|
Democratically starving the
Palestinians into submission to US and Israeli designs"
Aref Assaf, President
American Arab Forum 2/16/2006
It seems that the curse of
‘regime change’ is an American plague. For decades, we have conspired to affect
elections, sent in mercenaries to topple off undesired governments, funneled
money and imposed economic sanctions to de legitimize popular leaders in favor
of our puppets- all invariably failed to promote the strategic interests of the
United States, derailed and confused nascent democratic movements, and inflamed
anti-American sentiments. According to the
New York Times, the United States and Israel are discussing ways to
destabilize the Palestinian Authority, PA, government so that newly elected
Hamas officials will fail and elections will be called again, according to
Israeli officials and Western diplomats. While the US has officially denied any
such plots, one must wonder how much of these desperate attempts are being
considered.
Israel is unabashedly
preparing for economic sanctions against the Palestinians once the Hamas-led
government is inaugurated. " "The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet but
not
make them die of hunger," prime ministerial adviser Dov
Weisglass was quoted as saying at the meeting by public
radio." (2/16/2006)
Meanwhile, the United States
Congress is about to pass a non binding resolution which bans direct
aid to the Palestinians. This resolution,
HR4681, THE PALESTINIAN ANTI-TERRORISM ACT OF 2006,
introduced by Reps. Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) and Lantos (D-CA), extends far beyond
reaffirming the current US ban on direct assistance to the Palestinian
Authority; it also calls for many troubling provisions that would punish and
isolate the Palestinian people for exercising their right to vote. While
non-binding ,the Resolution portend the strong pro-Israel atmosphere dominating
our congress leaving very limited diplomatic options for the President to
realize his vision of a two-state solution. This
unconstructive approach would only perpetuate the status quo of violence,
military occupation, and human rights violations rather than promoting dialogue
and a just, peaceful resolution to the conflict.
The provisions include
restricting US humanitarian aid; designating Palestinian territory as a
“terrorist sanctuary” thus triggering restrictions on US exports; prohibiting
official Palestinian diplomacy or representation in the United States in a way
counter-productive to promoting dialogue and a just peace; reducing US dues to
the United Nations because some of its bodies were created by the UN to advocate
for Palestinian human rights; and denying Palestinians the ability to receive
assistance through international financial institutions.
The central provision of
this resolution would prohibit the United States from providing direct
assistance to the PA unless the President certifies that it has fulfilled a long
list of subjective and ambiguous conditions. Current law already prohibits the
United States from providing direct assistance to the PA unless the President
signs a national security waiver, and in fact, the United States provides no
direct assistance to the PA.
One thing is guaranteed,
Hamas will emerge more popular with the Palestinian people than ever. The
Palestinian people who have survived the 39 year Israeli occupation have learned
to do with little. Now, they have made an historic choice by electing Hamas in a
most clean and transparent popular elections. For Israel and US to now conspire
to debase Hamas, will only entrench Hamas’s power, demonize our supposed
neutrality and forever suspect our evenhandedness.
Instead of meddling into the
internal affairs of the Palestinian government, the US and Israel can and must
do basic things to encourage a more moderate Hamas outlook. Israel should
declare its immediate plan to end the 39-year occupation of Arab lands. To
accomplish this task, Israel should cease expropriation of Arab land, which is
used for Jewish-only illegal settlements, release all political and
administrative detainees, respect all signed agreements with the Palestinian
Authority, cease extra-judicial assassinations, and ensure freedom of movement
for Palestinian within the occupied areas and with the outside world.
For its part, the U.S should
respect the democratically elected choice, which brought Hamas into power. The
US should continue its financial aid to essential Palestinian projects and
institutions. America’s
resolve to the spread of democracy is obfuscated when those who seek and begin
to practice democracy are burdened with poverty and economic hardships. At any
rate, these funds have been channeled directly and without PA's
control, into the Palestinian economy through NGO’s and
USAID. the United States Agency for International Development.
To starve the Palestinians
into rejecting Hamas will most likely backfire in the face of both the US and
Israel. Giving Hamas some space to reconsider its options, and to be tested on
its ability to deliver on the promises it made during the elections campaign,
will ultimately provide a litmus test for its expected political emancipation.
Being the weakest link in the Middle East's tangled web, the Palestinians
can be easily punished, starved and humiliated. But I hope the goal of the
United States is not so. Patience, careful and prudent engagement, not
sanctions and containment will prove the best way to deal with Hamas.
One thing is certain, the US,
as the only world superpower, can significantly impact what and how political
maneuverings are played in the Middle East. the US however, can never foretell
the outcome.
End.
Background on HR4681
To view the Resolutions; PDF
HR4681, THE PALESTINIAN ANTI-TERRORISM ACT OF 2006,
introduced by Reps. Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) and Lantos (D-CA). S.Con.Res.79,
which the Senate passed by unanimous consent on Feb. 1 has similar language.
However, this resolution
goes far beyond reiterating the current US ban on direct assistance to the PA;
it also calls for many troubling provisions that would punish and isolate the
Palestinian people for exercising their right to vote, including:
* Restricting humanitarian
aid.
Through its military
occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israel has de-developed the
Palestinian economy by destroying infrastructure and agricultural lands; by
inhibiting the development of internal trade through walls, checkpoints,
roadblocks, closures, and curfews; and by preventing external trade through
border closings. US humanitarian assistance, overseen by USAID and implemented
by certified non-governmental organizations (NGO’s), is not only essential to
preventing the complete collapse of the Palestinian economy under these
difficult conditions imposed by Israel; it is also morally necessary since the
United States supports these Israeli policies through $3 billion of direct
military and economic assistance every year. Even though it contains a waiver
for certain humanitarian aid categories, this resolution threatens US assistance
to NGO’s in Palestinian territories by putting it in the same category as aid to
the PA.
* Designating Palestinian
territory as a “terrorist sanctuary”.
Under the terms of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004,
this designation would trigger restrictions on US exports to Palestinian
territories, effectively gutting the free trade agreement between the United
States and the West Bank and Gaza Strip and further crippling the Palestinian
economy.
* Prohibiting official
Palestinian diplomacy or representation in the United States.
Restricting Palestinian
diplomacy in the United States would be counter-productive to efforts to promote
dialogue and a just peace, further eroding the claim of the United States to be
an “honest broker”.
This resolution would deny visas to PA
representatives; restrict the movement of Palestinian diplomats at the UN; and
shut down the PLO information office in Washington.
* Targeting the UN for
supporting Palestinian human rights.
The Palestinians have been denied their human rights through Israeli
dispossession and military occupation. The United Nations has voted by
overwhelming majorities to create bodies like the Committee on the Inalienable
Rights of the Palestinian People to advocate for the realization of unmet
Palestinian human rights. This resolution seeks to defund these bodies by
calling on the United States to withhold UN dues in proportion to the percentage
of the UN budget that funds these bodies.
* Denying Palestinians the
ability to receive assistance through international financial institutions.
The World Bank has been
working with the PA to rehabilitate the Gaza Strip since Israel’s unilateral
“disengagement” from it in 2005. Funds are needed urgently to rebuild thousands
of homes that Israel destroyed there. The reconstruction of the Gaza Strip
could be in jeopardy if this bill is passed. It contains a provision
instructing the United States, which has a controlling vote at the World Bank,
to vote against such funding.
|