Independent
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Middle_East/2000-10/fisk101000.shtml
The UN
cavalry has arrived, but is it too late
to save the
peace process?
'The Oslo
agreement is dead. That is what
this latest
Middle East crisis is about'
By Robert
Fisk
10 October
2000
When the old
United Nations donkey comes stumbling into
town, you
know things are bad. And when Kofi Annan is riding
the elderly
beast, you know that the world is spinning out of
control, that
the Americans have thrown up their hands and that
even their
allies are feeling the ground shaking beneath their
feet. Back in
1998, Annan was dispatched to Baghdad to save
the peace when American threats against
Saddam no longer
produced
results. When Nato's bombing of Serbia failed to
produce a
swift surrender last year, the much-maligned UN
was asked to pass resolutions that would give
Milosevic a
face-saving
defeat. And now a devastating symbol, if ever
there was
one, of America's political defeat in the Middle East
that ancient
quadruped, the UN donkey, is clip-clopping
through the
very streets of Jerusalem.
The symbolism
of Mr Annan's arrival in the Middle East
yesterday
cannot be exaggerated. Remember that it was the
United States
that was supposed to be running the so-called
"peace
process", with the Europeans paying for it (providing
they didn't
interfere in the details), while the Palestinians were
supposed to
make the necessary "concessions" (ie
capitulation)
for the "two sides" Israel and "Palestine" to
sign their
"peace of the brave". Note those quotation marks. For
the whole
sorry story of the Oslo agreement perhaps the
most flawed
treaty ever negotiated for the Middle East has to
be put in
parenthesis, its lies and clichιs carefully defined to
remind one of reality. For Oslo is dead. That
is what this latest
Middle East
crisis is about. The killings are not endangering
the
"peace process" as the Americans would have us believe
but proof
that the "peace process" is already dead.
Mr Annan's
visit thus symbolises not just the failure of the 1993
Oslo accord.
It also reminds the Middle East that the original
peace process
the one that doesn't need quotation marks
was a UN
affair: UN Security Council resolution 242 of 1967 to
be precise,
the very foundation according to then President
George Bush
and his secretary of state, James Baker of the
post-Gulf War
Middle East peace. Baker specifically cited 242
when he invited Arab and Israeli leaders to
the Madrid summit
in 1991.
Since then, we with the help of the State Department,
Israel and a
very large number of journalists have been
encouraged to
forget what 242 actually said.
Its contents
are simple. It emphasised "the inadmissability of
the
acquisition of territory by war and the need to work for a just
and lasting
peace in which every State in the area can live in
security"
and demanded the "withdrawal of Israel's armed
forces from territories occupied in the
recent conflict". It insisted
upon the
termination of war and "respect for the sovereignty,
territorial
integrity and political independence of every State in
the
area".
Now this is
pretty strong stuff. Israel, like the Arab states, will be
secure within its frontiers, although
its forces must withdraw
from the land
occupied in the 1967 Middle East war: the
occupied West
Bank, the Gaza strip, Golan and Arab east
Jerusalem.
Only, of course, that didn't happen. Instead, we got
the secretly
negotiated Oslo agreement of 1993, which allowed
Israel to
renegotiate 242: henceforth, Israel would decide from
which
"territories occupied in the (1967) conflict" it would
withdraw and
from which occupied territories it would choose
not to withdraw. The massive Jewish
settlements, built illegally
on Arab land,
would not be abandoned. The frontiers of
occupied
Palestinian land would remain in Israeli hands. And
so would Arab
east Jerusalem, with its Islamic holy sites.
Jerusalem
would be the "eternal and unified capital" of Israel.
The
Americans, preposterously claiming to be "honest brokers"
in the
negotiations between their closest Middle East ally and
the forgiven
"terrorist" Arafat, went along with Israel's ambitions.
And when at last, after the predictable
collapse of the Camp
David talks
in July, Arafat baulked at the "sort of sovereignty"
(this
imperishable phrase courtesy of US Secretary of State,
Madeleine
Albright) he might be allowed in Jerusalem,
President
Clinton appeared on Israeli television to threaten him
into
submission, warning that the US embassy might be
moved from
Tel Aviv to Jerusalem if he didn't fall into line,
adding that
Arafat was to blame for the Camp David dιbβcle.
And now, so
great is the sense of political collapse and
danger, so
impotent the United States, so hopeless the Oslo
agreement,
that the UN derided by Israel, humiliated and
almost
bankrupted by the United States' failure to pay its dues,
distrusted by
almost all the western powers is called upon to
save us all
from war. Can Mr Annan succeed? Not with the
Oslo
agreement. For the Palestinian uprising represents its
hollowness,
its lack of fairness, its injustice towards the
weaker party, the Palestinians.
And how
typical that journalists, with so short an institutional
memory of
past threats, have allowed the Israelis to set the
news agenda over the past 11 days and thus obscure
the truth.
Listening to
Israel's spokesmen on radio and television, you'd
think it was
the Israelis who were under Palestinian
occupation,
rather than the other way round.
Arafat has
failed to control the violence, Mr Barak announces.
And the press
dutifully ask if this is true. Arafat doesn't want
peace. Reporters
ask if he doesn't want peace. Mr Barak says
that the
"peace process" is over how the Palestinians must
have loved
this one if Arafat does not call off his men. And we
journalists
ask if this means the end.
Surely the
truth is that the Palestinians want Oslo to end, that it
is time that it did end, that all the bits
of paper signed by Arafat
have produced
an animal even more pathetic than the UN
donkey, an
abortion of a "state" that will forever harbour the
resentment
and fury of a people who have been cheated of a
real nation
with a real capital. And in the end, both sides may
have to
reconsider as an alternative to war a return to the
original
peace proposal: the implementation of UN Security
Council
resolution 242.
If Israel
gives up the land it occupied in 1967 all of the land,
not bits of
it and if all the nations of the area are secure, then
there is,
perhaps, a chance of a real settlement in the Middle
East. The
Arabs all of the Arabs, not just our friendly dictators
must accept
Israel's existence within its international borders
and the Arabs
must get back the land that they lost in 1967.
Yes, it's a
boring old formula. We've almost grown tired of it.
Oslo sounded
so romantic at the time. But 242, in the end, is
probably the only show in town. Enter Kofi Annan.