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Unequalled US Hypocrisy Aref Assaf, January 20, 2006
At a recent meeting with NJ Arab and Muslim leaders,
Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) told
the attending dignitaries that he would pursue a fair and open-minded policy
regarding the Palestine-Israel question. His response was directed at my
criticism of his recent sponsorship of a bipartisan resolution in the House of
Representatives and a letter signed by 73 of 100 Senators which put Congress on
record that the U.S. government, despite rhetoric to the contrary, does not take
Middle Eastern democracy too seriously. On December 16, the U.S. House of
Representatives voted 397-17 in favor of a resolution introduced by Republican
Congressman and Deputy Majority Whip Eric Cantor chastising the Palestinians for
allowing the political wing of Hamas to take part in the forthcoming
parliamentary election. Cosponsors of the resolution included Democratic
Congressman (and recently appointed New Jersey Senator) Robert Menendez,
Republican Congresswoman Iliana Ros-Lehtinen, and Democratic Congresswoman and
House Minority leader Nancy Pelosi of California.
In recent months, Palestine Authority president Mahmoud Abbas has been trying to
lure supporters of the radical Islamist group Hamas away from terrorism by
allowing Hamas' political wing to participate in the political process. In
response, Congress has rushed in to pressure the Palestine Authority to bar them
from participating. The resolution begins by claiming that “the foundation for
the Israeli-Palestinian peace process was Palestinian recognition of Israel's
right to exist and a solemn obligation to end terrorism and violence,” ignoring
the equally important foundation of Israeli recognition of Palestine's right to
exist and for an Israeli withdrawal from the Palestinian territories seized by
Israel in the 1967 war. Similarly, the House of Representatives “reaffirms its
commitment to the safety and security of the democratic State of Israel” without
also affirming its commitment to the safety and security of a democratic state
of Palestine, yet another example of the bipartisan U.S. insistence that Israeli
Jews somehow have more rights than Palestinian Arabs.
The resolution also seeks to undermine the “ Performance-Based Roadmap to a
Permanent Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict”—endorsed by
the United States, Russia, the European Union, and the United Nations as the
basis for peace talks— by deliberately misrepresenting it. For example, the
bipartisan measure claims, “the first provision of the Road Map to Middle East
Peace calls for the Palestinians to dismantle the terrorist infrastructure.” In
reality, that anti-terrorism clause is just one of twenty-four provisions in
Phase I, which also calls upon Israel to withdraw from areas of the West Bank
seized from Palestinian Authority control since September of 2001, to freeze
“all settlement activity, including natural growth of settlements,” and to
dismantle all settlements erected since March 2001, which the right-wing Israeli
government has thus far refused to do. Congress has never called upon Israel to
uphold these and other requirements under the Roadmap, however, essentially
arguing that it is those under occupation, not the occupiers, who are solely
responsible for making the peace process work.
The resolution also criticizes Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for “his
willingness to see Hamas participate in the elections without first calling for
it to … renounce its goal of destroying the State of Israel.” However, they do
not similarly criticize Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon for his willingness
to see parties, such as the National Union—, which seeks to destroy any
Palestinian national entity and expel its Arab population—to participate in
Israeli elections, an apparent acknowledgement that while Israel's survival is
axiomatic, Palestine's survival is an open-ended question. In any case, under
the Palestinian Authority, as with the state of Israel , the head of government
simply does not have the authority to ban a political party simply because of
its ideology, however repugnant.
Similarly, the resolution goes on to assert that groups such as Hamas “should
not be permitted to participate in Palestinian elections until such
organizations recognize Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state.” Ironically,
however, the United States allows a number of political organizations, such as
the Socialist Workers Party—, which also does not recognize Israel's right to
exist as a Jewish state—to participate in U.S. elections. The U.S. Congress
apparently believes that Arab nations should not be able to experience the same
degree of democracy we enjoy in this country which allows even those with
extreme views to seek political office.
In a similar example of double standards, the Senate letter declares “No
democracy in the world allows a political party to bear its own arms,” an ironic
statement for a body that voted unanimously to praise the recently completed
Iraqi parliamentary elections in which a number of political parties with their
own militias openly participated. In addition, the United Kingdom—America's
closest ally—allowed Sinn Fein to operate a legal political party and
participate in elections even during the decades in which its armed wing, the
Irish Republican Army, engaged in terrorist attacks against British citizens.
In parliamentary systems throughout the world, including U.S.-backed governments
in Iraq and Israel, coalition governments have been formed which have sometimes
included extremist elements. U.S. officials have defended their backing of such
governments because the ideology of a minority party of such diverse coalitions
is not representative of the government as a whole. However, in the recently
passed House resolution, the bipartisan majority argues, “the inclusion of Hamas
… into the Palestinian structure could be construed as an implicit endorsement
of their anti-American and anti-Israeli terrorist ideology.” Both the House
resolution and the Senate letter threaten an end of U.S. relations with the
Palestine Authority if Hamas is included.
The liberal U.S. Zionist group Americans for Peace Now (APN) noted that while
“The goal of eradicating terror and consolidating weapons in the hands of the
legal [Palestinian] government remains,” it should not be “a prerequisite for
democratic elections.” APN also noted the negative impact of the United States
insisting that such measures be a prerequisite for ongoing U.S. relations with
the Palestinians' democratically elected body. They also observed how Israel had
spent nearly three decades trying to defeat Hamas through military means alone
and failed.
