Opportunism trumps in Palestine

What do Israel and the US expect from Abbas? asks Ramzy Baroud*
al-Ahram Weekly 
23-29 August 2007
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/859/op23.htm


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The rash and self-defeatist behaviour emanating from Palestinian Authority 
President Mahmoud Abbas and his close circle in the West Bank cannot possibly 
be intended for the benefit of the Palestinian people or for their 
internationally sanctioned struggle for human rights, freedom and equality. 
Abbas, and his self-serving Palestinian elites seem hell-bent on exploiting the 
unfolding Palestinian drama to further cement their status and position, even 
if such an attitude will lead to the total decimation of any little hope of 
recovering Palestinian rights. 

The Palestinian, Israeli and international response -- spearheaded by the Bush 
administration -- to the Hamas election victory and formation of a government 
under military occupation, in January and March 2006 respectively, indicated 
that democracy for all of these players falls into the category of political 
opportunism: to unleash wars, rationalise illegal occupations or profit 
financially. Under Abbas's rule, democracy was and remains a vehicle. It is 
mostly constituted from a bizarre mix of rhetoric, unsubstantiated by any 
meaningful action. 

If true democracy is intended to prevail over all threats and challenges, Abbas 
has failed miserably. Like every autocratic ruler, he understands that any 
practical application of democracy in the Middle East as in other parts of the 
world must pass the American test, an old lesson that the region was forced to 
learn time and again. Whatever serves American interests represents true 
democracy; anyone who dares to challenge these interests is duly ostracised and 
removed. However, friendly regimes (from the US point of view) that fail to 
exhibit even a token of a democratic governance are viewed as "moderate", as 
opposed to the "extremist" others who could be very democratic, such as Hamas. 
Indeed, Abbas understands the rules of the democratic game very well; well- 
educated in political science and history, he has been immersed in the region's 
tumultuous politics for over four decades. 

While Abbas has the right to deduce his own view of the world, he has no right 
to apply such deductions to eradicate the historic struggle of an entire 
nation. His actions are both unethical and unjustified, to say the least. The 
ageing leader and the shady characters surrounding him will go down in history 
books alongside all the rulers and elites that sided with their occupier and 
tormentor of their own people in exchange for worldly profits and shallow 
status. While corporate media across the world predictably fails to acknowledge 
the anti- democratic nature of the Abbas-managed charade, Israeli politicians, 
policy advisors and commentators are hardly discreet about the role they expect 
Abbas to play: his security forces must crack down on any dissent among 
Palestinians. His militants will carry out the dirty business of kidnappings 
and assassinations, in line with Israeli and American policy objectives. 

In fact, Abbas's apparatus has proved exemplary in meeting these objectives. 
Thus, the Palestinian leader and his Prime Minister Salam Fayyad are being 
rewarded generously: tens of millions of US taxpayers' dollars, tax funds that 
Israel has illegally held from the elected Hamas government, military training 
for its weak security forces and, finally, an international platform to provide 
Abbas with the political validation he needs. Abbas, in return, is throwing in 
a few extras, beyond the measures expected from him. A few of his government's 
mouthpieces are disseminating inaccurate information to international media 
equating Hamas to Al-Qaeda terrorists and Taliban militants; some have gone as 
far as alleging an actual link between Hamas and Al-Qaeda, a charge that can 
only contribute further to the misery and isolation of the Palestinians. 

As a reward for Abbas's active involvement in deepening the desperation in Gaza 
and widening disunity among Palestinians, he has been granted the privilege of 
meeting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert once every two weeks, and also the 
trust and confidence of US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her boss. 
Any attempt at reconciliation with Hamas, which is supported by the majority of 
Palestinians, at least in the occupied territories, would most definitely lead 
to the withdrawal of some, if not of all of these advantages, a risk Abbas will 
not take. 

But Palestinian disunity is disastrous, not only because it's a diversion from 
the struggle for freedom and sovereignty and because it distracts the 
international community from Israel's illegal occupations, it also presents 
Hamas and Fatah with very limited options: Hamas's isolation will likely 
strengthen the more radical view among its members, which will make it 
difficult to find a common ground in the future; Fatah, which is losing its 
popular support by the day, would have to continue to rely on outside help and 
initiatives, notwithstanding the hardly promising international Middle East 
peace conference aimed at solidifying the support for Abbas against Hamas, or 
at the revival of the Jordan option, linking the West Bank to Jordan through a 
confederation. Talks about the latter, reported recently in the Israeli daily 
Haaretz -- though the idea has been floating for many years -- could become 
terrifyingly real for two reasons: first, the internationally recognised 
Palestinian leadership of Abbas cannot maintain control over the Palestinians 
without the active support of regional and international actors, such as Egypt 
and Jordan, and second, the same leadership has proved most capable of sinking 
to new lows daily.

In the months leading to the November peace conference, Abbas is expected to 
further demonstrate his trustworthiness to Israel and the US, at the expense of 
the Palestinian people, who are now denied the only strong card in their 
six-decade struggle for freedom: their sense of collectivity, which, despite 
occasional fragmentations, always managed to survive against all odds. The day 
this is no longer possible, Israel's victory will be complete. 

* The writer is a Palestinian-American journalist and editor of 
PalestineChronicle.com

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