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[OPE-L:7417] Colonial Attitudes in Israel (LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE)



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Colonial Attitudes in Israel (LE
 MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE)

 Le Monde diplomatique



-----------------------------------------------------

July 2002

                    COLONIAL ATTITUDES IN ISRAEL

                    Camp David's thwarted peace


_______________________________________________________

President Bush has urged the Palestinians to replace Yasser Arafat as a condition of US support for their statehood. This call underscores the failure of the Oslo accords. As Israel tightens its hold on the West Bank and Gaza, peace has never seemed more distant. Yet two years ago Israelis and Palestinians seemed close to agreement: the Camp David summit in July 2000 could have been considered as one further step in the long negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians. Instead it was dismissed as a total failure, with Arafat responsible for that failure.

                                                  by
 ALAIN GRESH


_______________________________________________________

When, a few decades from now, historians return to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict of the 1990s they will undoubtedly agree on at least one point. The Camp David summit - a two-week conclave (11 to 25 July 2000) to which President Bill Clinton invited the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Barak, and the president of the Palestinian Authority (PA), Yasser Arafat - marked the start of the Middle East's long descent into the inferno. As historians decipher the reports on the summit published by the international media, they will probably warn their students that there would be little truth in history if it was based exclusively on information from the press.

      For months there was a one-sided version of the
 summit:
      Arafat had rejected Barak's "generous offer"
 and refused
      the creation of a Palestinian state on 95%,
 even 97%, of
      the West Bank and the whole of the Gaza Strip,
 with its
      capital in East Jerusalem. His obstinate
 demands for
      millions of Palestinian refugees to be given
 the right to
      return to Israel had wrecked all hope of a
 historic peace
      treaty between Israelis and Palestinians.

      One of the prime merits of the book by Charles
 Enderlin,
      Le Rêve Brisé (1), is that it firmly
 contradicts this
      version of events. Enderlin has been the
 Jerusalem
      correspondent for the France 2 television
 channel for
      more than 20 years. As the peace negotiations
 continued,
      he filmed the main protagonists, on the
 understanding
      that material would not be released before the
 end of
      2001. He had access to many of their personal
 notes,
      which he has put into perspective, drawing on
 his
      exceptional knowledge of the area and its
 history. The
      result, which is corroborated by other accounts
 (2),
      throws new light on the failure of the Oslo
 process.

      At the end of May 1999 Ehud Barak and the
 Labour party
      defeated Binyamin Netanyahu's right-wing
 coalition,
      ending its three years in power. Just after the
      elections, Saeb Erekat, one of the leading
 Palestinian
      negotiators, warned his new Israeli
 counterparts that
      there was very little room for manoeuvre.
 Palestinians
      had lost all hope of peace. Over the last few
 years they
      had been stifled and humiliated.

      Admittedly the Palestinians had been able to
 elect the
      PA, and the Israeli army had evacuated the main
 West Bank
      towns, with the notable exception of Hebron.
 But living
      conditions had constantly deteriorated. Travel
 inside the
      territories was increasingly difficult, with
 new
      checkpoints and humiliating searches - worse
 than before
      the signing of the 1993 Oslo accords. The
 standard of
      living plummeted and the settlements continued
 their
      inexorable advance, with more Arab land being
 confiscated
      every day. Hundreds of Palestinian prisoners,
 held since
      1993, remained behind bars. May 1999 was
 supposed to mark
      the end of the period of transition to
 autonomy, with the
      setting up of a Palestinian state. But the
 timeframe had
      slipped and none of the major issues still
 outstanding -
      borders, Jerusalem, settlements, refugees,
 security and
      water - had been addressed.

      The Palestinian leadership therefore welcomed
 Barak's
      election victory, even if there was some
 anxiety about
      this relative newcomer to politics. As chief of
 staff,
      Barak had opposed the original 1993 Oslo
 accords and two
      years later, as minister of the interior, he
 had voted
      against the agreement known as Oslo II
 (September 1995),
      which provided for the withdrawal of the
 Israeli army
      from the main Palestinian towns. Once in power
 he lost
      the Palestinians' trust within just a few
 months.

