The Failure of the Palestinian Venture (JEWISH PRESS) By: Dr. Mordechai Kedar 04/11/12)
Source: http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/analysis/the-failure-of-the-palestinian-venture/2012/04/11/?hpcr
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Lately, there have been many rumors about the intentions of the
Palestinians, specifically Abu Mazen, to dismantle the Palestinian
Authority and to return to the days before the Oslo Accords, when
Israel was responsible for all of the territories of Judea and
Samaria, including the Arab cities. About one month ago, in March
2012, a committee including Egyptian and Palestinian notables
convened in Cairo, and discussed this as a serious
possibility, “because at present there is no political solution on
the horizon”. The questions that the committee dealt with were: who
has the authority to take a decision to disband the PA, and whether
the advantages of such a move would outweigh the disadvantages.
According to the participants, the PA has failed because it has not
achieved a full Israeli withdrawal from all of the
territories “occupied ” since 1967, and has failed to impose the
refugees’ “right of return” upon Israel .
Ibrahim Hamami, head of the Center for Palestinian Affairs in London,
who participated in the committee, stated: “The Palestinian Authority
was established to serve the goals of the occupation by continuing
negotiations, while the Palestinian citizen did not benefit from it
at all. On the contrary: it was the Palestinians who were forced to
withdraw because of the settlement activity and roadblocks. An
additional reason to dismantle the PA is the Israeli fear of
deterioration in security that will occur in Israel because of the
absence of Palestinian security organizations. Hamami claims that six
years ago, in 2006, Abbas had already hinted at the possibility of
dismantling the PA after Israel broke into the Jericho prison and
arrested Ahmed Sadat and his associates. Since then the possibility
of dismantling the PA has arisen from time to time, when Abbas has
become disappointed with Israel.
As a result, Palestinian spokesmen have it easy: they just have to
blame Israel for their failure. It’s convenient and it provides an
explanation that the West will buy, because the West doesn’t have a
deep understanding of the problems of the Middle East. The truth of
the matter is, there never was a chance for the Palestinian Authority
to succeed, because of the innate problems that stem from the nature
of the political culture of the Middle East. We will focus on a few
of them.
1. The fundamental problem of any modern Arab state is the problem of
its legitimacy to exist as a state, principally because the state
does not reflect a well-defined ethnic unit, and therefore is not a
nation-state in the European sense, i.e. France and Holland.
Traditionally, there is no “Syrian people”, “Jordanian
people”, “Lebanese people”, or “Sudanese people”. There is an “Arab
people”, which is divided into tribes, clans, religious groups and
sects. Arab states such as Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Sudan are
creations of colonialism, which arbitrarily divided up the Arab
nation, without regard to demographic facts. The PA suffers from this
problem too, because – traditionally – there was never a “Palestinian
People”, and there is no trace of such an entity in any book or
newspaper that was printed before 1920, before the area of “Sham”
(Greater Syria) was divided into four political units: Syria,
Lebanon, Jordan and Palestine-Israel.
2. Most of the members of the “Palestinian People”, the virtual
collective upon which the idea of a Palestinian state is built, are
descendants of immigrants that entered the area between the
Mediterranean Sea and Jordan in the second half of the 19th century
and the twentieth century. The Ottoman Empire, the British Mandate
and the Jewish villages that were established in pre-state Israel
were an attractive source of livelihood for the immigrant workers,
who came from the surrounding areas. Many Egyptians fled to Israel in
the years of the 1860s in order to escape forced labor – digging the
Suez Canal. Therefore even today, many “Palestinians” have names such
as “Al-Masri” (The Egyptian), “Masarwa”, and “Fiumi”, names which
point to their Egyptian origin. Others are called “Al-Haurani”,
because they were brought by the British from the Hauran, in Syria,
principally to work in the port of Haifa. People who live in the
village of Jisr al_Zarqa’ are Sudanese, and therefore they did not
participate in the War of Independence and remained in the place
where they settled, between Caesaria and Ma’agan Michael. European
geographers who visited the Land of Israel in the 19th century, as
well as the International Investigative Committee which operated
during the first half of the twentieth century, documented groups of
immigrants from Iran, Afghanistan, Yemen, Iraq, North Africa and the
Balkans, who were residing in Israel . Residents of Rehania and Kfar
Kama, two Galilee villages, are Cherkessian from the Caucasus.
