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12 June 2011 By Abdul Rahman Al-Rashid The US President Barack Obama's attempt to revive
the peace negotiations was soon aborted by an explicit
and quick rejection from Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu. This time he was unequivocal,
sparing us all the trouble of watching a wearisome
soap opera. Without any doubt, the Palestinian cause will not
die or fall into oblivion just because Netanyahu said
no, or because Obama is preoccupied with mobilizing
voter support for his presidential election. The cause
will return strongly to the forefront, and the
Palestinian people's demands for liberating their soil
and establishing their country will by no means be
ignored. The status quo under which Israel said no has
now changed. Israel is now facing a new fait accompli
– albeit still a work in progress - following the
eruption of revolutions in Egypt, Tunisia, Syria,
Libya and Yemen. It will no longer be acceptable for
Israel to justify its occupation of foreign soil in
the name of democracy, just as it is no longer
possible for Arab governments to exploit the
Palestinian cause regionally. Everyone in the region
must now face the new reality, triggered by an
unemployed Tunisian youth who set himself on fire. Who
expected the Egyptian people to die in order to change
their regime? Who could ever have imagined that the
Syrian people would dare stage a revolt, resulting in
hundreds of deaths, and nevertheless return to the
streets once more in protest? There is now a
tremendous spirit prevailing which cannot be broken.
All the popular uprisings that have taken place,
and continue to be staged today, have been confined to
internal affairs. No single American or Israeli flag
has been burned, because such demonstrations were not
organized by governments aiming to divert attention
towards the outside world, away from domestic
concerns. Perhaps, in a year or two from now, the
majority of these countries will settle down, and
Palestinian demands will once again emerge. Then it
would not be easy for the world to remain a mere
bystander, simply watching Israel continue with its
occupation and oppression of the Palestinians, whether
under Talmudic pretexts, or in the name of military
superiority, or as the only democracy in the region.
For the Arabs who have obtained their democracy, or
for the rest of the world, it will not be easy to
simply watch what is going on. Similarly, it will not
be easy for the US President, who says he advocates
the Arab peoples' right to self-determination, to also
sit in the audience and simply watch what is happening
in the West Bank and Gaza. The US election calculations have put Obama in an
awkward position today, particularly as he wasted two
years in negotiation attempts without a clear roadmap.
Less than four months remain for the current
Democrats' Caucus, and then the election campaign will
be launched officially before it is settled by late
November 2012. Potential happenings in the Middle East
over the next 18 months will be decisive, not only for
the US with regards to its election, but rather for
the entire region, where the map may change
dramatically. |