http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/exposing-abbas-5335

 


 

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Exposing Abbas


By Benny Morris

 

May 19, 2011

 

  
<http://nationalinterest.org/files/imagecache/resize-340/images/Arab_volunteers.jpg>
 

Mahmoud Abbas's recent op-ed 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/17/opinion/17abbas.html?ref=opinion>  [3] in 
The New York Times is "worth reading 
<http://nationalinterest.org/blog/paul-pillar/abu-mazens-observations-5331>  
[4]," not because he "speaks some of the most important truths" about the 
Palestinian-Israeli conflict but precisely because of the lies and distortions 
it purveys, which tell us—unfortunately—something about the elite that has 
directed Palestinian politics since the 1960s.

Yasser Arafat, who led the Palestinian national movement from the late 1960s 
until his death in 2004, was notoriously duplicitous—a serial liar, in fact—and 
was distrusted by all Middle Eastern leaders across the board, Arab and 
Israeli. Most breathed a sigh of relief at his passing—as did many in 
Washington and other Western capitals. 

But many happily hailed his successor, Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the 
Palestine National Authority and the head of the Fatah party, the chief 
constituent of the PLO, as a worthier politician, a "moderate." Perhaps it was 
the suits that replaced Arafat's absurd martial uniforms; perhaps the donnish 
glasses; perhaps it was the softer verbs and adjectives. They dismissed as 
youthful whimsy his Ph.D. thesis from the 1980s, published in Arabic as The 
Other Side: the Secret Relations between Nazism and the Leadership of the 
Zionist Movement. 

In that book, Abbas declared that the gas chambers were never used to murder 
Jews and dismissed as a "fantastic lie" that six million Jews had died in the 
Holocaust; at most, he wrote, "890,000" Jews were killed by the Germans. And 
they were killed, Abbas wrote, in part as a result of Zionist provocation 
orchestrated by Ben-Gurion from 1942. Or, as he put it: "The Zionist movement 
led a broad campaign of incitement against the Jews living under Nazi rule, in 
order to arouse the government's hatred of them, to fuel vengeance against 
them, and to expand the mass extermination." All of this was designed somehow 
to facilitate the victory of Zionism.

So Abbas's distortions of subsequent history in the New York Times need 
surprise no one (though one wonders why the paper's editors, who probably have 
some inkling of what actually happened in the Middle East in 1947-1949, should 
publish such malicious nonsense). 

First, Abbas tells us that in May 1948, as "a 13-year-old Palestinian boy," he 
was "forced" and "driven" out of his home in Safad by the Zionists. But on 6 
July 2009 he told an interviewer on Falastina TV, in Arabic, that his family 
had actually fled Safad, fearing Jewish retribution for a massacre the Arabs 
had committed against the town's Jews two decades before.

The truth, of course, is that Safad's Arabs fled the town as it was mortared 
and then conquered by Haganah troops on 9-10 May 1948; there was no "expulsion" 
(a word Abbas later in the article uses to describe what happened to all the 
Palestinians displaced by the first Arab-Israeli war).

But this is a minor distortion compared to the outright lies that follow. These 
are embedded in the short, following text that describes the chain of events in 
1947-1948: 

In November 1947, the [UN] General Assembly made its recommendation [to 
partition Palestine into two states, one Jewish, the other Arab] and answered 
in the affirmative. [The meaning here is unclear: Did the Arabs respond to the 
resolution "in the affirmative", as perhaps Abbas is intimating? Did the 
General Assembly respond to its own recommendation "in the affirmative"?] 
Shortly thereafter, Zionist forces expelled Palestinian Arabs to ensure a 
decisive Jewish majority in the future state of Israel, and Arab armies 
intervened. War and further expulsions ensued…Our Palestinian [Arab] state 
remained a promise unfulfilled.

