From: "mart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: The Palestinians' Great Crime: A Brief Summary For The Uninitiated


http://www.jordantimes.com/Wed/opinion/opinion3.htm
 
 Jordan Times
 August 22, 2001  
     
 The Palestinians' great crime:
 A brief summary for the uninitiated
 By Ali Abunimah 
    
     
 WHAT IS the great, unforgivable crime of the
 Palestinian people? Simply put, it is to ask for their
 rights. It is to ask the international community to
 implement and guarantee their right to live a free and
 dignified life on their own land as other people do in
 the world. 
 What are their references? The Palestinians are not
 asking for something they cooked up from thin air, but
 for rights enshrined in the United Nations Charter,
 the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
 League of Nations mandate before them. In their
 specific case these rights have been applied to them
 by numerous UN General Assembly and Security Council
Resolutions. 
 
 Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338 provide for
 full Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories
 in exchange for peace with Israel. UN Resolution 194
 guarantees the right of Palestinian refugees, so
 cruelly deprived of their country and homes for
 fifty-three years, to return to them and live in peace
 with their neighbours. While they are waiting for
 this, under the brutal heel of Israeli military
 occupation, the Fourth Geneva Convention is supposed
 to protect Palestinians from the abuses of the
 occupation army. 
 
 What is a people to do when they find their rights
 denied and almost every one of the protections
 rendered worthless by the tanks, troops and bulldozers
 of Israel? For almost a full decade, the Palestinians
 negotiated in good faith with Israeli governments of
 the "left" and "right." They went to the Madrid
 conference in October 1991, where Dr Haider Abdul
 Shafi, their eloquent spokesman, declared before the
entire world that "we are willing to live side-by-side
 on the land." 
 
Then prime minister of Israel, Yitzhak Shamir,
 responded that Israel would never give up an inch of
 the occupied territories and later confessed in his
 memoirs that had he remained in office he would have
 allowed the negotiations to drag on for ten years
 while Israel completed its colonisation of occupied
 East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza.
 
 Shamir fell from office, and Yitzhak Rabin, the
 bone-breaker, took his place, and the Palestinians
 pressed on. In 1993, the PLO signed the Oslo accords
 and explicitly recognised the State of Israel.
 
Despite much criticism from Palestinians and others
 who felt the Oslo accords were fatally flawed, the PLO
 embarked on negotiations for an interim self-rule
 period to last five years. Agreeing to put off the
toughest issues until last - borders, settlements,
refugees and Jerusalem - the Palestinians relied on
 the good faith of the United States, if not the
 Israelis, to ensure that the negotiations would have a
 chance to succeed. For years the Palestinian National
 Authority (PNA) did the bidding of Israel and the
 United States, arresting dissidents without charge or
 trial, and altering documents and even history books
 in order to suit Israel.
 
 But what did Israel do? While saying that it wanted to
 solve all outstanding issues by negotiations, it
 continued to predetermine them by bulldozers. Shimon
 Peres followed Rabin, and Benyamin Netanyahu followed
 Peres. Each outdid his predecessor in settlement
 building. 

 Since 1993, according to the Israeli group "Peace Now"
 the number of housing units in Israeli colonies in the
 occupied territories increased by 53 per cent.
Palestinians watched as their land continued to
 disappear, and settlements and settler-only roads
 spread across it. If they resisted they were called
 "terrorists," if they did nothing, all hope was lost.
 
 Sometimes Palestinian resistance took unacceptable
 forms, targeting Israeli civilians, but this was
 always taken as an excuse by Israel to punish the
 entire Palestinian population and to declare that all
 Palestinians are driven by hatred and zealotry.
 
 When a Jewish settler, Baruch Goldstein, massacred
 dozens of Palestinians in Hebron, it was the entire
 Palestinian population of Hebron that was punished,
 and is still being punished, not the settlers who
 continue to terrorise the inhabitants of the land.
 
 Palestinians watched the promise of economic
 improvement rot like so many truck loads of Gazan
 oranges and tomatoes held up at Israeli checkpoints.
 They watched their dreams of democracy and self-rule
 evaporate in a fog of mismanagement and greed.
 Agreement after agreement was ignored as Israel simply
 declined to withdraw from occupied territory as it had
 promised to do. 
 
 But they pressed on. At Camp David last summer, the
 Palestinian leadership went and found themselves
 confronted by a US-Israeli axis that offered them
 autonomy or eternal damnation. Accused of spurning a
 "generous" offer from then prime minister Ehud Barak,
 the PNA did a poor job of explaining to the world that
autonomy is not independence, and that a statelet in
 part of the West Bank is an unacceptable compromise on
 the already enormous compromise contained in
 Resolution 242, of allowing Israel to keep the 78 per
 cent of Palestine it conquered in 1948 in exchange for
 allowing the Palestinians to have a future on just a
 fifth of the country they overwhelmingly dominated
 just two generations ago.
 
 Exasperated, frustrated, angry at the continued denial
 of their freedom, the Palestinian people in the
occupied territories rebelled. For this they have paid
 an enormous and growing price: More than five hundred
 dead, most of them unarmed civilians. Twenty-thousand
 injured, and millions confined and deprived of work,
 medical care and even food and water by blockades and
 sieges. 
 
 The Palestinians turned to the Arab world, and found
that its officials are experts at holding summits and
 crafting declarations but incapable of any sustained
and coordinated action that would exact a political or
 economic price either on Israel or its supporters for
 the hell they are imposing on the Palestinians. Now
 the PNA has taken the ultimate step that a people must
take when it has had its freedom taken away for so
long. It went back to the international community, as
 embodied by the United Nations Security Council, to
 ask for international action - at least monitors. The
Palestinians went back to the same international
 community that throughout history meticulously applied
 international law, when for example it concerned the
 League of Nations mandate that gave the Great Powers
colonial mastery of the Middle East, or the UN
resolution that created Israel. The Palestinians went
 back to the same international community that allowed
 a million Iraqis to die in the name of enforcing
 Security Council resolutions.
 
 But the same Security Council took no action because,
as the acting US Ambassador James Cunningham said,
Washington "question[s] the appropriateness and
 effectiveness of any action here in New York."
 
 This then, is the end of the road. After 34 years,
 three million Palestinians are still under a
relentless and inhuman occupation, and five million
are in exile. Negotiations with an Israel that simply
 will not stop devouring the little of Palestine that
 is left to be negotiated over have proved useless.
There is virtually no element of the international
 community that is either willing or able to provide
 material support for the Palestinians' struggle for
 freedom. The Europeans talk about Palestinian rights,
 but continue to buy produce from Israel's illegal
 colonies. The world's sole superpower, the United
 States, stands solidly behind Israel and thus
 international law is rendered meaningless. The Apache
 helicopters that murder and maim, the bullets that
 kill and the tear gas that chokes, are all made in the
 United States, an unconditional gift from the American
 taxpayer. 
 
 So the message is clear to the Palestinians: You are
 on your own. You alone among people do not have human
 rights by virtue of your membership in the human
 family. The world will do nothing for you. You must
 either come to terms with the dictates of an enemy
 that is a thousand times stronger than you, or you
 must fight your way to freedom. For if negotiations,
the United Nations, the European Union, the Arab world
 are all closed to the Palestinians, where is there
 left for them to turn?.
 
 The first eleven months of the Intifada were just the
 warm up. Now begins the long war for Palestinian
 freedom, which will be costly and bloody for both
 sides, but which, like the Indians, Algerians, South
 Africans and many other colonised nations before them,
 the Palestinians will undoubtedly win.
 
The author is an analyst based in the United States
 
 
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