White House Eager To Save Middle East Peace Process!
05 December 2016
By Dr. Abdul Ruff Colachal
Obviously, Israel has tasted its first ever bitter pill from UNSC when it
voted on December 23 to end the illegally built Zionist Semitist settlements,
meant to oust the Palestinians and confiscate their lands for further
proliferation of illegal colonies there. With the vote, time is indeed running
out for Israeli fascist regime to mend ways and try to become a normal nation
by allowing the much delayed Palestine state to come into being. Israel needs
to shed provocative terror schemes targeting Palestine and other Arab nations,
and eventually become a democracy.
Terror alliance with world's super power USA and getting the US terror goods
for fascist operations in Palestine and entire Arab world, does not just make
Israel a democracy. With irrational terrocractic behavior, Israel can only be
a terrocracy and not a democracy.
The US' shocking and momentous abstention during a vote at the UN Security
Council on Friday enabled the adoption of the first UN resolution 2334 on the
December 23 since 1979 to condemn Israel over its settlement policy by a 14-0
vote. Israel has accused the Obama government of playing a part in formulating
and pushing through the landmark measure.
Barack Obama and Binyamin Netanyahu have played out their games but ultimately
the former has the final say. Both have, since 2009, contributed to a chronic
deterioration in US-Israel relations and the wider Middle East meltdown and
Israel's usual stubbornness has let to USA refusing to use its veto to shield
Zionist crimes this time. The process of polarization and mutual alienation
culminated last Friday with Obama's active connivance in the passing of a
landmark UN Security Council resolution. The resolution condemned all Israeli
settlements in occupied Palestinian territory as a flagrant violation of
international law that imperiled a future two-state peace.
US-Israeli relations have reached their lowest point in decades. The
government of the Israeli and PM Benjamin Netanyahu has accused Washington of
conspiring against it when the UN Security Council vote on Friday the 23rd
December demanded an end to settlement building in the West Bank.
USA pushes ahead with the
resolution vote
The landmark vote came despite intense lobbying efforts by Israel and calls
from US President-elect Donald Trump to block the text. Unhappy with Obama,
Netanyahu is believed to be attempting to ''recruit'' to the incoming Trump
team but the brakes on an attempted bid by the outgoing government to have the
Security Council approve principles for a Palestinian state.. ''They are
spitting at us,'' Netanyahu told colleagues, according to Channel 2. ''We will
respond forcefully.''
Netanyahu rejected the UNSC resolution as a ''shameful blow against Israel,''
repeated the Israeli claim that Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry were
behind the resolution. Netanyahu told the media that Israel has ''ironclad
information'' of the US government's involvement in the resolution and even
Trump is behind it. .
Clearly, America is struggling to reset its Israeli policy which has hitherto
been decided by Israeli government. Possibly encouraged by President elect
Trumps' assertion for a new approach to resolve the Israeli-Palestine conflict
and achieve two state solution by establishing the much delayed Palestine
state to exist side by side with Israel as a legal entity, President Obama, by
asking the US ambassador to UNSC to abstain from voting, supported the UNSC
resolution to end illegal settlements inside Palestine.
Apparently, US Secretary of State John Kerry, following the UNSC vote, is
preparing a document which will form the basis for final negotiations between
the Israelis and Palestinians to be presented next month before President
Barack Obama leaves office on 20th January. John Kerry is laying out a US
framework for an Palestinian-Israeli agreement as the Obama government and its
international allies scramble to protect what is left of the peace process
before Donald Trump takes office. The document will outline the establishment
of a future Palestinian state according to the internationally recognized 1967
borders (Arab Peace pan 2002) , with land-swaps leaving approximately 75 to 80
percent of Israeli settlers living in the West Bank under the sovereignty of
Israel- a proposition that won't be accepted by the Palestinians. The
principles will probably set out requirements for US recognition of Palestine
and Israeli recognition of Palestine and Palestinian recognition of Israel as
a Jewish State, and Israel's required recognition of a Palestinian state with
East Jerusalem as its capital.
The Kerry speech at the state department is expected to restate the Obama
government's continued faith in a two-state solution to the chronic impasse.