In fact, what actually happened was this: The Arab states and the Palestinian 
national leadership, headed by Haj Amin al-Husseini, opposed the partition of 
Palestine, claiming all of Palestine for the Arabs. When the General Assembly 
voted in favor of partition, on 29 November 1947, the Palestinian leadership 
rejected the resolution and the Palestinian militias launched hostilities to 
abort the emergence of a Jewish state. They were aided by money, arms and 
volunteers from the Arab states. In the course of this first, civil-war half of 
the 1948 War (roughly from 30 November 1947 until 14 May 1948) the Palestinian 
militias attacked Jewish traffic and settlements for four months. But 
eventually the Jewish militias, chiefly the Haganah, went over to the offensive 
(in early April) and routed the Palestinians, and some 300,000 were displaced 
from their homes and lands. On 15 May 1948, the day after the Zionist leaders 
declared the establishment of the State of Israel, the armies of Egypt, Syria, 
and Iraq invaded Palestine, in defiance of the will of the international 
community, as embodied in the partition resolution, and attacked the Jewish 
state. The army of Jordan, the fourth invading army, occupied the West Bank and 
East Jerusalem, the core of the territory earmarked in the partition resolution 
for Palestinian Arab statehood. (The Palestinians failed to declare statehood, 
and Jordan did not allow the Palestinians to establish a state and subsequently 
formally annexed the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Egypt emerged from the war 
in control of the Gaza Strip.) During the weeks and months after 15 May, the 
Israeli army contained the invading armies and eventually drove them out of 
most of Palestine. Another 400,000 Palestinians were displaced from their homes 
in the course of the fighting: Some were expelled by Jewish troops (for 
example, from Lydda and Ramle in July 1948), some were advised to leave or 
ordered out by Arab leaders and officers (for example, from Haifa in April 1948 
and Majdal in October). But most of the 700,000 simply fled out of fear of 
being caught up and harmed in the fighting. In summer 1948 the Israeli 
government decided not to allow the displaced Arabs—most of whom ended up in 
refugee camps in other parts of Palestine, i.e., the West Bank and Gaza—to 
return to the area of the State of Israel, deeming them inimical (they had just 
assailed the Jewish community and tried to destroy the Jewish state) and a 
potential Fifth Column.

Abbas's twisted history deliberately omits mention of the first half of the 
1948 War, the civil war half, in order to portray the Palestinians as innocent 
victims. In fact, they were primary agents in the events that followed 29 
November 1947, and in launching their assault on the Jewish community provoked 
and generated the Zionist counter-attack that resulted in the collapse of 
Palestinian society and the creation of the refugee problem. In history, 
peoples often pay for their aggression and mistakes, and this is what happened 
in Palestine.

Abbas and his authority have now launched a campaign for international 
recognition of Palestinian Arab statehood, which he promises will be formally 
declared in September. This, he tells us, will "pave the way for us to pursue 
claims against Israel at the United Nations, human rights treaty bodies and the 
International Court of Justice." 

What Abbas does not tell his readers is that the Palestinians, as in 1947, were 
offered statehood in a two-state compromise settlement in 2000 and rejected it 
(and he, Arafat's aide, did not object); and that he, Abbas, was again offered 
a state, a two-state settlement, by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in 2008, 
and he (again) rejected it. The compromises offered by Barak-Clinton and Olmert 
were based on a Palestinian state consisting of some 94% of the West Bank, 100% 
of the Gaza Strip and the (Arab) eastern half of Jerusalem, including half or 
three-quarters of the Old City. In return, the Palestinians were expected to 
recognize Israel, give up their demand for a mass refugee return and agree 
definitively to an "end of claims" and an "end of conflict."

Arafat and Abbas rejected the offered compromises because they do not want a 
two-state solution, they want all of Palestine. Hence they had, and have, no 
interest in negotiating a compromise with Israel. (Abbas, in the New York 
Times, pays lip service to the idea of negotiation: "Negotiations remain our 
first option"—but this is hogwash. Last year Netanyahu froze settlement 
activity for ten months, under pressure from Obama and the Arab world—but Abbas 
failed to actually negotiate. He dragged his feet. Since then, Netanyahu, in 
refusing to extend that settlement freeze, has played into Abbas's hands, and 
has contributed enormously to the ongoing delegitimization of Israel in the 
West. In the Arab countries, of course, it was neither here nor there, as they 
have never "legitimized" Israel.) 

Abbas is now pursuing a Palestinian state without having to pay the price of 
recognizing Israel or making peace. Once the Palestinians get their West 
Bank-Gaza state, they will use it as a springboard for their second-stage 
assault, political and military, on Israel—and they will no doubt lodge claims 
"at the United Nations, human rights treaty bodies, and the International Court 
of Justice" as part of that assault.

But the major basis of political and moral assault on Israel will be the 
Palestinian demand for a "Right of Return"—and its international acceptance and 
implementation—of the 1948 refugees, who now number, them and their 
descendants, 5-6 million souls. As Abbas puts it in his article, the refugee 
problem will need to be resolved "justly" on the basis of UN General Assembly 
resolution 194, of December 1948, which, in the Palestinian interpretation, 
endorses the "Right of Return." If the world accepts this Palestinian demand 
and there is implementation, Israel will cease to exist (Israel's current 
population consists of close to 6 million Jews and 1.4 million Arabs: Add to it 
5-6 million Palestinian refugees and the country will have an Arab, not a 
Jewish, majority. Ergo, no Jewish state.). This is the Palestinian aim and end 
game; this, in fact, is the "truth" that Abbas is purveying and pursuing.

  _____  

Source URL (retrieved on May 29, 2011): 
http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/exposing-abbas-5335

 



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