Tuesday, 26 August 2008, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert during their meeting at the Prime Minister's Residence in Jerusalem.
With
all sides openly acknowledging, privately and even publicly, that the Annapolis process has failed in its promise to provide a viable
political vision and structure for relevant negotiations between the
Palestinian Authority and Israel
that would result in an agreement by the end of this year, what comes next? The
Americans are preoccupied with their presidential elections, elections that
regardless of the outcome will result in a new administration and unknown set
of domestic and international priorities. The Israelis are also busy with
elections. The first wave on 17 September in the Kadima Party primaries to
select a new leader following the decision by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to
step down in September in the face of extensive police investigations and
possible indictments. Then, perhaps, if and when the new leader of Kadima is
unable to form a government, national elections will be held in Israel in early
2009. Meanwhile, the Palestinian internal situation has been in a fractured
state—between the Hamas and Fatah, Gaza and the West Bank—in large part due to US and
Israeli meddling and pressure on the Palestinians to reverse their
democratic choice of January 2006. Once again, the Palestinians are compelled
to understand, be patient and wait due to the crises of the Israelis and
Americans.
Yet
the situation on the ground does not remain on hold pending Israeli and American
elections. While current negotiations focus on “everything and nothing” as
admitted by Prime Minister Olmert,
Israel is
strengthening its occupation of the Palestinian territories. Since the
beginning of the Annapolis process in November 2007, for example, Israel has
almost doubled the building of settlements in the West Bank, according to a report
issued yesterday by the Israeli group Peace Now . Simultaneously, the
number of Israeli building tenders for settlements in East
Jerusalem has increased by a factor of 38 over the same period in
2007.
The
Annapolis Agreement states unambiguously that “the parties also commit to
immediately implement their respective obligations under the performance-based
road map,” a document that obligates Israel to “freeze all settlement
activity (including natural growth of settlements).” At Annapolis, the United
States crowned itself supreme judge to “monitor and judge the fulfillment of
the commitments of both sides to the Road Map.” The utter lack of American
political will to fulfill this position is evidenced by the tepid statements
issued by Secretary Rice and the US State Department concerning the “unhelpful”
ongoing construction of settlements. Leaks to the media last month suggested
that General (retired) James Jones, the US Security Coordinator for the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, was set to issue a “very harsh” report concerning
Israel’s definition of its
security interests in the West Bank, interests
which include the bolstering of settlements. Such a report has yet to be
released, although the leak served to provide the illusion of a relevant
critical voice within the US
administration of Israeli actions.
Israeli
supporters of the failed Oslo process were quick
to designate Annapolis
as “the only game in town” last November, demonizing political criticism of
this tried and failed formula as an act against peace itself and the will of
the Palestinian and Israeli peoples. Learning nothing from the political
failure of a scant few years ago, these Oslo warriors again supported secret
negotiations (and thus the illusion that progress was being made) while
discouraging Israeli political accountability and public participation in
discussions of how to ensure that Annapolis, unlike the Oslo process, would not
again result in even fewer chances for peace and the socioeconomic
marginalization of huge swathes of the Israeli public for the benefit of a few
internationally-connected Israeli businessmen living in Tel Aviv.
The
sociopolitical situation in the region is vastly different than it was during
the Oslo heyday of the 1990s. Israel’s
60+ year reliance on military might and force to ensure its national agenda has
proven irrelevant in the 21st century of multiple power spheres and shifting
alliances. In response to (amongst other issues) the catastrophic American-led
occupation of Iraq, Israel’s failed 2006 war against Lebanon, and of course the
ongoing Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories, the peoples of the Middle
East have placed themselves on the front lines of global resistance to American
neoliberal imperialism. National resistance movements, from Lebanon to Iran,
from Iraq to the Occupied Palestinian Territories, have responded to the US and
Israeli military-economic designs and proven to the world’s military forces
that might is not enough.
Yet
the vast majority of Israelis, with a blind and arrogant ignorance historically
shared by occupying powers, believe they are living in the closest approximation
of peace possible for them today. Palestinian operations within Israel have all
but disappeared, Israeli relations with the Western world (upgrading of
relations with the EU, negotiations to join the OECD, lavish international
attendance at it’s 60th birthday bash in May, etc.) have perhaps
never been better while the immediate price paid for the occupation in the
lives of soldiers is exceptionally low. While Olmert and Kadima may have been
elected in March 2006 on a “peace” platform of unilateral disengagement from
Israeli defined sections of the Gaza Strip and West Bank (no talk of the
occupied Syrian Golan or East Jerusalem, of course), no real public pressure
has been exerted by Israelis on their failed and now irrelevant government to
even make reference to its past political promises.
In
this current political context, one of the sole ways that local and
international civil society groups can tangibly promote an end to the Israeli
occupation of the OPT and the establishment of a just peace and social justice
for all Palestinians and Israelis is by honoring the public call of Palestinian civil
society and embark on boycott, sanctions and divestment (BDS) campaigns. The
campaigns, easily adapted to the social, political, and historical realities
and requirements of civil society groups throughout the world, provide a
tangible means for demanding Israeli accountability and taking of responsibility,
values (and actions) necessary for even broaching the topic of peace after more
than 100 years of Palestinian dispossession and displacement.
Israeli
opponents, including all mainstream ‘peace’ groups and NGOs, issue dire
warnings (if they bother at all) of how BDS will serve only to alienate Israeli
public opinion and distance wider groups of people from peace. However, the
Palestinian people cannot be held hostage to any necessary or imagined internal
Israeli social-political-psychological processes. The Israeli occupation of
1967 must end, and must end immediately. After the occupation ends, the long term work required to enable a joint life of peace and justice for
Palestinians and Israelis, as an integral and progressive part of the Middle
East, becomes a top priority.
Israeli
human rights and peace activists have failed for over 40 years to hold their
own society accountable for the occupation as a system, and not simply a
collection of human rights violations that can be “caught”
on film and dealt (or not) within the Israeli legal system. The
aforementioned Palestinian call invites “conscientious Israelis to support this call, for the sake
of justice and genuine peace.” Israelis who desire an end to the
occupation should welcome this Palestinian invitation and assistance in holding
their government accountable and generating positive political change; they
have proven unable to do this alone. Human rights violations are committed not to
violate human rights per se, but to further political goals. Israeli human
rights groups can be inspired and learn much from their Palestinian colleagues,
such as Addameer, Defence of Children-Palestine, the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights and many
other Palestinian and international human rights organizations about how to
promote human rights in the existing political environment and not in a
theoretical and legal vacuum.
Israeli
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni recently warned that “the pressure, the
international pressure, this can lead to clashes […] to violence as we had […] after
Camp David 2000 and the circumstances, in a way, are similar.” Livni blames not the Israeli occupation but
international pressure for a potential outbreak of future violence. However,
for over 40 years, Israel
has proven without a shadow of a doubt that barring internationally justified
Palestinian resistance to the occupation and strong international political pressure,
there will be no peace and justice.
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