Israeli Oslo promoters shirk responsibility
Dan Margalit (Haaretz)
June 6, 2001
Dan Margalit: What went wrong with Oslo? Israeli Oslo promoters shirk
responsibility
A large peace camp whose members were prepared to see Israel make
far-reaching concessions for peace supported Ehud Barak, Shlomo Ben-Ami,
Yossi Beilin and Yossi Sarid on the road to Camp David and Taba, proposed
major compromises and banged their heads against a brick wall: The
Palestinian brick wall.As a result of this collision, the peace camp has
broken into three factions. The first faction, small but vocal, continues
indiscriminately to back every Palestinian whim. The second and the largest
faction, still loyal to its commitment to peace based on compromise,
understands that Arafat is still a warrior and thus wisely sent the
representatives of the Labor Party to the national unity government.
Between these two factions is a third group that is in crisis: Its members
are the architects of the Oslo accords and refuse to admit that, although
the agreement signed in Oslo in 1993 placed the Middle East on the much
longed-for peace track, it became an anachronism the moment Palestinian
Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat decided that he would not end the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict despite the magnanimity of the Barak government.
Instead, the "Oslo architects" are obstinately understating the gravity of
the Palestinian leadership's almost exclusive responsibility for the shift
from negotiations to violence.
The prevalent spirit among members of this group is present in a significant
working paper prepared by one of the "Oslo architects," Dr. Ron Pundak. In
the document, Pundak asks "What went wrong?" on the road from Oslo to Taba.
This question, however, should really be directed at Pundak and at his
colleagues.
In order to help Arafat shirk responsibility for the present crisis, Pundak
comes out with the incredible assertion that, in September 2000, the
Palestinians were "in a political-psychological state of utter despair." But
why at precisely that point in time? When Benjamin Netanyahu was prime
minister, he offered them nothing and, in Pundak's words, "physically abused
the peace process." During Netanyahu's regime, the Intifada hibernated. Why
did the Palestinians return to the tactics of blood and fire after Barak and
the members of his cabinet had agreed to accept then American president Bill
Clinton's proposal, which would have given the Palestinians 96 percent of
the West Bank and another one percent after territorial exchanges? The
Palestinians' reaction is particularly mystifying in view of Barak's
historic breakthrough on Jerusalem (even Pundak admits the significance of
that breakthrough). Even if the Palestinians were not getting absolutely
everything they were demanding, the position Barak adopted was so close to
their own goals that, if they really wanted a peace treaty, then logically
they should have continued negotiating with the Israelis, instead of
shooting at them.
In his working paper, Pundak detects a mental-psychological flaw in the fact
that Barak, who had served 35 years in the Israel Defense Forces, failed to
discern the importance of the fact that Arafat, the person he was supposed
to be negotiating with, always appears in public in uniform. (No one can
think of a public event for which Arafat has sent his military garb to the
laundry and appeared in a suit and tie instead.) Another flaw Pundak points
to is the fact that Clinton labeled Arafat an opponent of peace. Clinton
should have refrained from such political stereotyping, claims Pundak: he
"should have been less emotional and more 'presidential.'" But what is so
terrible about Israel enjoying the dividends of its peace policies when
faced with such an adamant opponent of peace on the other side?
There is one conclusion that the "Oslo architects" have failed to reach,
although it is so transparent and so crucial: Arafat simply refuses to say
good-bye to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Yet they are not asking him
the pointed, but essentially naive, question: "Why?" Arafat felt less
threatened by Netanyahu - who had serious doubts about the prospects of ever
seeing an end to the dispute - than by Barak, who actually was striving for
the attainment of the very goals the Palestinian leader cherishes. That is
the real reason why Arafat decided to use violent tactics against Barak, not
Netanyahu.
Instead of admitting that Arafat stubbornly wants to perpetuate the
conflict, the "Oslo architects" note what they claim is the problematic
conduct of the peace negotiations during the Barak era and argue that this
factor was one of the "prime limitations" that obstructed the road to peace.
This argument, which is not particularly convincing, insults the
intelligence of Arafat and his followers, who, according to the architects,
passed up an opportunity for peace because they did not like the way Barak
behaved during the talks.
The matter is not just of historical interest. Even today, when Beilin and
Pundak are conducting a commendable dialogue with the Palestinians, the
following demand must be met: First of all, Arafat must finally take the
initiative and present a binding proposal that specifies the price the
Palestinians are prepared to pay for an end to the dispute with Israel. That
proposal must take into consideration Israel's two essential requirements:
One, Israel's character as a Jewish state must be maintained in accordance
with the Wilsonian principle of respect for every nation's right to
self-determination; and two, Israel's security needs must be given priority.
If that demand is presented to Arafat, it will immediately emerge that,
although the settlements are a serious drag on Israel's ability to deal with
the items on its diplomatic and national agendas, the Jewish communities on
the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip are not the reason why peace is yet to
be attained. The settlements cannot be the reason because, at Camp David and
Taba, for the first time since the Six Day War (whose 34th anniversary was
marked yesterday), Israel actually expressed a willingness to consider
giving up all the West Bank - and the Palestinian response was expressed in
blood and fire.
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