It is a parting shot after eight years in office, during which there has been
a dearth of diplomatic progress. It is not expected to lead to any new
initiative but rather lay down a marker on a longstanding US and international
approach to the region before the US president-elect, whose commitment to such
a solution is in doubt, assumes office. ''What secretary Kerry will be doing
is he will give a speech in which he lays out a comprehensive vision for how
we see the conflict being resolved – where we see things in 2016 as we
unfortunately conclude our term in office without there being significant
progress toward peace, the deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes, told
Israel's Channel 2 television. On the same day as the Kerry speech, Jerusalem
authorities are expected to discuss the issue of more than 600 building
permits for settlements in historically Palestinian east Jerusalem and have
raised the possibility of issuing about 5,000 more.
The parameters outlined by Kerry are expected to draw international
endorsement at a meeting of foreign ministers on 15 January, just five days
before Trump moves into the White House. The meeting is supposed to reinforce
a strategy of isolating Netanyahu in the hope it will push him towards
reviving stalled negotiations with the Palestinians. Netanyahu has said his
government will not attend.
Israel responded furiously to the UN Security Council resolution passed on
Friday that demanded an end to settlement building, threatening diplomatic
reprisals against the countries that voted in favour. Israel feels now fully
exposed and isolated internationally. The Israeli government is reportedly
fearful that any guidelines agreed in Paris would be turned into another UN
resolution before Trump's inauguration, and it has ratcheted up its rhetoric,
presenting itself as the victim of an international conspiracy. Meanwhile,
Israel's military minister, a prominent illegal settler leader in the
government Avigdor Lieberman, portrayed the Paris conference as a new
''Dreyfus trial'', referring to an outburst of French anti-Semitism more than
a century ago, and urged French Jews to move to Israel.
A French official denied there was any intention to pass a new Security
Council resolution on the basis of the Paris conference. A foreign ministry
spokesperson said the meeting would ''give the participants an opportunity to
present a comprehensive incentive package to encourage the resumption of
negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians. Only they will be able to
conclude a peace deal directly.''
In excessive expectation of a more supportive government in Washington next
month, Netanyahu has reacted to the diplomatic maneuvering in the last weeks
of Obama's term with defiance. Netanyahu has vowed to resist a peace framework
imposed on his government, and observers warn that a threatened Israeli
backlash in the form of thousands of new settler homes in east Jerusalem,
combined with Trump's plan to move the US embassy to the disputed city, could
trigger a fresh wave of violence.
Netanyahu claimed to have ''ironclad evidence'' that the Obama government had
plotted behind the scenes to promote the UN resolution. Israel has said it
will present evidence against the Obama government to the incoming Trump team
and ask Trump to just abide by the mutual understanding in terror operations
and help Israel retain all illegal settlements in Palestine.
Egyptian media published a document purporting to be a transcript of a meeting
in which Kerry and the US national security adviser, Susan Rice, discussed the
UN resolution and US proposals with Palestinian officials, who agreed to give
the Kerry framework immediate support.
In order to appease the Jewish community in USA and Israel, Trump criticised
Friday's UN resolution, saying it would make it harder to negotiate a peace
agreement. He described the UN as ''just a club for people to get together,
talk and have a good time'' but has not dwelt about how the UN as well as US
veto has been misused by USA and Israel all these years. Trump's designated
ambassador to Israel, his own bankruptcy lawyer David Friedman, has actively
supported settlement building.
If the highly emotive issue of Jerusalem's status became the focal point of
Israeli-Palestinian friction once more, then the prospects for a serious,
significant confrontation are high. Trump knows it.
The US withdrawal from Iraq left a political vacuum in Baghdad that Iran and
its Shia allies filled. Then, in partial reaction, came the Sunni jihadists of
Islamic State which ensured the US support . The Arab spring revolts of 2011
left Washington nonplussed. In Egypt it fretted over the toppling of Hosni
Mubarak and welcomed his eventual replacement by another pro-American military
dictator. In Syria, Obama prematurely anticipated the demise of Bashar al-Assad,
only to back away when the going got tough, letting in the Russians and the
Iranians (again) and squandering US leverage.