      Barak took the immediate start of negotiations
 on the
      final status of the West Bank and Gaza as an
 excuse for
      delaying the implementation of the commitments
 made by
      his predecessor and the hand-over of new
 territory to the
      PA. His decision to comply - only partially -
 came too
      late. Moreover he failed to honour his own
 promises to
      evacuate villages in the outskirts of Jerusalem
 - Abu
      Dis, al-Azzaria and Sawahra - even though the
 Israeli
      government and parliament had voted for this
 concession.

                          'Dear brothers'

      For reasons that had nothing to do with
 tactics, Barak
      was clearly attached to the settlements. One of
 the first
      things he did, after the election, was to visit
 the
      extremist settlers of Ofra and Beit El,
 addressing them
      as his "dear brothers" (3). On 31 March 2000 he
 spoke to
      the settlers in Hebron, a group of fanatics
 implanted in
      the centre of the Arab town who terrorised its
      population. He affirmed the right of Jews to
 live in
      Hebron in safety, protected from any attacks.
 Under the
      Barak government building in the settlements
 continued at
      a faster pace than under Netanyahu.

      Worse still, Barak neglected the Palestinian
 issue for
      months and gave priority to negotiations with
 Syria. He
      later attempted to justify this approach: "I
 always
      supported Syria first reaching peace with Syria
 would
      greatly limit the Palestinians' ability to
 widen the
      conflict. On the other hand, solving the
 Palestinian
      problem will not diminish Syria's ability to
      existentially threaten Israel" (4). He
 appointed Oded
      Eran to lead negotiations with the
 Palestinians. But he
      did not listen when Eran told him that the
 Palestinian
      problem was central to the Israeli-Arab
 conflict and no
      solution to the conflict with Syria would be
 found nor
      any agreement reached until it was settled.

      Once more Barak would take no advice and again
 he failed.
      Enderlin's account provides details of Barak's
 personal
      responsibility in this fiasco. Dennis Ross, the
 US Middle
      East coordinator, who can hardly be suspected
 of pro-Arab
      sympathies, once complained that whereas the
 Syrians had
      made progress on all fronts, Barak had made
 none.

      By the time talks with the Palestinians resumed
 in spring
      2000, Barak had wasted almost a year. His
 government
      majority had disintegrated and the suspicion of
 the
      Palestinians - both the PA and public opinion -
 had
      increased. Barak decided to force the issue and
 organise
      a summit meeting to settle all outstanding
 issues. Was
      his offer sincere, or did he aim to trap the
 PA, making
      it responsible for failure? The Palestinian
 leadership
      had serious misgivings. It explained that
 preparatory
      talks were needed to ensure that a meeting
 between Barak
      and Arafat was truly productive, warning that a
 hastily
      organised summit could lead to disaster. The
 warning went
      unheeded.

      Barak convinced Clinton, nearing the end of his
 term as
      president, that he could crown his career with
 a
      spectacular success. The two men met for the
 first time
      on 15 July 1999 and, according to Enderlin, it
 was love
      at first sight. Clinton could not conceal his
 admiration
      for Barak, going so far as to say that he was
 "eager as a
      kid with a new toy". Their affinity influenced
 the course
      of events at Camp David. Despite his efforts,
 Clinton
      always felt closer to Barak. It required little
 effort on
      his part to understand, accept and defend
 Israeli
      positions.

      In his book Enderlin devotes a long chapter to
 the Camp
      David meeting. He describes the life of the
 summit, its
      participants, the discussions within each of
 the three
      delegations. But should it really count as a
 summit?
      Barak refused to negotiate directly with
 Arafat, whom he
      never met alone. Two years later he tried to
 justify this
      attitude: "Did Nixon meet Ho Chi Minh or Giap
 [before
      reaching the Vietnam peace deal]? Or did De
 Gaulle ever
      speak to [Algerian leader] Ben Bella?" (5). But
 neither
      Nixon nor De Gaulle had demanded a summit
 meeting with
      their adversaries. Barak's obvious disdain for
 Arafat
      merely fuelled Palestinian suspicions.