Booshank clans who live in Kfar Manda come from Bosnia. All of the
residents of the Negev, most of the residents of the Gaza Strip and
some from Mount Hebron are Bedouins, who migrated between the deserts
of Sinai, the Negev, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Their Saudi Arabian
dialect clearly testifies to their country of origin. Some of the
Armenians – who are Christian – fled to Israel from Turkey in the
years 1915-1918, because of the genocide that the Turks carried out
upon them. Therefore, most of the “Palestinians” are a mixed people,
various groups whose origin is not the Land of Israel.
3. The modern Arab state, since its inception, has failed and
continues to fail in its main objective: to settle in the hearts of
the citizens and to take the place of their traditional loyalty for
the tribe, the ethnic group (i.e.: Kurdish, Turkmen), the religious
community (i.e.: Muslim, Christian, Druze, Alawite) or the sect
(i.e.: Sunni, Shia). A person will define himself as “Iraqi”
or “Syrian” only if he is part of a system of government or if he
enjoys economic or political benefits from it. No person will
volunteer for a state, dedicate his time, his wealth, and certainly
not his life for a government, if he doesn’t feel that the governing
system represents him. In the Palestinian case, this is evident
because of the absence of a volunteer army. All of the employees of
the PA, especially those who serve in security apparatuses, are
salaried, and serve the government only for what their salary is
worth, and no more. They don’t do it because they see the state as
something that reflects their collective consciousness. Without the
flow of funds, the PA would never be able to buy the services of its
employees. It would collapse, and this leads to the clear conclusion
that it is not a state of its citizens but an employer of its
salaried workers.
4. One of the results of the failure of the Palestinian venture is
the split between Gaza and Ramallah. From a historical point of view,
the bond between these two centers of Arab population is fairly weak,
and is not stronger than the bond between any two centers of
population in the area. Between 1948 and 1967 the Gaza Strip was
under Egyptian occupation, and the Old City of Jerusalem, Judea and
Samaria were under Jordanian occupation. These two states reacted
with an iron fist to any attempt of the residents of these areas to
liberate themselves from occupation. The idea of a “Palestinian
State” that would unify the Gaza Strip with Judea and Samaria is new,
and was born after 1967 from the coupling of the Israeli left with
Arab deceit, which misled some naive Jews to believe that the Arabs
would come to terms with a Jewish state within the cease-fire lines
that were in place until 1967, known as the “Green Line”.
5. The Palestinian Authority was originally defined as a political
entity, a “state in progress”, for the Arabs who live in Judea,
Samaria and Gaza. But this geographical definition is a severe
contradiction to the modern Arab narrative which claims that the
concept of “Palestinians” includes all of the Arabs who live in
Israel, even those who live as refugees and immigrants and live in
the scores of refugee camps and outside of them in Jordan, Syria,
Lebanon and in many other states. The connection or bond has never
been established between the PLO, the organization that established
the PA, and the groups who are defined today as “Palestinian” and
live outside of Judea, Samaria and Gaza, because the PLO claims since
its inception in 1964 that it is “the only legitimate representative
of the Palestinian people”. What – if so – is the PLO doing for
the “Palestinians” in Jordan, where they are a majority? or in Syria?
or in Lebanon? What would be the meaning of the establishment of an
Arab state in Judea, Samaria and Gaza, for the “Palestinians” who
live outside of it? How would this state solve the problem of
the “Palestinian” diaspora, those who do not belong to local tribes
in other countries?
6. Since a real answer was never given to this question, the PLO
invented the standard, but impossible answer: “the right of return”,
meaning a solution through a third party: Arab “Palestinians” who
were born in Arab states and have lived in them for scores of years,
will move to Israel, and this, despite the fact that all throughout
history, there has never been a case where the establishment of a
state was conditional on the transfer of millions of people who were
born in a second state to a third state. What is implied by
the “right of return” is that the Palestine Liberation Organization
and the “state in progress” that it established, shirk their
responsibility for a solution to the problem of the “Palestinians” in
the diaspora. Therefore, every time that any possible solution came
up between Israel and the PLO, Arafat and Abu Mazen made an
obligatory visit to the refugee camps in Lebanon and Syria, in order
to ease tensions and to tell the people there that they are not
forgotten, and their problem is not neglected by the PLO. But since
no one really believes them, organizations that object to the
political process have developed in those camps, principally Hamas
and the Fronts for Resistance.