The UN resolution could save the government from itself by bringing closer an
end to forceful and illegal settlement construction inside Palestine. The
passage of the resolution won't result in the immediate dismantling of any
West Bank settlements, but the world is beginning to come to the rescue and
try to save Palestinians from Israel military and Israel from itself.
What makes this particular
resolution important?
Palestinian leaders hope the UN resolution 2334 and the Paris conference will
offer some degree of international protection against the encroachment of
settlements in the Trump era. The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, said
he hoped the Paris meeting would establish an international mechanism to end
Israeli settlement building once for all and start the work on the promised
Palestine state.
It is the first decisive and clear condemnation of Israel by the UN Security
Council in nearly eight years — almost the entirety of President Barack
Obama's terms in office. The vote was cast despite extraordinary Israeli
pressure on the current US administration, on the forthcoming administration
of Donald Trump and successful pressure on Egyptian President Abdul Fatah Al
Sisi.
For the first time in history, the USA neither vetoed the resolution nor
threatened to use its veto power; nor did it even seriously lobby among the
world powers, big and small, as it often does, to defeat the resolution. In
fact, Egypt delayed the vote, which was scheduled a day earlier, so New
Zealand, Senegal, Malaysia and Venezuela stepped up and put the resolution to
a vote, a day later.
Though the UN resolution remains rather symbolic as long as there are no
practical mechanisms to ensure the enforcement of international law, the vote
is historic and a major step towards the freedom and independent state.
Not only Israel does not respect the United Nations' will, it is, in fact,
already accelerating its settlement activities in the Jerusalem area, in
defiance of that will. The Jerusalem Municipality announced that 300 housing
units will be built in the illegal settlements of Ramat Shlomo, Ramot and Bit
Hanina, while the Security Council members were preparing for the vote on the
''legal invalidity'' of the Jewish settlements.
Obviously for the Palestine who are being terrorized and brutally attacked by
Israeli military with American terror goods, the vote is a major achievement
The UN resolution was, indeed, keen on ensuring that the Palestine state comes
into being as part of the two-state illusion is further perpetuated, which is
all that the leadership of Mahmoud Abbas needs to continue to push for an
unattainable mirage. With all this in mind, there is a lesson, and a valuable
one, that must be registered at this moment: without US backing, Israel, with
all its might, is quite vulnerable and isolated in the international arena.
The outcome of the vote was quite telling: 14 Security Council members voted
yes, while the US abstained, making vote possible. The vote was followed by a
rare scene at such meetings: sustained applause, with countries that hardly
agree on much agreeing wholeheartedly with the justness of Palestinian
aspirations and the rejection of Israeli practices.
The relentless efforts by Israel and the US to intimidate, coerce and as usual
bribe UN members, so as to sideline the international community from the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, has failed utterly. All it took was a mere US
abstention from the vote to expose the still solid international consensus
regarding Israel's illegal actions in Palestine.
In an emblematic sign of hope, the vote brings to a close the year 2016, which
has been harsh for Palestinians. Thousands of Palestinians, mainly civilians
and children, were killed during this year in clashes in Jerusalem, the West
Bank and Gaza; hundreds of houses were partly or wholly demolished and
damaged; thousands of hectares of land were confiscated by Israel, and
countless olive trees cut.
The next year could promise the Palestinians new horizons in their struggle
for freedom and sovereignty, depending on humanitarian concerns of the new US
administration under Trump though his language is confused to suggest that the
US support of Israel will remain steadfast. The appointment of pro-settlement
hardliner David Friedman as the new US ambassador to Israel carries with it
terrifying prospects. One is not sure if Trump is indeed an insane Zionist
like Madam Hillary Clinton has been. Friedman and his ilk have no regard for
international law and no respect for US current foreign policy regarding the
Israeli occupation and the illegality of the settlements (considered an
''obstacle to peace'' under various administrations), and is eager to relocate
the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
All of this is quite ominous, and the freshly passed resolution should not
advance the illusion that things are changing. Of course things can change
only if follow-up actions are forthcoming form UNSC and ICC. Criminals cannot
be given choices to change the world, they should only be punished for their
crimes against humanity.