      Enderlin's account confirms that Arafat was
 never offered
      a Palestinian state controlling more than 91%
 of the West
      Bank. Nor was his full authority over the Arab
 districts
      of Jerusalem and the Haram al-Sharif (the
 precinct on
      which al-Aqsa mosque is built) recognised.
 Contrary to
      claims by several Jewish organisations, the
 Palestinian
      negotiators never demanded the return of 3m
 refugees to
      Israel. The figures mentioned during the talks
 varied
      from a few hundred to several thousand
 Palestinians, whom
      Israel would allow to return.

      Arafat had already made clear to Clinton at a
 meeting in
      Washington on 15 June 2000 that he recognised
 the
      existence of UN Resolution 194 (of 11 December
 1948, on
      refugees' right to return to their homes) but
 said that a
      balance had to be struck between Israel's
 demographic
      concerns and Palestinian demands. According to
 Robert
      Malley and Hussein Agha, the refugee problem
 "was barely
      discussed between the two sides" (6) at the
 summit. At
      the subsequent press conference, Barak
 attributed its
      failure to disagreement on Jerusalem, before
 changing
      tack and highlighting the refugee problem.

      So Camp David ended without agreement. This was
 not the
      end of the world. Progress had been achieved
 and taboos
      shattered. For the first time the Israelis had
 considered
      sharing Jerusalem in some way. The Palestinians
 had
      accepted that certain territories on the West
 Bank or in
      East Jerusalem, where there were large
 concentrations of
      settlers, could be annexed by Israel.

      But instead of building on these advances,
 Barak put all
      the blame for the summit's failure on Arafat.
 Above all
      he resuscitated an old right-wing slogan that
 he had no
      valid opposite number on the Palestinian side.
 The claim
      was taken up by journalists and the media, and
 gained
      credence. Barak then threw all his energy into
 revealing
      what he called "the true face of Arafat". He
 stopped
      negotiating for a solution, preferring to
 demonstrate
      there was no solution.

      But negotiations did continue, particularly at
 Taba,
      Egypt, in January 2001. They brought the
 positions of the
      two parties closer on most of the issues under
      discussion, particularly territory and sharing
 of
      sovereignty in East Jerusalem. Arab quarters
 would be
      integrated in the Palestinian state and Israel
 would
      annex Jewish neighbourhoods. The Israeli
 delegates even
      made novel proposals on the refugee question
 (7). But it
      seems unlikely that these offers reflected
 Barak's own
      position, for he never endorsed them.

                     'The true face of Arafat'

      Menahem Klein, an advisor to the former Israeli
 foreign
      minister, Shlomo Ben Ami, recently confirmed
 this view.
      According to Klein, Barak told him that he had
 sent a
      delegation to Taba solely to reveal "the true
 face of
      Arafat" and not to conclude an agreement (8).
 Barak
      succeeded in convincing Israeli public opinion
 that it
      was a case of "us or them", dealing a fatal
 blow to the
      peace camp. The Israeli peace campaigner, Uri
 Avnery,
      rightly called Barak "a peace criminal".

      The aim is not to exonerate the Palestinian
 leaders of
      all blame, and Enderlin is careful to avoid
 this mistake.
      Arafat was often indecisive, incapable of
 taking drastic
      measures. He totally underestimated the risk of
 the right
      winning the elections in February 2001 and
 invested quite
      unjustified trust in the Bush administration.
 Above all
      he could not understand the undercurrents of
 Israeli
      opinion and failed to draw up a clear
 programme,
      particularly after the second intifada started.

      Enderlin rejects outright the idea that the
 Palestinian
      leadership planned the uprising. Georges
 Malbrunot, a
      fellow journalist, seconds this view in a
 well-researched
      book on the intifada (9). According to him, on
 31 July
      2000, well before the start of the uprising,
 Erakat told
      all the Israeli heads of security that Camp
 David had
      failed, but its achievements had to be
 protected.
      Negotiations were continuing and there was a
 real chance
      of success. He added that in the coming weeks
 they would
      have to prevent any friction that might trigger
 violent
      confrontation.

