MERIP Press Information Note 33: THE IRON FIST IN THE PEACE PROCESS
Roger Normand
October 4, 2000
(Roger Normand is executive director of the Center for Economic and
Social Rights in New York)
Televised images of Israeli combat soldiers killing unarmed Palestinian
children and helicopters strafing Palestinian neighborhoods have publicly
exposed the Israeli military force that undergirds and shapes the Oslo
process.
Despite previous crises and setbacks over the past seven years, government
officials and media sources have portrayed the negotiations as a slow, at
times troubled, but nonetheless steady journey towards a peaceful
resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But after recent events,
the public is now well aware that something is seriously wrong with this
picture. It is difficult to reconcile even a troubled peace process with
the merciless images of war -- especially with this one-sided war in which
a heavily armed military force is crushing -- the word "massacring" may be
more appropriate -- crowds of largely unarmed protesters.
It is hardly a contest on the war front, but an equally important battle
is being waged over the meaning of the conflict. This parallel battle for
public opinion, and through it government support and political
legitimacy, mirrors the dynamics of the military conflict. Israel
strategically deploys a superior arsenal (in this case, media access and
connections coupled with well-funded and sophisticated spin control) to
enforce its version of events, while the Palestinian leadership squanders
the opportunity to mount effective resistance based on the moral and
political appeal of a defenseless, oppressed yet galvanized population.
The intensity of the conflict indicates larger forces at play than
spontaneous protest and military escalation. We are witnessing more than
the pent-up outrage of a people for whom seven years of peace negotiations
has meant increased poverty, repression and humiliation from both Israeli
occupation forces and their own corrupt and brutal self-rule authority. We
are also witnessing a harbinger of the Barak government's plan for final
status, the liberal Israeli vision of peace -- ethnic separation enforced
by a military iron fist.
ORCHESTRATED VIOLENCE?
Israeli officials charge -- and media outlets uncritically accept --
that Arafat is orchestrating the violence for political gain. This charge
is truly Orwellian in its inversion of logic and reality. In a move
calculated to maximize Palestinian anger, Sharon, along with 1,000
well-armed police and border guards supplied by Barak, chose to champion
Israeli sovereignty over the Haram al Sharif with a personal visit on the
anniversary of the Sabra and Shatila massacres. The ensuing Palestinian
protests were spearheaded initially by Islamists and students -- the very
sectors that most despise Arafat and over which he exerts the least
control. And far from intervening decisively, the PA's 40,000-strong
security forces, which Arafat does control, have largely avoided direct
confrontation with the Israeli army, offering only sporadic support to
rock-throwing demonstrators facing off against Israeli helicopter
gunships, armored units and combat platoons. In this context, the charge
that Arafat is directing and radicalizing Palestinian protest from behind
the scenes is a transparent pretext to shift blame for the violence and
pressure the PA to crack down on "the street" -- which paradoxically has
the effect of distancing Arafat and the PA even further from popular
sentiment.
Notwithstanding Israeli claims, the issue of who is actually orchestrating
the violence seems rather obvious. Israel's massive and coordinated
military assault, with tank deployments ringing major Palestinian
population centers throughout the Occupied Territories, testifies to
careful planning. In recent months Barak and army leaders have openly
threatened the strategic deployment of overwhelming military force to
crush Palestinian "violence" in the event of a unilateral declaration of
statehood by Arafat. Other components of this very public plan included
annexing large areas of Palestinian territory and besieging encircled
population centers.
Lack of international response to this brazen threat set the stage for the
recent conflagration. It should not be necessary to recall that
Palestinians have an internationally affirmed right to self-determination.
The PLO's 1988 Declaration of Independence already constitutes a
declaration of statehood, recognized by almost all countries in the world
(except of course Israel, the US, and a handful of others). Israel's
self-proclaimed veto over Palestinian statehood, and Arafat's playing
politics by repeatedly postponing the (re)declaration, in no way negate
the legal, moral and political basis of this fundamental Palestinian
right. Yet the international community stood silently by when Israel
asserted an explicit commitment to deploy massive and illegal military
force against Palestinians for declaring their right to statehood. Now
that Israel has chosen to implement this plan, albeit a bit later under
different circumstances than anticipated, it is hardly surprising that
most world leaders have issued only weak appeals for "both" sides to stop
the killing, even while Israeli helicopter gunships fire American-supplied
TOW missiles into residential Palestinian neighborhoods. This muted
reaction is only the latest and most egregious example of the
"even-handed" approach adopted throughout the Oslo process, whereby the
two parties are left to their own devices to work things out irrespective
of power imbalances or human rights considerations.
OMINOUS DEVELOPMENTS IN ISRAEL
Inside Israel, police contingents have killed nine and wounded hundreds of
Palestinian citizens of Israel in northern towns like Nazareth and Umm
al-Fahm. Many of the casualties were struck in the head and chest with
live ammunition, apparently the victims of shoot-to-kill targeting.
According to rights groups, scores of demonstrators have been detained,
beaten and tortured. Unlike their counterparts in Gaza, these protestors
do not include armed police within their ranks, or even experienced
stone-throwers. The use of excessive force against Israel's Palestinian
citizens comes on the heels of a recent campaign by Galilee police
commander Alik Ron, who accused Arab communities in northern Israel of
harboring a network of Islamic terrorists. Though later proven false,
these widely reported charges generated a wave of anti-Arab sentiment
among the Israeli public. Many Israeli Palestinians fear that Ron's
slanders, followed by the brutal police response to unarmed protests, are
part of a broader campaign to isolate and intimidate Israel's Arab
minority.
