Palestinians seek UN Moxie

Posted: 16 Sep 2011 06:12 PM PDT

Palestine Authority President Mahmoud Abbas gave a major speech Friday
making it clear to the Palestinians that the PA will seek membership
in the United Nations at this year’s General Assembly meeting.

The Palestinians (or more precisely the Fateh faction that controls
the ever-shrinking Palestinian parts of the West Bank) are not going
to the UN, as is often charged, to make an end run around negotiations
with Israel. Abbas knows very well, and acknowledged in his speech,
that only through negotiations with Israel can there ultimately be a
change in the status of the Palestinians as largely stateless persons,
a significant proportion of them descended from refugees created by
Israel ethnic cleansing campaigns in 1947-48.

The reason for seeking recognition as a member nation of the UN is
simply to gain moxie in those negotiations.

The big problem of the Palestinians is that, being stateless, they
lack moxie. Even Americans can go tomorrow to the West Bank and steal
Palestinian land and resources, aided by an enormous US aid package
for Israel and by unthinking, knee-jerk approval by the US government
of virtually anything Israel’s rightwing government does, no matter
how illegal in international law.

If Israeli squatters move in, claim Palestinian fields, and dig deep
wells that cause the Palestinian’s wells to dry up, what recourse do
Palestinians have? They mostly can’t sue in Israeli courts because
those courts are premised on Zionist principles of appropriating
Palestinian land and denying Palestinians statehood.

Since Israel has the strongest military in the region and several
hundred nuclear warheads, and since it has the absolute backing for
almost anything it wants to do to the Palestinians of among the most
powerful countries in the world (the US, Germany, the Netherlands,
most often Britain and France, etc.), the Palestinians are helpless.

Israel can conduct the Oslo accords with the Palestinians, and can
promise to withdraw almost completely from the West Bank by 1999, but
then can double the number of Israeli squatters on Palestinian land
instead. And PM Binyamin Netanyahu can actually boast on camera about
having destroyed the Oslo peace process. All this with impunity.
Nothing the Palestinians can do about it.

Former Congressman Alan Grayson said during the health care debate
that the Republican plan was “Don’t get sick; and if you get sick, die
quickly.”

The Likud Party’s (and worse, the Yisrael Beitenu Party’s) plan for
the Palestinians is, “If you have your land or resources taken by
Israeli squatters, drop dead or become a refugee once more.” That is
what the slogan that Palestine is Jordan really means — it is a call
for massive ethnic cleansing of 4 million people and relocating them
to the barren Eastern desert of the Hashemite Kingdom. It is a war
crime in the hopeful stages.

So the Palestinians have no moxie. They don’t have a state, don’t have
anyone they can depend on to do justice to them or effectively to get
them justice. They are, and have been since the Balfour Declaration,
royally screwed.

But if 126 out of 190 countries in the UN vote to make Palestine
within 1967 borders a member state, then at least the Palestinians
have some international recognition of their claims on statehood and
on specific territory. (They often say that they were kicked out of
78% of their land, and are now willing to settle for 22%, but the
Israelis aren’t even willing to let them have the 22%).

Then when the Israelis annex ever more of the West Bank and flood the
territory with Israeli squatters (who often receive cheap prefab
housing from the Israeli government if only they will move there),
then the Palestinians can have their new friends call the Israel
ambassador on the mat.

Ultimately they might even gain the standing and respect to bring suit
against Israel concerns that are benefitting economically from the
theft of Palestinian land and resources.

That’s the hope.

It should be remembered that the Palestinian leadership was ambivalent
about this step, and felt forced into it by the absolute intransigence
of the Netanyahu government, which refuses to freeze Israeli
settlements while negotiations are being held concerning the land the
Israelis are squatting on. It would be like negotiating with someone
about a piece of pie when they have a fork and are eating away at the
pie, of which there is less and less left even as you negotiate for a
piece of it. The Palestinians are afraid that if the negotiations go
on like this, at the end of them they will only get some crumbs of a
stale pie crust, because the other party in the negotiations has
gobbled up the very thing over which there were negotiations.

Going to the UN General Assembly may or may not have any practical
implications. But it is the least the elected leadership of the
Palestinians could do. In all likelihood, the step comes as too little
and too late, and the Israelis have probably already made a two-state
solution impossible. If so, then the Palestinians face decades as
stateless flotsam, open to being expropriated at any moment.

It is an unstable situation, for the Palestinians and for the world.
If going to the UN contributes to a strengthening of the Palestinian
hand and some sort of citizenship for Palestinians in something, then
it will make the region and the world less unstable.

It is that move to more stability that President Obama has pledged to
veto. So the American veto will be a vote for instability and violence
in the region, which in turn will spill again over onto the European
and the American publics.

--
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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