26 January 2011 By Tariq Alhomayed Before going into the details, the answer to the
above question is: No! It seems that some today,
through the use of leaked documents, are trying to
convince the Palestinians and the Arabs that Mahmoud
Abbas and his associates have sold out the Palestinian
issue. The bulk of the so-called "Palestine papers"
contains nothing new, especially to the Arabs, and
many officials are responding to this by saying "yes,
we already knew this." The leaked documents relate to
details of the negotiations – not agreements –
conducted during the latter part of George W. Bush's
presidency. It must be noted here that when a
negotiator goes to the negotiation table, and this is
something that goes for any negotiator and any
negotiations, he puts forward a variety of ideas, that
are both consistent and inconsistent [with previously
stated positions]. This is something that resembles
the blades of a helicopter, with nobody knowing
whether these are spinning clockwise or
anti-clockwise. The most important point is always the
final agreement. Furthermore, there is a certain
rationalization that governs both sets of negotiators,
prompting them to roam from their interests and stated
positions, for there are facts on the ground, both
historical and religious, that cannot be ignored. If these documents had come out when Mahmoud Abbas
and his associates were sitting at the negotiating
table, face-to-face with Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, then we could say: maybe they
deserve this Arab outburst. However, the documents
have come out at a time when the Palestinian President
is refusing to negotiate with Israel, because of
ongoing settlement activity. This is the puzzling
matter, for how can we accuse Abbas and his men of
‘selling out' the Palestinian cause, or offering major
concessions, at a time when they are being criticized
by many, including ourselves, for refusing to return
to the negotiation table, under the pretext that there
must first be a settlement moratorium? How can someone
intending to sell out Jerusalem also battle to stop
settlement construction there? The truth is that the
current uproar does not even merit the time that has
been spend discussing it. I am not saying this in order to disregard [the
leaked documents], but rather to express my
disapproval of the attempts to destroy the Palestinian
Authority, when it is currently obtaining official
recognition for an independent Palestinian state, from
one South American country after another. The latest
country to do so was Peru, the day before yesterday,
announcing that "we recognize a free and sovereign
Palestinian state." Israel was yesterday furious when
Ireland decided to raise the status of Palestinian
representation in Dublin to the level of ‘diplomatic
mission', something that both France and the U.S. have
done previously, whilst Britain is currently
considering adopting the same measure. Therefore, the question that must be asked today is
not the one I mentioned in the title, i.e. is Abbas a
traitor? Rather the real question is: Who benefits
from releasing these negotiation documents at this
time, considering that they are non-binding, and were
not signed by anybody? That is the question, and all
indications would suggest that Israel is the only
beneficiary. As for the current criticism being lodged
by Hamas, this is both pointless and petulant. If the
details contained in the leaked negotiation papers
justify anger against the Palestinian Authority, or
criticism of the Palestinian President, then what can
we say about Hamas, who offered a limited-period truce
to Israel? Does this mean that they only wanted to
"rent" Jerusalem from Israel, for a specific period of
time? Unfortunately, the Arab-Israeli conflict has been
ongoing for around 60 years, and the Palestinian cause
is still being used as a weapon to settle inter-Arab
disputes; we do not image that inter-Arab relations
will be resolved anytime soon, however what is
unfortunate is that the methods of inter-Arab
bickering have not developed, and in fact continue to
decline.
Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq Al-Awsat, the youngest
person to be appointed that position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also completed his Introductory
courses towards a Master's degree from George Washington University in
Washington D.C. He is based in London. Comments 💬 التعليقات |