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE OSLO PROCESS
In the short-term, all progress towards final status talks has stopped.
The larger question is whether Barak can revive momentum for his peace
plan, repeated endlessly to the Israeli public of "us here, them there."
This model of socio-economic, cultural and especially physical separation
between Jew and Arab derives from the original Labor Zionist ideology that
culminated in the 1948 military expulsion of 90 per cent of the indigenous
Palestinian population from what became Israel. Through the Oslo process,
Barak is seeking international sanction and legal ratification for this
longstanding vision of ethnic and religious segregation. "Us here, them
there" has a formula to resolve the contentious final status issues of
statehood, land, refugees and Jerusalem. Palestinians are to be separated
from Israel politically and geographically, linked only economically in
the form of cheap labor and captive markets. Arafat will be anointed
president of his cherished state on 90 per cent of the West Bank and Gaza.
But the population will remain confined in territorially non-contiguous
bantustans, encircled by and controlled through a network of Israeli
settlements, roads and military checkpoints, and subject to repressive PA
security forces. In return for Israeli sovereignty over the settlements,
the Barak camp has even floated the possibility of ceding sovereignty over
Arab areas in northern Israel, thereby ridding the state of 300,000
Palestinian citizens. As the final element in this plan, over three
million Palestinian refugees will be denied their internationally
recognized human right to return to homes within Israel, and instead given
some cash and the "choice" of involuntary resettlement in either the new
statelet of Palestine or surrounding Arab countries.
At Camp David, the narrow dispute over the old city of Jerusalem
overshadowed broader agreement on these basic elements of "us here, them
there." While the recent crisis has temporarily set back prospects for a
final status agreement, it may also reinforce Barak's fundamental message
to the Israeli public that Jews and Arabs are better off apart --
including in divided Jerusalem. To Palestinians living in the Occupied
Territories and inside Israel, the message is even more clear: the
alternative to Israeli-imposed peace is the ruthless iron fist of war. It
remains to be seen whether Palestinians can effectively put forward
alternatives of their own.
(When quoting from this PIN, please cite MERIP Press Information Note 33,
by Roger Normand, October 4, 2000.)
Lucy Mair
International Program Associate
Center for Economic and Social Rights (CESR)
162 Montague Street, 2nd floor
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Phone: (718) 237-9145, ext. 18
Fax: (718) 237-9147
Email:
LMAIR@cesr.orgWebsite:
http://www.cesr.org/___________________________________________________________
Oproep Palestijnse organisaties in Israel
Please Circulate Widely.
October 3, 2000
Ittijah Calls for International Campaign to
Protect Palestinian Citizens of Israel
As the recent attacks by the State of Israel on its Palestinian
citizens made clear, the Palestinian population of Israel is a
population at risk and in dire need of outside assistance to protect
its freedom and defend its rights. Ittijah - Union of Arab Community
Based Associations therefore calls for an international campaign to
safeguard the rights and existence of the Palestinian community in
Israel.
This campaign is necessary as recent violence aimed at Palestinians
on both sides of the Green Line has shown that in dealing with
Palestinians, Israel makes no distinction between Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza who live under Israeli occupation and the Palestinians in
Israel who make up some 20% of country's citizenry. Indeed, this sentiment
was expressed explicitly by a high ranking Israeli police office who,
commenting on the ongoing clashes between Palestinian youths and Israeli
forces, asserted that "[The] Green Line doesn't exist anymore". Implied by
this statement was the fact that Israel feels free to oppress Palestinians
on both sides of the Green Line in equal measure.
As citizens of a state that refuses to accord them even a modicum of
security or protection, Palestinians in Israel are in urgent need of
international support. Ten Palestinian citizens of Israel have
already been murdered by their government's forces in the past
four days: 3 in Umm El-Fahem, 2 in Arabeh, 2 in Sakhnin, 1 in
Nazareth, 1 in Moaweye and 1 in Jatt. Dozens more were injured, and
thousands endangered, as Israeli police attacked unarmed
demonstrators in Palestinian towns throughout Israel.
The scale of these attacks, and Israel's ongoing treatment of
Palestinians as enemies and not citizens both indicate that this is
not an internal Israeli matter but rather one that demands
international intervention.
Ittijah therefore calls on all people of conscience to join the
campaign to safeguard the rights of Palestinians in Israel. We urge
you take the following action:
1. Call or write to your local government representative demanding
that they take all necessary steps to assure an end to Israeli
massacres of Palestinians everywhere;
2. Call or write to your national representatives (Presidents,
Prime Ministers, and Foreign Ministers) demanding both their
immediate intervention to halt the bloodshed and their public
condemnation of Israeli attacks on Palestinian civilians;
3. Call or write to Israeli Embassies in your home country
expressing your horror at the scale of Israeli attacks on Palestinian
civilians and demanding an immediate end to the violence [for updated
statistics on those injured and martyred in the continuing attacks go to
www.addameer.org/september2000]; 4. Call or write to Prime Minister Ehud
Barak and acting Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben Ami demanding they take
immediate action to end the massacres and grant Palestinians everywhere
their human and civil rights; 5. Contact your local human rights
organizations urging them to follow Amnesty International's lead and
investigate, and report publicly on, Israeli attacks on civilians in
Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, attacks which Amnesty has already
condemned as "excessive and indiscriminate use of force which is in
contravention of international human rights standards".
For more information, please contact Ameer Makhoul either by e-mail
at
ameer@ittijah.org, or by telephone at +972 4 862-1713.The Global Network of Arab Activists (GNAA) is a democratic forum for all
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