Amitai Etzioni Notes

http://icps.gwu.edu/2013/07/24/an-israeli-palestinian-commonwealth/

An Israeli-Palestinian Commonwealth?

Originally published in The Huffington Post on 7/23/13

Secretary John Kerry is reported to making progress in restarting the 
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. Many analysts and high-ranking officials 
involved in this and previous rounds of give and take between the two sides 
assert that “everyone knows what a final agreement between the Israelis and 
Palestinians would look like,” as Bill Clinton put it. Senior Palestinian 
negotiator Saeb Erekat stated that “We don’t need to reinvent the wheel. I 
believe it is known by now. It is no secret. The Palestinian state will be 
established on June 4, 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as the capital, living 
side by side with the state of Israel.” Uri Avnery (founder of the Gush Shalom 
peace movement) has written that “the terms of Israeli-Palestinian peace are 
clear”: a “sovereign and viable” Palestine; a border based on the pre-1967 
lines with agreed-upon “land swaps”; a divided Jerusalem with Palestinian 
sovereignty over Arab areas; evacuation of settlements outside Israel’s 
borders; and Israeli recognition of the “principle of the right of the 
[Palestinian] refugees to return.” No mention is made in these and numerous 
other such statements — that Oslo agreements and President Obama assume that 
the new Palestinian state will be a demilitarized one; that in the past 
Palestinian negotiators accepted this assumption, and the Israel governments — 
past and present — consider this assumption a vital one.

For a long time, the right-wing parts of the Israeli political spectrum 
objected to the very notion of a Palestinian state. When finally Prime Minister 
Netanyahu stated Israel’s willingness to accept a two-state solution in June 
2010, he added that “Israel cannot agree to a Palestinian state unless it gets 
guarantees it is demilitarized.” President Obama’s “Cairo II” speech in May 
2011 referred to the Palestinian state as a “non-militarized” one. Much more is 
at issue here than the positioning of some Israeli troops along the Jordan 
River.

By far the most detailed case for a demilitarized Palestinian state is made in 
a document that received scant attention. The document, “Israel’s Critical 
Security Needs for a Viable Peace,” carries an introduction by Lieutenant 
General (ret.) Moshe Ya’alon (Vice Prime Minister of Israel) and contains 
extensive presentations by several highly influential Israeli generals, 
including Major General (res.) Uzi Dayan (former head of the Israeli National 
Security Council); Major General (res.) Aharon Ze’evi-Farkash (former head of 
the Israeli Military Intelligence Directorate); Brigadier General (res.) Udi 
Dekel; and Major General (res.) Yaakov Amidror (national security advisor to 
Netanyahu).

The Israeli precept of demilitarization, spelled out in the document, 
encompasses “a wider definition than is normally accepted or spelled out in 
international law — since the common term does not take into account the 
changing nature of military conflicts and threats.” According to the document, 
the precept includes 1) the absence of any kind of Palestinian army or security 
force beyond what is needed for internal policing and security. The formation 
of an army with “planes, tanks, and other conventional heavy armor and 
weaponry” would be prohibited. Only weapons whose purpose is for internal 
security would be permitted. 2) The Palestinian state would be prohibited from 
forming military alliances with other nations or conducting joint military 
exercises. It would not be allowed to maintain any military forces or build any 
military structures outside its borders. 3) Any sort of military infrastructure 
would be banned and the manufacture of dual-use components (though perhaps not 
intended for military use) would be prohibited. 4) The Palestinian police and 
security forces would have to engage in activities to prevent terrorism and 
smuggling. 5) The Palestinian government would have to work to build a “culture 
of peace” and prevent interference in the state by radical extremists and 
opponents of peace. 6) Effective control, supervision, and inspection along the 
borders of the Palestinian state would be established. 7) The 
Israeli-Palestinian airspace would be unified and controlled by Israel.   
Israel would control the electromagnetic spectrum to prevent disruption and 
jamming of Israeli military and civil communications. 9) Israel would retain 
the right to locate some strategic sites and early-warning stations in the West 
Bank. 10) Israel would have the capability to deploy IDF troops against 
military and irregular forces infiltrating the Palestinian state. 11) The 
Israeli navy would have control of the seas and would have the ability to 
detain boats to prevent hostile activity and smuggling. 12) Israel would 
maintain control of strategic high-ground areas overlooking Ben Gurion Airport. 
13) Israel would maintain the capability of stopping foreign armies and 
weaponry from crossing the Jordan River into the Palestinian state. 14) The 
Palestinian state would be allowed to possess only explicitly permitted weapons 
and capabilities, rather than not possessing weapons that were specifically 
prohibited. 15) Palestinian and Israeli forces would have to share intelligence 
to prevent terrorism in the Palestinian state. 16) An effective supervision and 
verification system would be created to ensure that the Palestinian state 
remains demilitarized.

