
From
Challenge # 90
March - April
2005
editorial
Unilateral
Give, Unilateral Take
Roni Ben Efrat
IN DAYS of yore, when
right-wing thugs shouted "Arik, King of Israel!" leftist leaders grimaced
in disgust. On Sunday, February 20, however – after the cabinet approved "Arik's"
Disengagement Plan – Labor ministers beamed with smug satisfaction. They
had all they could do to keep from shouting, "Arik, King of Israel!"
Sharon has begun to accomplish for them what the Oslo Accords never dared
to broach: dismantlement of settlements. The media have promised him a
place in the pantheon of the greats. He is the man who set the deadline
for "the end of the Occupation," who "has opened a new chapter in the
history of the Middle East." (Shimon Shiffer, Yediot Aharonot Feb.
20.) On that festive Sunday, few wanted to be reminded that after
approving disengagement – practically in the same breath – the government
decided to build its notorious "separation barrier" on a line that will
unilaterally annex, in effect, 7% of the West Bank. The principle of
unilateral action, Sharon demonstrates, can work in two directions. But
this was not just another of his notorious tricks. The Labor Party is a
full partner to the decision on the barrier, which annexes to Israel the
large urban settlement of Maaleh Adumim and the Etzion Bloc.
A senior pundit of Yediot
Aharonot, Sever Plotzker, wrote in the paper's lead editorial for that
historical Sunday: "The dream of Greater Israel has melted away,
disappeared from the agenda, at least for the present generation. Under
Ariel Sharon, Israel is withdrawing from Gaza and clearing all the
settlements there – as a first step, and not as the last, toward a return
to its proper borders."
BUT what are these proper
borders? As we read the map, the Palestinians have gone full circle, after
an odyssey that began 11 years ago at Oslo, back to the "initial step" of
those days, called "Gaza and Jericho first." The Disengagement Plan
promises nothing more than that. Even less, for it does not promise them
sovereignty in Gaza. Yasser Arafat, in his day, understood that Israel
must not be permitted to separate Gaza from the West Bank. Abu Mazen has
let it happen. At Sharm al-Sheikh he agreed to the parting of the two,
while getting no Israeli commitment about the future.
Where Israel is concerned,
Gaza and the West Bank are separate worlds. In April 2002, when the
Intifada raged, the Likud and Labor joined to make full-fledged war on the
West Bank in an operation known as "Defensive Shield." Israel did not
hesitate to flatten the Palestinian Authority (PA) and quarantine
Arafat politically. Yet it did not go into Gaza – and this was no
coincidence. Israel has no interest there, whereas it sees the West Bank
as its own strategic territory, even if part of it may pass someday to the
hands of a docile PA.
Nahum Barnea, the veteran
Yediot commentator, interprets Sharon's course of action, in chess
terms, as a sacrifice of the rook in an attempt to save the queen. (Feb.
21.) The rook consists of the Gaza settlers, the queen consists of those
in the West Bank. Yediot satirist B. Micha'el wrote on Feb. 22:
"Slow to learn, and led by a conjurer, Israel again sets forth on one of
its 'sting' operations – again a futile attempt to sell half a sack of
damaged goods at an exorbitant price."
The "proper borders" of the
future Palestinian state vary with the eye of the beholder. As seen by the
cheated side, they depend on whatever power it can muster to recapture
what it's been robbed of. If, in order to get back Gaza, which Israel
doesn't want at all, the Palestinians have had to make four years of
Intifada, imagine what kind of World War they would have to wage to
retrieve the West Bank!
Meanwhile, except for the
Palestinian people, there are plenty who benefit from the charade. For Abu
Mazen and the PA, the way back into the political arena, after the fiasco
left by Arafat, must pass through Sharon. Israel's Labor Party gets a
piece of the government without having to give up principles which, in any
case, it never had. The Yahad Party (which holds the copyright to the
Geneva Initiative) believes that Sharon, in breaking the taboo against
dismantling settlements, will pave the way for it to continue where he
leaves off. The Arab parties, as usual, have not risen above the level of
proclamations. They announced their opposition to disengagement because it
does not ensure the minimal Palestinian needs, but in crucial Knesset
votes they either abstained or cast their Nays when they knew the Ayes
would win. In Knesset committees, when the count looked close, two of them
voted for disengagement. The official Israeli Left, in a word, shows its
customary short-sightedness.
The fate of the West Bank
will not be the fate of Gaza. The dismantling of some little West
Bank settlements will cost the Palestinians dearly: they will have to let
other, bigger settlements stay – not to mention concessions on
Jerusalem and the refugees. When the price is announced, they will
conclude that the cost of independence is the surrender of that
independence. Then, once again, they will take to arms. And "Arik, King of
Israel" will discover that he was leading not just them by the nose, and
not just Israel by the nose, but finally himself by the nose. When he
mewed Arafat in the Muqata'a to die a slow death, he left Abu Mazen to
roam outside. But an empty-handed Abu Mazen will be powerless to stop the
next uprising. And who will King Arik have then?
n
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