Nonetheless, there is hope. The resolution is a further affirmation that the
international community is unconditionally on the side of Palestinians and,
despite all the failures of the past, still advocates respect for
international law. The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement is
moving from strength to strength, galvanizing civil societies, campuses and
trade unions all over the world to take a stance against the Israeli
occupation.
In 2009, Netanyahu, newly re-elected, described his ''vision'' of a historic
peace, ''of two free peoples living side by side in this small land, with good
neighborly relations and mutual respect, each with its flag, anthem and
government, with neither one threatening its neighbor's security and
existence''. Although he appeared to renege during last year's election
campaign, Netanyahu still claims to support a two-state solution. Now the
international community's message is unequivocal: you were right in 2009. So
stop undermining the prospect of peace. Honour your promise.
Not only should USA scrap all military aids to Israel but also impose
sanctions of Israel so that the Zionist regime could come to its senses.
Palestinians, now unite!
As the UNSC is making strenuous efforts to punish Israel for its crimes
against humanity and for the proliferation of illegal settlements in
Palestine, there has been world cry requesting US President Obama to recognize
Palestine before he goes out of office. For different but related reasons,
Jimmy Carter made a similar plea last month.
Israel can be blamed for much of problems the Palestinians face, but
Palestinians deserve much of the blame, too, for their disunity, infighting
and corruption. They must not expect their efforts, however sincere, to yield
freedom and liberation when they are incapable of forming a united front. This
should be done by overhauling the Palestine Liberation Organisation and
bringing all Palestinian factions under one single platform that caters to the
aspirations of all Palestinians, at home and in Diaspora.
The Palestinian leadership needs to understand that the age of ineffectual
American leadership is over. No more lip service to peace and handouts to the
PA, while bankrolling the Israeli military and backing Israel politically. The
next administration is pro-Israel, absolutely. This may be the clarity
Palestinians need to understand that pleading for American compassion will not
suffice. If a united Palestinian leadership does not seize the opportunity and
regain the initiative in 2017, all Palestinians will suffer. It is time to
move away from Washington and embrace the rest of the world.
One of the arguments often heard is that Israel cannot survive as a Jewish
state if it annexes all of the West Bank, since it will ultimately acquire 4
million Palestinians (West Bank & Gaza residents) as citizens in that case.
Israel does not have a Jewish majority even by accelerated births as Hindus in
India have been busy doing.
The USA in 1789 was mostly British and had a population of 4 million. Now it
is 8 times as big, and has large Italian, Latino, German, African, Muslims
three million Jewish and Irish populations. All those groups have brought
gifts to enrich the nation. In an age of globalization, trying artificially to
maintain one ethnic group as a majority is probably a fool's errand, anyway.
Israel is importing Thai agricultural workers and initially was welcoming
African refugees..
So what is called a ''one-state'' solution is a farce but as long as all the
citizens of that one state has equal rights and it was a genuine democracy
people would be happy. .
It would be fairly easy to set up two states, Palestine and Israel, since the
basic framework of the two states already exists. It is entirely possible that
the Israeli squatters on Palestinian land, as their usual practice in the West
Bank will at some point engineer a civil war, and try to expel the
Palestinians, making them stateless refugees all over again.
What is wrong with the present arrangement is that the Palestinians do not
have citizenship in a real state. Israel state controls the water, air and
land of Palestine territory. The Palestine Authority controls none of those
things. In fact nothing, not even the taxes. A state needs a judicial system
that can protect the basic property and human rights of a citizen. Palestine
has none of those things. Important cases are kicked to the Israeli judiciary,
which, like police stations and military units, tends to rule in favor of
Israelis. And, a lot of decisions are made for Palestinians by the Israeli
army or by colonial administrators.
People, who are stateless, in the phrase of Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren,
do not have the right to have rights. It is unacceptable that millions of
Palestinians should be kept stateless at the insistence of Israel. PM B.
Netanyahu has even vowed that he will not allow a Palestinian state as long as
he is in power or alive (a violation of the Oslo Peace Accords).