The reasons given for ensuring that a new Palestinian state ought to be a 
disarmed one are basically of two kinds. First, disarmament is necessary to 
prevent the new Palestinian state from turning into a “Hamastan.” Second, as 
Jackson Diehl put it in the Washington Post, is “how to ensure that the 
post-occupation West Bank does not become another Iranian base.”

The Israeli document rejects the use of foreign troops on the grounds that both 
UN and NATO peacekeeping forces in the past did not stop terrorists and left 
once fighting started. Hence, the current Israeli government holds not only 
that a Palestinian state must be demilitarized, but also that Israeli forces 
will be the only ones to enforce this condition.

At various points both sides have agreed to at least some elements of 
demilitarization. The Declaration of Principles (9/93), the Gaza-Jericho 
Agreement (5/94), and the Interim Agreement (9/95) all contain statements to 
this effect. For instance, there was agreement that the Palestinian state would 
have a strong police force but no army, and that Israel would be in charge of 
securing the borders with Jordan and Egypt. The 2000 Oslo agreements called for 
Israeli early warning stations in the new Palestinian state, and for the IDF to 
be able to reenter the West Bank along designated routes in “emergency” 
situations.

>From a legal viewpoint, one can imagine two nations agreeing that one nation 
>would be armed to the teeth and control the space of the other, while the 
>other would have few arms and no military trappings. For a sociologist, it is 
>hard to image that such an agreement would win the support of the population 
>of the newly independent state, as the coming and going of all people and many 
>goods would be scrutinized and controlled by the other state. It is extremely 
>rare for a national state to be demilitarized. The very precept of national 
>sovereignty stipulates that a nation can conduct its internal affairs, 
>including arming itself, in any way it prefers. For Palestinians who feel that 
>they have long been humiliated, the establishment of a truncated state would 
>be viewed as a continuation of their treatment as second-class citizens.

Once the Palestinian state has a seat at the UN and embassies in the capitals 
of the world and otherwise assumes the trappings of an independent state, the 
presence of Israeli forces on what used to be the West Bank and the 
restrictions Israel would impose on the Palestinian state would seem almost as 
debilitating as the siege of Gaza. One must therefore expect that large 
segments of the international community would pressure Israel to respect 
Palestinian sovereignty and allow the new state to modify or deviate from the 
restrictive agreement.

The apparent conflict between Israel’s security needs and the Palestinians’ 
aspirations for a “real” state calls for thinking outside the box. Treating the 
two states as members of one commonwealth, may move the deliberations in a 
constructive direction. For example, Israelis and Palestinians might carry out 
joint security patrols of disputed areas. Such patrols would be similar to the 
largely-successful ones carried out between 1945 and 1955, when the U.S., the 
UK, and France patrolled the center of Vienna jointly with the USSR — a nation 
that was already emerging as a Cold War adversary. There is precedent for such 
operations. The 1993 peace accord established a series of joint patrols to be 
carried out by Israelis and Palestinians in regions where political control was 
shared by the two sides. Such patrols were implemented in 1994 in both Gaza and 
Jericho and, in their first 21 months of operations, successfully thwarted 
roughly 80 attacks against Israelis. These operations were expanded to include 
the city of Hebron in 1997 and continued through the end of the year 2000, when 
a security incident led to a cessation of the patrols. During their operation, 
the patrols reportedly served to enhance cooperation between the two sides, 
soften the attitudes of those whose security they ensured, and reduce overall 
Israeli-Palestinian tensions by focusing upon common threats.

A fair number of other projects have been suggested that could be viewed as 
building blocks of a joint architecture into which the jointed security forces 
could be folded. There is already considerable collaboration between Israel and 
the Palestinians on matters concerning water. Especially imaginative is a 
project that calls for bringing water from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea, 
providing for desalinization and generating a great deal of electricity for 
both nations. Other such potential building blocks include the formation of 
binational industrial parks and green parks at the borders of the two states, 
to which citizens of both nations would have free access. And commonwealth 
committees of historians could review the educational material used in both 
states to remove texts that promote hate.

If Germany and France could form the European Union after they fought each 
other longer than the Israelis and the Palestinians, one cannot argue that a 
Middle Eastern commonwealth has no prayer, though granted, that is all it got 
right now — and Secretary Kerry.


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