
From
Challenge # 82
November - December 2003
editorial
The Geneva Accord: Beyond Time and Space
REPRESENTING no official body, Palestinians
close to the PA and members of the Israeli left have signed a detailed
plan for a peace agreement. Switzerland financed the exercise, whose
result is known as the Geneva Accord. The chief figure on the Israeli side
is Yossi Beilin, formerly a central leader in the Labor Party and an
architect of the Oslo Accords. His Palestinian counterpart is Yasser Abed
Rabo, the PA's former Minister of Information.
The new
accord places before the two peoples, for the first time, an idea of the
approximate price that each would have to pay in order to gain a peace
agreement that the other might perhaps someday be persuaded to live with.
It breaks taboos: a few Israelis speak publicly, in detail, about dividing
Jerusalem; a few Palestinians adopt a document which, in effect, nullifies
the refugees' right of return. Proponents make the further point that the
agreement explodes the myth that Israel has "no partner" for negotiations.
Such
claims, we shall see, are questionable. The single definite change is
this: the Zionist left (which eleven years ago stepped into the shadow of
the Labor Party, enticing the Palestinians into the trap of Oslo), has
taken at last an independent stand, its most radical ever, showing how far
it is willing to go in a future agreement with the Palestinians.
As to the
Accord itself, we shall focus on two questions. How far exactly are
the signers willing to go? How relevant is the document?
Breakthroughs occurred on three fronts.
1)
Territory. To appearances, the Israeli side acceded to the
principle of not taking land, although it did so by trade-offs: that is,
it adopted the principle that for every acre Israel annexes beyond the
border of June 4, 1967, it will compensate the Palestinians with an acre
of Israeli territory elsewhere. The land annexed to Israel will consist of
certain Jewish settlements. All in all, it will amount to about 2.5% of
the West Bank.
2)
Jerusalem. The sides adopted the principle that Arab areas would pass
to Palestinian sovereignty, Jewish to Israeli. In the Old City, the Jewish
Quarter and the Western Wall would become part of Israel, the other three
quarters part of Palestine – with heavy reliance on international
observers.
3)
Refugees. The Palestinians did not explicitly forgo the right of
return. They were not asked to do so. The Accord stipulates, however, an
end to all past claims. It provides that the number of refugees allowed to
return will depend on Israel's agreement.
THIS MAY LOOK
PROMISING, but on reflection we cannot but
wonder about the identity of those who play the Israeli side in these
fictitious negotiations. Are they the left? Surely, the left ought
to be the ally of the Palestinian people, working with it to change
the present reality. But these, we must remember, are the Zionist
left (an oxymoron).
For the
agreement takes Israeli supremacy as axiomatic. We see this in the fact
that the settlements near Jerusalem, including the Jewish neighborhoods
built after 1967, will be recognized as part of Israel, and likewise the
Etzion Bloc between Jerusalem and Hebron. Yet why (on the basis of what
principle) should French Hill (the first post-1967 Jerusalem neighborhood)
or Ma'aleh Adumim (a Jerusalem suburb in the West Bank) be annexed to
Israel? As in the case of settlements like Ariel and Kiryat Arba, they sit
on lands that Israel conquered; they are "facts" that Israel "created".
Why should leftists, even Zionist leftists, start from a position that
accepts such "facts"?
Or to take
another instance: Palestine will have no army. It will depend for security
on massive international forces, relying on the kindness of strangers. It
was far from the minds of the Zionist-leftist negotiators to allow parity
on this point.
Speaking of
parity, the Geneva Accord does not address the economic disparity
between Israel and Palestine or between Israel and the wider Arab world.
This disparity will be the central factor in the coming struggle between
haves and have-nots, where Israel stands exposed as an anomalous extension
of the first world into the third. No wonder the Zionist-leftists want
Palestine demilitarized!
In the
current geopolitical realities of the Middle East, the Palestine of the
Geneva Accord will be a wingless chicken, poor and dependent. As Jaffa to
Tel Aviv.
OUR
MAIN CRITICISM of the Geneva Accord pertains, however, not to its content
but rather to the context in which it has been published. It lacks all
relation to time and space. Its spokespersons admit that the document is
incomplete (e.g., they have not completed the articles on water or the
economy), because there was an urgent need to publish it. The
urgency derives from political dividends the framers hope to gain, given
the vacuum left by Abu Mazen's resignation and the de facto
disintegration of the Road Map. That vacuum finds Israel today in one of
its worst and ugliest moments. America's Iraq adventure has not worked
out. Israel's gamble on George W. Bush has only increased its isolation.
It has no guiding political concept. The blows it rains on the
Palestinians look increasingly futile, a mere kicking-out in frustration.