The reason that all these decades of negotiations have proved fruitless is
that the Palestinians, as stateless, don't really have standing to negotiate.
You can renege on agreements with stateless people at will, as Netanyahu has
repeatedly done, without fearing any consequences and without the stateless
having recourse. So you can't start with negotiations. You have to start by
addressing Palestinians' lack of citizenship.
The government in Germany stripped the Jews of their citizenship, in
preparation for committing a Holocaust against them or driving them out of
their homes as refugees. Jews are doing the same with Palestinians now. The
Nazis understood very well that you can do with Stateless people what you
will, and that no one will effectively so much as object. For the Zionist
right wing, Israel comes as a solution to the problem that Jews are always in
danger of losing their citizenship rights when they are citizens of other
states. Moreover, in a nuclear-armed world, the idea that a state can protect
you from another holocaust is a false messiah; ask the people of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. In any case, solving the artificially created problem of Jewish
statelessness cannot come at the price of creating Palestinian statelessness.
The chair of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization,
Saeb Erekat, said that the Palestinian leadership was invigorated by the UN
Security Council resolution condemning Israeli colonization of the Palestinian
West Bank. As a result, it would redouble its efforts to achieve full
membership in the UN for the State of Palestine. The Palestinians would take
their case to the International Criminal Court at the Hague, charging Israeli
officials with various crimes against the international law of occupation,
chief among them flooding their own citizens as colonizers into the Occupied
Territory. Erekat recognizes that the Palestinian cause will go nowhere until
Palestine has some of the perquisites of a state, such as UN membership and
ability to take cases to the International Criminal Court.
Just as he established diplomatic relations with Cuba, so President Obama
could do the same with regard to Palestine. It would be one step toward
resolving the decades-old problem of Palestinian statelessness.
Observation: welcome sovereign
Palestine!
The historic US abstention from voting on ending Zionist illegal settlements
from Palestine territories and UN vote are not lacking in significance. But
Netanyahu's smug suggestion that he need only wait for the advent of a Donald
Trump presidency is misleading. It is likely Trump may give him a sympathetic
hearing. But he already committed himself to peaceful solution to the vexed
issue in and establishes Palestine state to exist along with Israel. He may
not even move the US embassy to Jerusalem as that would be a gratuitously
inflammatory gesture. US Jews still hopes they can arm-twist Trump as well.
This was the world telling Netanyahu, with one voice, that the expanded
settlement policy he has encouraged and justified is wrong – wrong legally,
wrong morally, wrong politically, and wrong in terms of Israel's future peace
and security. The odd thing is, he knows this.
There is no doubt that the UN Security Council condemnation of Israel on
December 23 was an important and noteworthy event as it readily paved the way
for the creation of Palestine after a long struggle. True, the United Nations'
main chambers (the Security Council and the General Assembly) and its various
institutions, ranging from the International Court of Justice to the UN
cultural agency UNESCO, have repeatedly condemned the Israeli occupation,
illegal Jewish settlements and mistreatment of Palestinians.
Today there are at least 430,000 Jewish settlers currently living in the West
Bank or the 200,000 in east Jerusalem which would be the capital of Palestine.
.But Israel feels upbeat that Resolution 2334 is unenforceable and cannot
dismantle the structures or evict the criminal Jews form Palestine territories
and this can be done only with NATO help. Israel says nobody can force Israel
to embrace John Kerry's recycled ideas about a two-state solution, although
the US secretary of state is expected to spell them out one more time before
he leaves office next month.
Resolution 2334 joins UN resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973) in the
theoretical, consistently bypassed legal canon of the Israel-Palestine issue.
It says what should happen. It does not say how.
There are up to 196 illegal settlements on occupied Palestinian land, in
addition to hundreds of settler outposts. These settlements house up to
600,000 Jewish settlers who were moved there in violation of international law
and, in particular, the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Israel must respect the opinion of international community in favor of
establishing the much delayed Palestine state as they voted to end the Zionist
Semitist settlements in Palestine. Israel needs to accept the pro-peace option
now available for it to save its spoiled face and come forward for final peace
talks and accept the Arab Peace plan to resolve the conflict once for all.
