
From
Challenge # 83
January -
February 2004
editorial
Unilateral Delusion
BESIDE the government and
the Knesset, a parallel institution has developed in Israel. It is known
as the Herzlia Conference. All the "who's who" of Israeli politics, the
rich and the powerful, assemble there. Generals and politicians announce
their plans in Olympian serenity – without the catcalls, backbiting and
endless maneuvers that color our elected institutions. This
alternative arena suits the Prime Minister well. It is the second
consecutive year in which Ariel Sharon has sealed the Conference with a
"speech to the nation". Suspense, this time, was higher than ever.
Sharon's deputy and presumed trial balloonist, Ehud Olmert, had given an
interview to Yediot Aharonot (December 5). A consensus-sniffing
right-winger, Olmert stopped the breath of the nation with a call for "the
unilateral evacuation of most of the Territories and parts of East
Jerusalem and the division of the land of Israel into two states with the
border between them determined not by politics, national sentiment or
religious tradition, but by demography." Olmert was referring to the
projection that by 2012, the majority west of the Jordan River will be
Arab.
Israel waited, therefore, to hear what Sharon
himself would say at Herzlia. There were further reasons for suspense:
Ever since the resignation of Abu Mazen, Israel has been floundering
without a political agenda. The Americans have announced they will pull
their civil administration out of Iraq by July 2004. Saddam is in their
hands. Libya has joined the Axis of Good. Yet between Israelis and
Palestinians, mere butchery continues.
THE POLITICAL vacuum has set things in motion. On
the left, old Oslo supporters re-emerge with the "Geneva Initiative".
Among elite army units, some have had their fill of oppressing the
Palestinians; letters of refusal pile up: from the officers, the air
force, and now the commandos (Sayeret Matkal). The four most recent heads
of the Shin Beth (General Security Services) announced in November that
Israel is living on borrowed time; it will have to bite the bullet,
confront the settlers, and withdraw from most of the Territories.
All this was in the background as Sharon took the
podium at Herzlia on December 18. He announced that if the Palestinian
side does not do its part, as defined by the Road Map, in the next half
year – especially where security is concerned – then Israel will make a
unilateral withdrawal from certain areas, retrenching along lines that
suit it.
Sharon's declaration may be viewed as a kind of
squirm. He avoids Olmert's demographic realism and stalls for time. He
does not of course bring the idea before his cabinet: the government would
collapse in a minute.
One sentence in Sharon's speech did not receive
much media attention, although it expresses the curious trap in which
Israel finds itself. He said: "We won't let the Palestinians hold us
hostage." Now what could he have meant by this? In what sense are the
Israelis the hostages here? In the sense that the country cannot move
forward, economically or security-wise, because of the violence. Every
time the Palestinians hit them, the Israelis hit back, and then they are
hit in return, and on it goes. Sharon's idea is to "disconnect," as he put
it, so that the Palestinians will have nothing to hit but a wall. There is
something absurd, however, in the picture of the regional bully, armed
with the best modern weaponry, stomping all over his neighbor's yard and
shouting, "I won't let you hold me hostage!"
THE THREAT of unilateral withdrawal comes at a time
when anarchy rules on the Palestinian side. No one there is in a position
to negotiate with Israel. This fact became obvious in early December, when
the various Palestinian factions met in Cairo to arrange a cease fire
(hudna). Under the aegis of the Egyptian secret security service, they
sought a formula that would enable the Palestinian Authority (PA) to make
diplomatic progress. Hamas in particular was supposed to accept a hudna
applying not just to Israeli citizens, but also to settlers and soldiers.
PA Prime Minister Abu Ala arrived to receive the goods, but Hamas balked.
It agreed to spare Israeli civilians but would go no farther. It also
demanded American guarantees for an end to Israeli assassinations. Abu Ala
left Cairo with empty hands. The practical consequence is that the PA has
no mandate to begin implementing the Road Map, which cites an end to
terrorism as a starting point. The Cairo talks demonstrated the weakening
of the PA, which has become, in effect, a mediator between Hamas and
Israel. All too aware of Abu Mazen's fate, Abu Ala will not take a step
without Hamas approval.
The PA and Fatah are angry with Hamas. They accuse
the Islamists of misreading the map. When Hamas was seeking to save its
skin in the summer of 2003, they claim, it agreed to a total hudna, but
now, with the fate of the entire Palestinian people at stake, it couldn't
care less. Although they won't say so in public, many point out that Hamas
provoked the building of the separation barrier. Hamas asserts, for its
part, that precisely its actions have caused Israeli morale to crumble:
witness the talk of unilateral withdrawal. Yet even supposing that Hamas
is right, the parameters of Israel's concessions remain light years away
from the Palestinian starting point.
Hatred of Israel makes up, indeed, the principal
fuel for the growth of Hamas, but there is real concern that no one will
be left to pluck the fruits of radical Islam. Time is working against both
societies.
IN ISRAEL there is a new consensus that the moment
for decision has come, and that the occupation of 2.9 million Palestinians
is no longer workable. The more balanced leaders, such as Labor Party boss
Shimon Peres, reason correctly that a unilateral withdrawal will lead
nowhere. Nahum Barnea writes in Yediot Aharonot (December 22): "Every
greenhorn lawyer knows that the worst agreement is better than the best
unilateral move." Washington doesn't fancy it either – but so far seems
incapable of making the Road Map work.
The concept of unilateral separation amounts to
typical Israeli impudence, as if one could circumvent reality by military
means. Impudence is widespread, however, which is why this populist notion
finds supporters in both the Likud and the Labor Party. (Labor's Ehud
Barak, for example, has long been a proponent of "separation" by hook or
crook.) To this delusion Sharon appeals: We'll take down a couple of
settlements and kosher the rest. We'll retreat to lines the army feels
comfortable with. We'll duck responsibility for the ensuing economic
catastrophe on the other side.
It cannot, however, be a case of "Pick up and
leave," as in Lebanon three years ago. The infrastructure of the West Bank
and Gaza (water, sewage, electricity) remains bound up with Israel's. The
same holds for the economies. Having destroyed the ruling authority in the
Territories, Israel has made itself responsible, like it or not, for the
welfare of the people. To come now with a threat of unilateral
"disconnection" is the equivalent of doomsday. The weapon, in this case,
is not a nuclear bomb, for that would be irrelevant against such a weak
and defenseless people. Sharon's doomsday weapon is unilateral withdrawal.
It is always dangerous, however, to deploy a
doomsday weapon. Suppose it flops? Unilateral disconnection is, in fact,
no option. For assuming that Sharon could pull it off (despite protests by
the settlers), the result would be new hell in the Territories, compared
to which the current version will seem mere purgatory. Millions of
Palestinians, starving behind walls and fences, will haunt the Israelis no
less than the exiles of 1948 who, with their children, today demand the
right of return. n
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