The economy is in atrophy: people sink into unemployment while welfare
benefits are cut. Ariel Sharon still has public support, but his
government has lost its moral standing both in relation to the
Palestinians and to its own citizens.
Into this
vacuum step the Zionist-leftists with a virtual peace plan. If this had a
chance in the current reality, then welcome. If its signers would present
it as the basic program for a future social-democratic party, then too
welcome. It would be their right to tell voters how they think the
conflict ought to be resolved. They could then put the program to a test
at the ballot box. Instead they make somersaults in the air without
sticking a toe into muddy reality. In short, the appearance of the
document at this time has the air of a publicity stunt, rather than of a
proposal capable of realization.
THE GENEVA
Accord is supposed to present each side with a realistic view of what
peace will cost, but its effect is rather to obfuscate reality.
1) In the Palestinian arena: anyone to talk with?
The
Palestinian Authority teeters above the void. On November 4, PM Ahmed
Qureia (Abu Ala) will decide whether to continue in his post. Unless
Arafat gives him sufficient control of the security forces, and unless
Israel restrains its attacks on Palestinians, he will likely quit. It is
an open secret that the rest of the cabinet may resign collectively,
turning the keys over to the Occupier.
In MIFTAH
(the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and
Democracy), an unusual article appeared on October 18 under the title
"Chaos", including these words: "Instead of dismantling the occupation, we
are dismantling our institutions, our people. Ultimately, we will end up
with a fragmented people and no law and order, but still determined to
resist. In other words, chaos."
The
Palestinians no longer know who is governing them: Arafat, Qureia, roving
gangs, Israel? Amid the disorder, how can Beilin and his Geneva associates
tell the Israeli public, "There is a partner, someone to talk with"…?
The Accord
has encountered opposition in the upper Palestinian echelon. Nabil Sha'at,
a moderate toward Israel and America, gave an interview to Al-Ayyam
on October 25, criticizing the formulation concerning refugees. He also
opposes the excessive use of international forces, claiming that the
Palestinians will allow them only on the borders.
2) In the Israeli arena: danger of civil war.
The Accord
requires the dismantling of most Jewish settlements while assuming the
basic framework that we have, i.e. the PA on one side and a Likud or Labor
government on the other. But even Labor has always backed down before the
settlers - and not by chance. Any Israeli government that tries to
evacuate settlers invites civil war.
The Geneva
Accord thus gives an impression that is divorced from reality. Those who
enthusiastically leap on the bandwagon will find themselves disappointed,
as with Oslo, after wasting huge amounts of energy and time. As a
condition for the dismantling of settlements, there would have to be a
major change in the global alignment of forces, beyond the limited
framework assumed at Geneva.
We should
mention in this regard that Geneva architect Yossi Beilin has no political
base. In the last Labor primaries, after the debacle of Camp David, he
failed to win a realistic place on the list. One wonders: suppose Beilin
and the other signers had won and were part of government; would they then
dare offer this Accord to the public? Without governmental responsibility
it is easy to float utopias.
3) In the international arena.
The Bush
Administration includes enthusiastic supporters of Ariel Sharon. They seek
to crush all opposition from the Palestinian people: "No rewards for
violence!" Only thus, they believe, can peace be achieved. Their approach
to the Palestinian question is cut from the same cloth as their attitude
toward all the peoples of the Middle East. The Palestinians and Iraqis are
currently under treatment, Syria and Iran in the pipeline. The Geneva
Accord does not fit this approach. For one thing, it does not address the
issue of terrorism. The Bush Administration insists on the Road Map, which
freezes all negotiations until the Palestinian side puts down the armed
opposition within.
IN AN
ARTICLE entitled "Long is the Road to Geneva" (Yediot Aharonot
October 17), Nahum Barnea describes the difficulty of connecting the
Accord to reality. The signers, he writes, "completed what they had left
unfinished (at Taba in January 2001 – Ed.). As if time had come to a
standstill. As if Clinton were still in the White House and the left were
still governing Israel and Arafat were a leader like others. As if three
years of mutual killing had not changed anything in the hearts of Israelis
or Palestinians. As if agreements between peoples could be made in a
vacuum, sans emotions, sans politics, sans history."
In the end,
the Geneva Accord will be rejected not because of what it includes or
omits, but for another reason altogether: In order that trust should
develop between the two peoples, the Israeli left will have to give up the
precondition of Israeli supremacy. It will have to stop viewing the Middle
East through the prism of American imperialism. It will need to look
rather through the prism of the worldwide forces opposing that
imperialism.
How close
is the left to such a change? In Al-Ayyam (October 25), Yossi
Beilin writes that the Geneva Accord is not intended to supplant the Road
Map. On the contrary, he said, it completes it.
The
flirtation with America continues. n
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