7. The PLO has never clearly and decisively defined its relationship
to the state of Israel as a state of the Jewish people. Despite the
fact that the Oslo Accords were signed, and despite the fact that
according to them, “Palestinian” media were established, these media
channels have never stopped speaking about the Galilee, Haifa, Acre,
Yaffo and Be’er Sheva as part of “Palestine”. And even now, the logo
of the PLO includes the map of Palestine in its entirety. There has
always been a double message: You speak with Israel, but it doesn’t
exist because it is actually Palestine. This is how the “Palestinian”
educational system operates: Israel does not appear in books as a
legitimate state, and it is the same in the public arena: all of the
drawings and illustrations of “Palestine” are from the sea to Jordan.
This situation has created a cognitive dissonance among many Arabs as
well as on the Israeli side: how can the “Palestinians” speak of a
state in Judea, Samaria and Gaza, but at the same time,
represent “Palestine” as the whole area between the sea and Jordan?
8. The Palestinian National Covenant states in section 1
that “Palestine is the homeland of the Palestinian people; it is an
inseparable part of the greater Arab homeland, and the Palestinian
people is part of the Arab nation. This wording became the official
version of the Palestinian narrative, which expresses the political
aspirations of the “Palestinians”. Section 2 of the covenant states
that “Palestine, as its borders were defined during the period of the
British Mandate, is one indivisible territorial unit.” This statement
negates of the existence of the state of Israel (and perhaps also the
Kingdom of Jordan). This section has never been changed. Following
the signing of the Oslo Accords Israel was told in a vague letter
that the sections that contradict the peace accords are no longer
operative, but the covenant itself was never reworded. It is this
discrepancy that gives rise to the Israeli perception that the
Palestinians speak about the establishment of a state in Judea,
Samaria and Gaza, but their true intention is that by the end of the
process, the Palestinian Covenant will be realized exactly as written.
9. Arafat, followed by the various heads of the PLO, made a huge
strategic mistake when they issued the ultimatum that Jerusalem must
be the capital of the Palestinian state. This distressed many Jews
who, despite their desire to reach peace with the Arabs, are not
willing to give up Zion, the cherished treasure of the Jewish people,
toward which it has prayed for the 1900 years of exile. The demand to
have Jerusalem is relatively new because the Palestinian covenant –
whether in the 1964 version or the 1968 version – does not mention
Jerusalem at all. It is interesting that the Hamas covenant, which
was written in 1988 also does not speak of Jerusalem as the capital
of Palestine. Moreover, there is no historical basis for the
Palestinian claim to Jerusalem, because this city was never the
capital of an Islamic state or province. The capital of “Jund
Filistin” (the District of Palestine) after the Islamic conquest in
the year 637 CE was the city of Ramle. And just for the sake of
comparison: In the Jewish Bible, Jerusalem is mentioned hundreds of
times and in the Islamic Qur’an not even once. The Jewish people and
the children of Israel also appear in the Qur’an hundreds of times,
but the Palestinian people – like Jerusalem – not even once. The
baseless Palestinian demand for Jerusalem has caused many millions of
Christians to grant Israel its unstinting support.
10. The world paid little attention to the Palestinian terror that
raged in Israel after the outbreak of the second Intifada, at the end
of September 2000 – until September 11, 2001. With the attacks that
occurred on that day in New York and Washington, the world began to
understand better the terror that Israel was confronted with, because
until then, there was no tangible reference point with which to help
them understand the problem in Israel. Only then was the decision
taken to declare Hamas, as well as Al-Qaeda, to be terror
organizations and to boycott any bank or organization that transfers
money to it. The Palestinians, chiefly Arafat, did not understand
that continuing the terror after September 11, 2001 worked against
them and made it easier for Israel to define them as terrorists,
which has darkened their image in the world until today, at least
regarding Hamas.
