination or about
ending the occupation, but about allowing Israel to
impose its point of view, with US blessing every step
of the way. This has been the case since the Madrid
Conference of 1991. The only practical use of the
peace process was to allow Israel time to build more
settlements, with US approval. A US veto only a few
days ago, on 18 February, should put to rest any
lingering doubts in this regard.
But American officials are still conducting "quiet"
talks with both sides, as Dennis Ross told the 2011 J
Street Conference. Abbas thinks this is the only way
forward, but some Israelis are not so sure.
Uri Avnery, long-time peace activist and founder of
the peace movement Gush Shalom (the Peace Bloc), says
that the Palestinians have other options. "What would
happen if hundreds of thousands of Palestinians
started walking to the Separation Wall and pulled it
down? What would happen if a quarter of a million
Palestinian refugees in Lebanon gather on our northern
borders? What would happen if protesters gathered in
numbers at Al-Manara Square in Ramallah and Al-Baladiya
Square in Nablus to challenge the occupation?" he
asked.
The Israeli peace activist is not saying that this may
happen today or tomorrow. But, judging by the way
things are going, it cannot be ruled out. This is
perhaps why Obama's chief Middle East advisor Dennis
Ross admitted that the current situation was
"untenable".
And yet PLO negotiators are helping the Israelis
prolong the situation, by giving the false impression
that something will happen when everyone else knows
that things are going to stay the same. The PLO seems
to be holding out for the day when the US, or the EU,
put their foot down and broker a fair peace. It's not
going to happen.
Meanwhile, the PLO continues to suppress the only two
forces capable of turning things around: national
resistance and a citizen-led Intifada. The PLO is
blocking any chance of forward movement while giving
everyone the impression that it is doing something for
the people. All it is doing is to help the Israelis
perpetuate a basically untenable situation.
On 2 March, the newspaper Haaretz reported that
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was working on a
plan for establishing a Palestinian state with
temporary borders as part of interim peace
arrangements. We've heard it all before.
The Netanyahu plan is nothing new. It is a
reproduction of earlier plans, all aiming to give the
Palestinians a reduced version of the West Bank.
Former defence minister, Shaul Mofaz, who is now
chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defence
Committee, came up with a similar idea that would have
given the Palestinians back about half of the West
Bank.
An earlier version of the Netanyahu strategy was tried
by Labour when Ehud Barak was prime minister. Barak,
unable to complete a promised three-phase withdrawal
from the West Bank, dragged PLO negotiators to a
summit in Camp David in 2000 and then made sure that
the summit would lead to nothing.
Kadima tried the same thing when Ariel Sharon was
prime minister. Arafat snubbed him and was subjected
to a cruel siege that ended in his death. Were Abbas
to snub Netanyahu, he may face a similar fate. But
Abbas doesn't seem too eager to take a stand.
Arafat stood firm, even when he ran out of options. He
told his people the truth. He told them that he cannot
give up their rights, froze the PLO's participation in
the talks, and told the Palestinians that they would
have to live and die for their rights. "Millions of
martyrs will go to Jerusalem," were his famous last
words.
You cannot have a national unity government without
having credibility. The most Abbas and Prime Minister
Fayyad have so far proposed is a government of
technocrats. How can technocrats resolve an issue that
is so political at heart? Reconciliation is a
political quest, and the concessions it requires are
not "technocratic" in nature.
The PLO cannot partner with Hamas before
reconciliation is achieved, Fatah Central Committee
member Jamal Moheisen told Gulf News on 28
February. This makes a lot of sense, but
reconciliation comes at a price. And so far I don't
believe that the PLO is willing to pay that price. The
way I see it, the PLO cares more for peace talks than
it does for national unity.
You cannot have negotiations without resistance, just
as you cannot have democracy without fighting for it.
We've always known that, and we have the Intifada to
prove it. We cannot be united until we're willing to
struggle against occupation together. And we cannot be
democratic until we've learned how to share. So far,
the PLO is neither sharing nor struggling, and its
quest for peace is therefore doomed.
* The writer is a veteran Arab journalist based in
Birzeit in the West Bank of the Israeli-occupied
Palestinian Territories. This article was translated
from Arabic and published by Al-Ahram Weekly on 10-16
March 2011.