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Whether or not the disengagement plan will ever be implemented, it has
already been wildely successful in dividing the peace movement, derailing the
Geneva Accords, and weakening opposition to Sharon. Now Sharon is on to
expanding settlements, building new ones, grabbing more land, killing
Palestinian civilians, and building the wall. With all this success for a mere
plan, why ever do anything?
Jimmy
Uri Avnery7.8.04
Some
Order in the Mess Ariel
It has sparked a
continuing cabinet crisis, an upheaval in several parties, a disorientation of
public opinion, confusion in the security establishment and armed confrontations
between Palestinian organizations. The Israeli peace
movement is mixed up like everybody else. Some support
Let�s try to make some
sense of this mess. 1.
What
does the plan say?
According to As a symbolic gesture,
the plan also provides for the dismantling of three small, unimportant
settlements on the northern edge of the 2.
Will
it be implemented? Not at all certain.
The plan
was not the result of elaborate staff-work. It was more in the nature of an
improvisation, quickly served up to please President Bush.
The government has
officially resolved to confirm the plan in principle, but has not decided to
dismantle a single settlement. Such a decision would necessitate another
government resolution. In the meantime, the
matter is moving forward languidly. The army is supposed to produce a plan, but
insists that the job of removing the settlers should be turned over to the
police. The Ministry of Justice has been charged with the drafting of the
necessary laws. A committee is supposed to prepare a sliding scale for
compensation. The tempo of progress in no way indicates speedy
implementation.
But, most importantly:
there is no effort at all to mobilize public opinion in favor of the
disengagement. The opponents of disengagement, the settlers and their allies,
are working with great zeal. They have already won a victory in the referendum
of Likud members, they have organized a big �human chain� demonstration, they
are preparing further large actions. They manipulate the media with great
dexterity. They can mobilize at a moment�s notice tens of thousands of settlers
and right-wingers. They have at their disposal almost unlimited amounts of
money, provided by American Jewish millionaires and Christian
fundamentalists. Opposing this
propaganda juggernaut, there is nothing but silence. The Likud is not mobilizing
its members for a campaign of support for the plan, the Labor party is busy with
internal squabbles about joining the government and the left-wing does not know
what to think about the whole affair. The supporters of the
plan console themselves with the knowledge that in all public opinion polls, a
majority supports the plan. But this is a wobbly majority, unenthusiastic and
unsure of itself. It has not yet been tested in a real crisis. It can easily
evaporate. 3.
Is
there a time-table? None at
all. Sharon and his people speak loosely about starting the evacuation in March, 2005, and finishing the job by the end of that year. By the look of things, this is idle talk. Since Yitzhak Rabin remarked that �there are no sacred dates�, all Israeli leaders have violated agreed timetables. The natural inclination is always to postpone difficult decisions. When I met Yasser
Arafat this morning, he remarked: �It took
4.
So
what is The plan suits his
grand design to turn all (or almost all) of Eretz
For him,
5.
If
so, is there any positive side to the disengagement
plan? In
the peace camp, some voices insist that the plan should be supported because it
creates, for the first time, a precedent of evacuating settlements in Eretz
The peaceniks who
support the plan argue that the long-term intentions of
6.
On
the other side, can the plan cause damage? A disengagement that
is divorced from peace negotiations can be very
dangerous.
If this happens, the
local strongman may well end up like Bashir Jumail, who was supposed to rule
On the other hand, if
the experiment succeeds, the 7.
Can
the plan be supported by the peace camp? Only if the following
conditions are met: (a)
The
government of (b)
The
disengagement must be connected with the renewal of peace negotiations between
the government of (c)
The disengagement must be implemented by
agreement with the Palestinian Authority and the territory must be turned over
to it in an orderly manner. The agreement should include arrangements that will
guarantee the security of both sides, perhaps backed by an international
peacekeeping force. (d)
The
�Philadelphi Axis� must be dismantled. Land, air and sea connections between the
(e)
All buildings and infrastructure of the
settlements must be turned over intact to the Palestinian Authority or an
international institution. Their value may be taken into account when the
refugee problem is settled. (f)
A definite timetable must be agreed for
the implementation of all phases of the
disengagement.
PS: When I asked Arafat
today whether he believes that the disengagement plan will actually be
implemented, he answered: �We hope so!� �I didn�t ask whether
you hope so, but whether you believe it!� I insisted. Arafat smiled and
repeated: �We hope so!�
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