
From
Challenge # 88
November -
December 2004
editorial
The Bag of Aeolus
Roni Ben Efrat
Aeolus was keeper of the winds. He gave a
bag of evil winds to Odysseus, instructing him to keep it closed while a
good breeze wafted him home. Within sight of his lovely Ithaca, the great
voyager fell asleep. Thinking that there might be treasure in the bag, his
men opened it and let loose a hurricane.
Odyssey, Book X
TWO DAYS in October 2004 may have brought
new winds into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but no one can say which
way they will blow. These stirrings came after eighteen months of
political standstill, which led Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to initiate a
plan for unilateral disengagement from Gaza and part of the West Bank.
On
October 26, the Knesset approved this plan by a margin of 66-44. For the
first time in the history of the Occupation, Israel decided to dismantle
settlements in Palestinian areas: 21 in the Gaza Strip and four in the
northern West Bank.
Yet the
road to implementation is full of hurdles. About half the Likud Knesset
faction opposes Sharon's plan. His party rival, Binyamin Netanyahu, even
attempted a putsch on the eve of the Knesset vote. Sharons majority
depended on 25 solid Ayes from the opposition: the Labor Party and Yahad.
The next
night, suddenly, a new possibility raised its head. The health of Yasser
Arafat, President of the Palestinian Authority (PA), took a sudden
turn for the worse. Israel let him be flown to Paris for treatment, ending
more than three years of virtual imprisonment in the Muqata. It seems
unlikely that Arafat will return to direct historical action. He will have
to transfer at least some of his authority. One reason Israel has not
expelled him is that from its point of view, he still has one task ahead:
to appoint a successor. This is to be someone who, by virtue of Arafat's
blessing, will have sufficient prestige to cut the deal that Israel wants,
namely, the establishment of a dummy state with friendly leaders. If that
happens, Sharon's main argument for unilateral disengagement that there
is no partner will be superseded. He will have the option of withdrawing
from Gaza by agreement with the PA. That will remove the objections
of many in the Likud rank-and-file, and they will return to his fold.
If the
"Arafat axiom" (No negotiations as long as Arafat rules!) ceases to be
relevant, we are likely to witness a bevy of political initiatives. Until
now, the disengagement plan looked like the only game in town, a form of
solitaire. It was meant to give Sharon a possibility of movement within
the general paralysis. He wanted to achieve three things:
1) In
response to the American failure in Iraq and the fall of Abu Mazen's
government, key figures in Israel's security establishment came out in
November 2003 with bold statements against the Occupation. Among them
were four former heads of the General Security Services (Shin Beth). At
the same time, a group of air force pilots wrote a letter to Sharon,
declaring their refusal to fire into populated areas. The PM felt the
ground begin to quake, and he wanted to come up with something that would
win back support from these circles.
2) He
hoped that so dramatic a move withdrawal from Gaza would force the
emergence of a local Palestinian leadership, which would take
responsibility for the Strip without such costs to Israel as might arise
through negotiation. Israel, he thought, would then be in a position to
put off further withdrawals for years.
3) By
gaining American acceptance of his unilateral plan, Sharon sought to
neutralize European pressures for implementation of the Road Map.
Of these three aims, which have been
achieved?
Sharon
has succeeded in stemming the criticism from the Left. He has received
unqualified support for disengagement from the whole security
establishment, as well as the Labor Party and Yahad. The latter, which
initiated the Geneva Agreement with the Palestinians, has shelved it for
now, because the party leaders, including Yossi Beilin, have concluded
that Sharon's proposal represents a once-in-a-lifetime chance. Who else
but he can get away with pulling down what he built up? And he is older
than Arafat how long till he goes the way of all flesh? Carpe diem! The
Israeli Left has always dreamed that the Right would do its dirty work.
Sharon
received the enthusiastic agreement of the White House for his plan, thus
staving off diplomatic pressures. As to sparking the emergence of an
alternative Palestinian leadership, Arafat's departure from the arena may
render this unnecessary.
WHAT Sharon did not foresee, however, is
the deep parliamentary crisis that has overtaken his party and government.
This remains unresolved. His opponents in the Likud have exploited the
fact that his plan is full of holes: 'Why should Israel let the
Palestinians have so significant an achievement with nothing in return?
Who can guarantee that Qassam rockets will cease to fall on the cities of
the Negev?'
Whatever
Arafat's condition, there will still be a long way to go before calm. The
PA leader has not yet handed over the tattered bag of Aeolus (from which
many evil winds have already escaped) to any of his colleagues. If he
dies, the question of his burial place will be a first bone of contention
between his political heirs and Israel. Arafat wants to be buried beside
the al-Aqsa Mosque on the Haram al-Sharif, and Israel is not about to
agree. There are other, deeper problems as well:
The
future Palestinian leadership will receive a difficult legacy. After all
the suffering that its people has undergone in the current Intifada
bereavement, targeted assassinations, destruction of homes, destruction of
the economy, roadblocks, and now, most recently, the separation barrier
the Palestinians will still have to prove to Israel that it can count on
them. The disengagement from Gaza, if it happens, will not lead quickly to
further withdrawals. Gaza, the poorest, bloodiest, most oppressed part of
Palestine, will be forced to bear the "burden of proof."
And then
there's Hamas, whose strength is greatest in Gaza. It is by no means
certain that this fundamentalist movement, which bent beneath the baton of
Arafat, will do the same for any pro-Israel, pro-American elements that
come to replace him. Which of the Palestinian leaders will be able to
control it? And what about the street gangs that roam the West Bank
unhindered, waving their rifles, shifting fidelity like butterflies in a
storm? Which Palestinian leader will be strong enough to bring them into
line? These winds are already out of the bag who can stuff them back in?
We must
not underestimate the importance of the events in late October, but the
essential problems remain. Even if Sharon does empty Gaza of settlements,
and even if the PA does pull itself together and take control of the areas
Israel evacuates, there will remain the immense gap between, on the one
hand, what Israel is willing to give, and, on the other, the Palestinian
expectation of a truly sovereign state, with Jerusalem as its capital and
no settlements on its land. Another big problem, which the Intifada has
blurred, concerns the Palestinian leadership. Will it be democratic and
free of corruption, capable of restoring the society after so many years
of occupation and rottenness? No matter what happens in Gaza, these big
old problems will be there, blowing us again toward collision.
n
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