Unlike the December 23 UNSC Resolution 2334, past UN condemnations were far
stronger; some resolutions did not ask just for an immediate halt of illegal
Jewish settlement construction, but for the removal of existing settlements as
well.
Arabs will assure Israel of not attack Israel or force Jews to resettle
themselves in Europe or convert to Islam or Christianity for that matter.
Palestinians will ensure that no more toy missiles would be fired into vacant
spaces in Israel.
Israel now being isolated by its close terror ally USA, must recognize
International Law and dismantle all Zionist structures inside Palestine.
Although insecurity, aggression and paranoia are their shared characteristic,
Trump would like to make decisions independent of Israel or US Jewish
community that hitherto decided the policies of USA. Moreover, Trump
administration cannot simply reverse the stated will of the UN Security
Council – backed in this case by permanent members China, Russia, France and
Britain; not will unilaterally scrap last year's multinational nuclear deal
with Iran. These are policy decisions of USA and not Israel
The resolution 2334 will accelerate existing moves to prosecute Israel at the
international criminal court. The UN vote has highlighted the extraordinary
extent of Israel's international isolation under Netanyahu. Even he cannot
persuasively dismiss the unanimous opinion of countries as diverse as Japan,
Ukraine, Malaysia, Venezuela, Angola and Spain. It takes a lot to make an
enemy of New Zealand, but Netanyahu has managed it.
Obama has not been much help. He, too, made a big speech in 2009, shortly
after taking office, pledging a ''new beginning'' for the Middle East. But he
could not do anything as his foreign minister Hillary Clinton supported
Israeli regime and its criminal operations and his actions led to ME regional
disintegration and growing American detachment.
Israel is annoyed, nervous and feels isolated for its arrogant posture on
Palestine. But as usual Israeli leadership wants to put up a brave face. ''We
will do all it takes so Israel emerges unscathed from this shameful
decision,'' Netanyahu said. Now many in Israel also talk about ''betrayal'' by
USA and many Jews feel USA should not have propped up a fascist regime in the
first place with full military backing from the Western powers. Interestingly,
Israel receives huge sums from abroad as aid but now it cuts aid to small
countries. Not only Israel barked at USA, but Israel has also withdrawn its
ambassadors from two of the countries that supported the resolution, New
Zealand and Senegal, and cut aid assistance to the latter. Planned diplomatic
exchanges have been cancelled, future Israeli cooperation with UN agencies
placed under urgent review, and civilian coordination with the Palestinian
Authority suspended.
Obama realized that pressurizing the risk-averse Netanyahu into peace talks
with the Palestinians is useless, especially when Israel's Arab neighbours
fell prey to civil disorder and Islamist insurrection supported by USA, Israel
and EU. Obama did not push nearly hard enough for peace in both terms when the
regional climate might have allowed it. In 2011, he vetoed a similar UN
resolution, arguing US-brokered talks would find a way forward. Cautious to
the end, even Obama's UN demarche on Friday was half-hearted. If he really
believes settlements are undermining peace, why abstain? Why not go the whole
hog and vote to condemn them?
Obama's Middle East legacy is not one to be proud of. But his final axe on
ending Israeli illegal settlements at UNSC has earned him the name he missed
for 2 terms. Only now Obama knew how criminal minded Israeli leadership is and
the defeat of his Democratic candidate Hillary has eye opened him to realize
his presidential duties towards humanity. .
Future of Palestinians looks promising as the UNSC can impose sanctions on
Israel if it refuses to respect the resolutions to end Israeli expanding
settlements on occupied land and possibly annexations, as mooted by
Netanyahu's rightwing allies.
President Obama has to make all recent decisions on Palestine tenable in
future so that the Neocons and other promoters of Israeli fanatic fascism
won't be able to arm-twist politically novice Trump.
While the rights of Palestinians do not register in the slightest in the radar
of US foreign policy interest (which sees its alliance with strong Israel as
far more important than the needs of disjointed and confused capitalist Arab
countries), Palestinians can still forge a new strategy that is predicated