11. Since January 2006, the split between the PLO and Hamas has not
simply been a division between two parties who sit together in the
same elected body. Rather, the split has a deeply cultural
characteristic, because Hamas represents a religious Islamic concept,
which sees the division of the Islamic nation into states as a
colonialist, anti-Islamic division, that was intended to break up the
nation of Islam into splinters. The PLO is trying to build a modern,
artificial narrative of a Palestinian people, similar to the modern
narrative of the Syrian, Iraqi or Jordanian peoples. Hamas, a
religious movement from the Muslim Brotherhood school of thought,
sees the narrative of the nationalist circles as something that is
against Islam and this is the basis for the split between the two
movements. In June, 2012, Hamas will mark five years since the
establishment of the Islamic state in the Gaza Strip, while in Judea
and Samaria, the PLO has failed to establish a governing body that
has any chance of surviving without the backing of the state of
Israel. Anyone who is involved with what is happening in Judea and
Samaria, Arabs as well as Jews, knows that Hamas will take control of
Judea and Samaria, and sooner rather than later, if the IDF leaves
that area.
12. During the year 2011, since the beginning of the “Arab Spring”,
the Arab world has neglected the Palestinian problem, because the
events in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria have taken over the
newspapers and the TV and computer screens. The Arab World has turned
its back on the Palestinians and their problems, and has removed them
from the public agenda. This is the real reason that the Palestinians
turned to the UN last September for recognition as a state. And the
continual development of events in Egypt and Syria that dominate the
Arab media push the PLO again to search for their friends in the
corridors of the international arena, in places where there isn’t
even the slightest understanding of the culture of the Middle East
and the problems that it causes to modern illegitimate entities that
are known as [Arab] states. There exists in the world, and even in
Israel here and there, the hope that if only the Palestinians will
get their state, they will accept Israel as a legitimate state with
the right to exist in peace and security, Hamas will sit together
with the PLO around the campfire and will sing the Palestinian hymn
harmoniously, and the sons of Hebron will take wives from the
daughters of Nablus. No one is willing to address the question: What
will the world do when the Palestinian state, with a territorial
contiguity in Judea and Samaria turns into a Hamas state? It’s
interesting that those Israeli bleeding hearts who naively hope for
peace despite the discouraging past, seem to have had enough, and
don’t deal with this question either.
There is a conclusion to be drawn from all of the above. The
Palestinian national project was supposed to create a Palestinian
people on which to base the establishment of a Palestinian state.
This has resulted in total failure. Therefore, Israel and the world
must search for a different solution, for example the eight-state
solution that was presented on this stage in the past, and which is
based on the establishment of eight Arab city-states: one in Gaza
which already exists, and has been alive and kicking for almost five
years, and another seven in each of the Arab cities in Judea and
Samaria: Jenin, Nablus, Tulkarem, Qalqilya, Ramallah, Jericho and the
Arab section of Hebron. Israel must remain forever in the rural
expanses in order to assure that the hills of Judea and Samaria will
not turn into the hills of Hamas. And just as the Arab residents of
Jerusalem have Israeli citizenship – and according to many public
opinion polls, prefer to live under Israeli control than under any
alternative Arab control – Israel should offer Israeli citizenship to
the Arab residents of the villages of Judea and Samaria as well.
The world must wake up and recognize the reality, read
the “Alfatiha” – the first chapter of the Qur’an, which is similar to
the Jewish “Kaddish” and the Christian “Requiem” – over the
Palestinian Authority, and to send its corrupt Tunisians back to the
place from where they were brought by Rabin (may he rest in peace)
and Peres (he should live and be well), who were deceived by fellow
Nobel prize winner, the great murderer and consummate liar, Yaser
Arafat. They thought that he will take care of Hamas for them without
the High Court or human rights groups, but what is actually happening
is that Hamas is taking care of the PLO (Gaza, since June, 2007) and
takes care of us too, in Sderot, Ashkelon and the area surrounding
Gaza, without the High Court or human rights groups, but with
Goldstone and the perennial bias of the UN and most of the rest of
the world.
The dismantling of the Palestinian Authority into eight Arab city-
states is a necessary condition for Israel to thrive, and therefore
Israel and the world must accept Abu Mazen’s threat to quit with a
blessing. (© 2012 JewishPress. 04/11/12)
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