      But it was already too late. The PA was faced
 with the
      revolt of the Palestinian rank and file who
 demanded an
      immediate end to 35 years of occupation. It is
 perhaps
      worth remembering that several weeks later the
 intifada
      became a military operation, in response to
 Israeli army
      reprisals. Malbrunot recalls the scale of
 repression:
      "Israeli soldiers killed 204 Palestinians
 between 28
      September and 2 December, including 73 youths
 aged less
      than 17 and 24 members of the security forces.
 The
      Palestinian leaders all agreed that they could
 not afford
      to lose 10 children a day and that the human
 cost was too
      high. They must find another strategy" (10).

      By now the Oslo accords were defunct. The
 causes of their
      demise and the personal responsibility of the
 various
      players have been the subject of endless
 debate. Above
      all, the peace was lost because the occupying
 power - the
      Israeli government and a large part of public
 opinion -
      was incapable of treating the Palestinians as
 equals. The
      Israelis always put their own rights before
 Palestinian
      rights to dignity, freedom, security and
 independence. If
      progress is to be made in the future they will
 have to
      break with this colonialist attitude, now
 defended by
      Barak.

      In a recent interview Barak supported Sharon's
 strategy
      of terror and in particular this April's
 Operation
      Defensive Wall, but claims he would have acted
 "more
      forcefully and with greater speed, and
 simultaneously
      against all cities" (11). Barak shows his true
 colours in
      his references to the Arabs. "They are products
 of a
      culture in which to tell a lie ... creates no
 dissonance.
      They don't suffer from the problem of telling
 lies that
      exists in Judeo-Christian culture. Truth is
 seen as an
      irrelevant category."

      This simplistic view, levelling accusations at
 an entire
      culture, is reminiscent of the racist
 obsessions of the
      French authorities in Algeria, advocated by
 Camille
      Brunel, a French colonialist writing at the
 beginning of
      the 20th century. He wrote: "A French officer
 pardoned an
      Arab rebel who had deserved death a hundred
 times. The
      Arab said: 'I am in debt to you. To show my
 gratitude, I
      shall give you a piece of advice that you must
 never
      forget as it will always be useful when dealing
 with my
      people. Never trust an Arab, not even me'"
 (12).

 ____________________________________________________

      (1) Charles Enderlin, Le rêve brisé. Histoire
 de l'échec
      du processus de paix au Proche-Orient.
 1995-2002, Fayard,
      Paris, 2002, 366 pages. Unless otherwise
 indicated all
      quotes are taken from the book.

      (2) See, in particular, Robert Malley and
 Hussein Agha,
      New York Review of Books, 9 August 2001. Amnon
 Kapeliouk
      was one of the first writers to contradict the
 dominant
      line on Camp David. See "Camp David dialogues"
 and
      "Conducting catastrophe", Le Monde diplomatique
 English
      edition, respectively September 2000 and
 February 2002.

      (3) Michel Warschawski, Sur la frontière,
 Stock, Paris,
      2002.

      (4) New York Review of Books, 13 June 2002.

      (5) Ibid.

      (6) Ibid, quoting from Robert Malley, who took
 part in
      the summit as one of Clinton's presidential
 advisors.

      (7) See "The Middle East: how the peace was
 lost" and
      "The Middle East: how the war cannot be won",
 Le Monde
      diplomatique English edition, September 2001.

      (8) Ha'aretz, Tel Aviv, 2 May 2002.

      (9) Georges Malbrunot, Des pierres aux fusils.
 Les
      secrets de l'Intifada, Flammarion, Paris, 2002.

      (10) Ibid.

      (11) New York Review of Books, 13 June 2002.

      (12) Quoted by Alain Ruscio, Le Credo de
 l'homme blanc,
      Complexe, Bruxelles.




Translated by Harry Forster



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