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Whether Palestine
Aref Assaf, PhD
Septemebr 23, 2011
First publsiehd in the Record Sunday's print edition on 9/25/2011 and the Daily
Record. Now it is on the
Star
ledger's NJ.Voices. feel free to share your views online.
"What Is A Man Worth
If He Has No Homeland
And He Has No Flag
And No Address?
What Is A Man"
Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian Poet
The
formal birth of the state of Palestine, albeit metaphysical, is certain to
entail challenges and opportunities for the world community. It is not certain a
decision will be made at this year's gathering of world leaders. For me and a
thousand supporters who gathered under intense soaking rain across from the UN,
it was a history in the making to finally seek statehood recognition from the
world body. After over 63 years struggling for global recognition, it was moving
to see the countries of the world represented in the UN general assembly give
President Abbas a rousing standing ovation when he announced the formal
application for statehood was submitted to Ban Ki Moon, the UN Secretary
General.
2011 seems so much like 1947 when the fate of Palestinians and the Middle East
underwent a historic development. Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin announced to
the British parliament that his government was no longer able to bridge
irreconcilable differences of Jews and Arabs in Palestine, and had therefore
decided to relay the "Palestine question" to the United Nations. There is no
chance of resolving the dispute via negotiations between the sides, Bevin
declared. Nine months later, following a complex, trying diplomatic struggle,
the UN authorized the partitioning of the country into two states; this
resolution led to the establishment of the State of Israel. The 'state' of
Palestine, which failed to materialize, is now turning to the UN for
recognition.
For the Palestinians, however, the march for full recognition is irreversible.
More than 130 states already recognize the state of Palestine, first declared in
1988. The United Nations is now being asked to formally affirm the right of the
Palestinian people to a state of their own based on the 1967 borders. By doing
so, the world community is again reaffirming its commitment to all previous UN
Resolutions that call for the end of Israel's military occupation of Arab lands
and the rights of the Palestinians to sovereignty and self-determination. The
recognition however, will not end the 43-year-old Israeli occupation. That task
has been the elusive goal of nearly twenty years of negotiations.
The Palestinians view their decision to apply for full United Nations membership
at the Security Council is the most viable of the options. The options being:
surrender, return to violence or appeal to the international community. The
demand for statehood does not contradict the spirit and intent of the so-called
Oslo Accords and the subsequent agreements between. After all, the US backed
peace process had one goal: to end Israeli's military occupation, not the
recognition of the Palestine state- a privilege only the United Nations, can now
bestow.
Arguably, The UN bid is an acknowledgement of the failure of a twenty-year peace
process from Madrid to Camp David. It acknowledges Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's failure of imagination and lack of a vision, an
intransigence that seems anachronistic in today's world especially when some of
Israel's most hard-bitten former security and defense chiefs have publicly
called for more active diplomacy toward a two-state solution.
More specifically, it acknowledges the failure of President
Barack Obama, a man whose election engendered nearly as much hope in the
international arena as it did at home. However, Mr. Obama has found both at home
and abroad that soaring rhetoric is not enough to change the most stubborn facts
on the ground. One of which has been Mr. Netanyahu's unwillingness to rein in
the expansion of settlements in the West Bank.
It is time for a dramatic shift away from a futile peace process and on to a new
path for progress. While the Israeli and US governments are calling the
Palestinian initiative 'unilateral' and dangerous, in fact the world's nations
overwhelmingly support this diplomatic move away from violence. Global
recognition of Palestine could crush extremists who argue violence is the only
solution and foster a growing non-violent Palestinian-Israeli movement in step
with the democratic momentum across the region. Most importantly, it will rescue
a path to a negotiated settlement; allow the Palestinians access to a variety of
international institutions that can help advance Palestinian freedom, sending a
clear signal to Israel's pro-settler government that the world will no longer
accept their impunity and intransigence.
Sadly, since the Palestinians announced their decision for recognition of their
state, the American response has been characterized by threats focusing mainly
on using their veto in the Security Council and cutting off aid to the
Palestinian National Authority.
The US should abandon its current approach and instead make an offer that
addresses the Palestinians' needs in the context of the changing region, a
context the President in his UN address completely disconnected from the
Israel-Palestine conflict. The speech could have been given by Israel's Prime
Minster. While the world was reminded about Jewish suffering and yearning for
peace, no mention was made of the daily suffering of Palestinians under Israeli
military occupation or their deeply felt desire for freedom and normal life. As
long time Palestinian activist, Hanan Ashrawi, said: "listening to the Obama's
speech, one would have thought it is Israel that is under the occupation of the
Palestinians." President Obama, speaking at the UN on Wednesday, Obama lauded
the Arab Spring—but rejected the Palestinian Autumn. The president retreated
from his earlier positions that demanded Israeli accountability for its military
occupation, and he did not acknowledge the ongoing role of the U.S. in
maintaining that imbalance through its extraordinary economic, military, and
diplomatic support for Israel, even when its actions violate international law,
human rights, and U.S. policy. And he did not acknowledge that twenty years of
the "peace process" has brought only a more entrenched occupation. Instead,
Obama merely said that both sides should "sit down together, to listen to each
other, and to understand each other's hopes and fears."
The Palestinians have waited 63 years to attain their independence; that can
hardly be called short cuts. Returning to endless negotiations and a lackluster
peace process under past conditions is no longer an option. The US has failed
the test of honest and effective mediation. For those who argue the Palestine
initiative derails the peace process, I ask what peace process? There is no
peace because the terms of reference were never agreed to by Israel.
President Obama should keep in mind that the Palestinian appeal to the
international community might very well be the last chance for salvaging the
two-state solution. The Palestinians have spoken. Now it is up to Israel and its
patron the United States to make their intentions clear. If the Palestinian
demand for recognition falls through due to a US veto, then the necessary
conditions for a paradigm shift will be in place: The two-state solution will be
even less feasible, and the one-state formula will emerge as the only
alternative.
The Palestinian leadership has maintained its willingness to consider what they
called a 'credible' alternative to the UN approach. In a recent speech to a New
Jersey audience of community leaders, Husam Zomlot, a member of the Palestinian
UN delegation, said, "The intention behind Palestinian request to the Security
Council move was to break the deadlock in the peace process, which may now be
happening... We are seeking this to provide any future bilateral process with
sufficient multilateral cover where we don't waste another 20 years," he said.
A banner at a recent pro Palestine demonstration at the UN summed it up: "We
have a dream too: a place to call a homeland".
Related: The official Palestinian position on the UN vote bid is contained in a
35-page booklet that was given to every United Nations delegation. Titled
"Recognizing Palestine: An Investment in Peace" it lists four reasons the
Palestinians have taken this course: acts by Israel that undermine peace,
international responsibility toward the Palestinians, the growth of Jewish
settlements and intensifying Israeli designs on East Jerusalem.
Click here for the link. (It may take a while to download)
Full transcript of President Abbas speech at UN General Assemblyhttp://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/full-transcript-of-abbas-speech-at-un-general-assembly-1.386385
According to a recent survey more than 80% of Palestinians support the push for
Statehood recognition.
http://www.pcpsr.org/survey/polls/2011/p41ejoint.htmlA plurality of
Americans (42%) than oppose (26%) the United States recognizing Palestine as an
independent nation, while nearly a third (32%) express no opinion.
http://people-press.org/2011/09/20/palestinian-statehood-mixed-views-low-visibility/
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