Congress, however, has rejected moderate voices among Israelis and their U.S.
supporters, and has instead thrown its weight behind Sharon's rightist
government, which has threatened to disrupt the elections if Hamas is allowed to
run. Ironically, Sharon announced last week that, regardless of which parties
participate, Israeli occupation authorities would prevent Palestinian residents
of Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem—long seen by the Palestinians as their
capital—from voting. Since Jerusalemites tend to be more moderate than most
other Palestinian voters do, their exclusion would likely increase the numbers
of Hamas supporters being elected to the Palestinian parliament.
Congress has thrown itself into internal Palestinian politics at a critical
juncture. Young Fatah reformers led by Marwan Barghouti—currently held in an
Israeli prison—are challenging Abbas and the corrupt Fatah old guard by
organizing to run a separate slate. In addition, Hamas did unexpectedly well in
recent municipal elections, though exit polls show that their unexpectedly high
vote total resulted more as a protest against Fatah's misrule than an
endorsement of Hamas' extremist ideology. Polls also show that most Palestinians
oppose Hamas' notorious armed wing, the Al Qassam Brigades, which have been
responsible for a series of horrific terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians
over the past decade and which has been outlawed by the Palestine Authority
since 1996. Given that many Palestinians blame the United States for its failure
to end Israel's 38-year occupation, Congress' recent anti-Hamas initiatives
could boost the Islamist group's fortunes even more.
In addressing the threat from Hamas, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers
join the Bush administration in confusing cause with effect. It has not confused
many leading Israelis, however: Writing in the Dec. 19 Jerusalem Post, the noted
policy analyst Gershon Baskin observed how “Israel 's unilateralism and
determination not to negotiate and engage President Mahmoud Abbas and the
Palestinian Authority has strengthened the claims of Hamas and weakened Abbas
and his authority which was already severely crippled by … Israeli actions that
demolished the infrastructures of Palestinian Authority governing bodies and
institutions.” Indeed, the PA still has not recovered from the devastating 2002
Israeli military offensive against its urban West Bank enclaves, an action
roundly denounced by human rights groups and Israeli moderates but strongly
endorsed by an overwhelming bipartisan majority in Congress.
President Bush and an overwhelming bipartisan majority of Congress have also
thrown their support to Sharon's unilateral disengagement policy which, while
withdrawing Israeli settlements from the Gaza Strip, has expanded them in the
occupied West Bank as part of an effort to illegally annex large swathes of
Palestinian territory. In addition, neither Congress nor the Bush administration
has pushed Sharon to engage in serious peace negotiations with the Palestinians,
which have been suspended for nearly five years, despite calls by Abbas and the
international community that they resume.
Given that the PA's emphasis on negotiations has failed to stop Israel's
occupation and colonization of large parts of the West Bank, it is not
surprising that Hamas' claim that the U.S.-managed peace process is working
against Palestinian interests has resonance, even among Palestinians who
recognize that terrorism by Hamas' armed wing is both morally reprehensible and
politically counter-productive.
Though Sharon and Congress are insisting that the Palestine Authority attempt to
forcibly disarm the Al Qassam Brigades, the PA's weak and battered
infrastructure combined with the widespread popular support for Hamas resulting
from the PA's inability to end the occupation through diplomatic means makes
such a scenario virtually impossible. This is what led to Abbas' strategy of
allowing Hamas to participate in the parliamentary elections. This recent
Congressional resolution opposing Abbas' initiative, then, is a means of giving
the Israelis an excuse to not resume substantive peace talks with the
Palestinians, thereby enabling Sharon to continue his creeping annexation of
Palestinian territory in the West Bank . The U.S.-backed Israeli strategy is to
limit PA-controlled land to a series of non-contiguous cantons surrounded by
Israel , declare this unviable territory the Palestinian state, and declare
Palestinian refusal to accept this imposed solution as evidence of their
unwillingness to live in peace.
Baskin argues that one of the few initiatives Abbas may have to assert his
credibility against the rise of Hamas is to reactivate Palestine's unilateral
declaration of independence, made during the first and largely nonviolent
Intifada in 1988. Both the Bush administration and a large bipartisan majority
of Congress is on record opposing formal Palestinian independence outside of
terms agreed to by the Israeli government, however, arguing that rather than
being an inalienable right, self-determination should be allowed only on
conditions agreed to by the occupying power.
The recent Congressional initiatives in respect to the Palestinian elections is
part of a larger right-wing effort to undermine international legal principles
regarding foreign military occupation, human rights, and self-determination, and
should be seen as part of the concerted Congressional attack against
international law and human rights, also manifested by the bipartisan support
for the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the granting of extraordinary war powers to
President Bush.
Given that the overwhelming majority of Democrats supported these latest
anti-Palestinian initiatives, it may also indicate that, should the Democrats
take back Congress in next year's midterm elections, little change can be
expected on foreign policy. Both parties seem to agree that international law,
the right of self-determination, and open elections are not principles to be
upheld universally, but should instead be encouraged or denied based upon
narrowly defined strategic interests.
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