Into the Fray: Stupidity – on steroids (JERUSALEM POST OP-ED) By MARTIN SHERMAN 05/25/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=271380
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ool me once, shame on you, fool me twice shame on me
– A proverb of disputed origin
Stupid is as stupid does
– From the movie, Forest Gump
There is something about the discourse on the Palestinian issue that
seems to induce the total evaporation of the mental faculties of
otherwise ostensibly intelligent human beings.
Perplexing questions
How else can we explain the occurrence of so many perplexing – and
vexing – phenomena? For example: Why is it that the feasibility of
Palestinian statehood has been repeatedly disproven, but somehow
never discredited – and certainly never discarded? How can it be that
the land-for-peace formula has been undermined neither by the
accumulation of past failures nor the accumulating evidence of its
future implausibility? What makes any professed Zionist advocate a
policy whose prospects for success are so slim and whose chances of
ruinous failure so great?
Why do so many, who purportedly endorse rationality in human
behavior, embrace such irrationality in their political credos?
But even more disturbing questions as to the conduct and motives of
adherents/advocates of Palestinian statehood and the landfor- peace
formula arise from their determined denial of the failure of their
dogmatic doctrine and the devastation that endeavors to implement it
have wrought.
Cavalier and contradictory claims
Prior to the Oslo process, the land-for-peace/ two-staters explained
sagaciously that Palestinian terror attacks were the acts of
extremists, driven by frustration at the lack of a peace-process.
However, once the peace process was implemented, and Palestinian
terror attacks not only continued but increased dramatic ally, they
explained that these were acts of the extremists trying to impede the
peace process – whose previous absence was invoked as the cause of
their “frustration” that allegedly precipitated the pre-process
terror.
So, according to the “enlightened” two-staters, terror is produced
both by the lack of – and the existence of – the peace process. Go
figure!
One of the main arguments put forward previously by two-staters was
economic. Without peace, they warned, there could be no economic
prosperity.
But then the violence of the 2000 intifada erupted, and the
negotiations with the Palestinians ground to a halt. Yet lo and
behold, with nary a peace process on the horizon, Israel’s economy
strengthened, then surged, then soared – and another loony-left
legend bit the dust. But get this! Now Israel’s economic success is
being blamed for Israel’s apathy toward peace – or rather the lack
thereof.
Thus in a September 2010 article entitled “Why Israel Doesn’t Care
About Peace” Time magazine wrote: “The truth is, Israelis are no
longer preoccupied with the matter [peace]. They’re otherwise
engaged; they’re making money.”
So whereas previously peace was presented as necessary for attaining
economic prosperity, now economic prosperity is being blamed for not
attaining – or at least, not pursuing – peace. Confusing, isn’t it?
They just can’t seem to stick to the story line.
More contradictory claims
Of course the whole raison d’etre – both moral and substantive – for
initiating the Oslowian peace process on the basis of landfor- peace
was the claim that was there was a credible peace partner
(i.e. “someone to talk to”) with whom a sustainable agreement could
be struck. Thus, according to the twostaters, territorial withdrawal
could be achieved by a negotiated bilateral agreement.
However, when it soon became clear that this was not the case, rather
than jettison the idea of territorial withdrawal, they jettisoned the
idea that it should be negotiated. So the notion of unilateral
withdrawal was born – which culminated in the
disastrous “disengagement” from Gaza.
When confronted with the debacle into which the Gaza abandonment
rapidly deteriorated, two-staters refused to admit error. Instead
they now tried to excuse/explain the failure by complaining that the
withdrawal had not been the product of a negotiation process – the
acknowledged impossibility of which was presented as the need for
unilateral measures in the first place. You couldn’t make this stuff
up!
But wait, there’s more. Having apparently despaired once again of
resurrecting the negotiations anytime soon, two-staters have
rediscovered unilateralism, which now seems back in favor with them–
big time, on the pages of The New York Times no less.
Thus, in a recent op-ed – endorsed this week by Tom Friedman (itself
a reason for caution and concern) – a trio of prominent two-staters
announced: “We recognize that a comprehensive peace agreement is
unattainable right now… It now seems highly unlikely that the two
sides will return to negotiations – but that does not mean the status
quo must be frozen in place.” They then issued a call for – wait for
it – “constructive unilateralism.”
Plumbing new depths of absurdity
You’ve got to hand it to The New York Times. When it comes to
publishing delusional drivel on the Israeli-Palestinian issue
the “newspaper of record” is difficult to match. But even by the
Times’ standards, the April 23 opinion piece, “Peace Without
Partners” by Ami Ayalon, Orni Petruschka and Gilead Sher plumbed new
depths of absurdity – leaving one to puzzle over whether the only
journalistic criterion for publication in the paper’s opinion section
is denigration of Israeli settlements or support for Israeli
withdrawal.
Indeed, the very oxymoronic nature of the title, “Peace without
Partners,” testifies to the nonsensical nature of its content, which
not only resurrects the failed formula of unilateral retreat but
suggests a new one – of “unilateral peace” whatever that might mean.
For Israelis, the article should be a matter of grave concern,
especially in view of the prominent positions held by some of the
authors. Ayalon served as commander of Israel’s navy and Shin Bet
(Israel Security Agency), while Sher was chief of staff to prime
minister Ehud Barak.
It is thus difficult to know what is more disturbing: Whether people
who held such senior positions of responsibility actually believe in
the viability of their preposterous proposals, or whether they don’t,
but found it appropriate to publish them anyway.
The kernel of their “ingenious” initiative is the notion of
preemptive surrender by means of staged, slow-motion submission to
maximalist (at least in the interim) Palestinian demands.
Get this: “Israel should first declare that it is willing to return
to negotiations anytime… that it has no claims of sovereignty on
areas east of the existing security barrier. It should then end all
settlement construction east of the security barrier and in Arab
neighborhoods of Jerusalem.”
Leaving aside for the moment the question of with whom such
negotiations should be conducted, an unelected president whose term
expired more than three years ago, or his likely Judeophobic Islamist
successor, the question is: What would be left to negotiate once
Israel has rescinded any demands to virtually the entire area of
Judea and Samaria –apart from unconditional evacuation of the IDF and
the unconditional removal of all the settlements – including the
large settlement blocs?
‘Disputed’ territories become ‘occupied’
In a single stroke, Israel would have conceded that it no longer
considers these “disputed” territories but indeed “occupied.” The
significance of this distinction should not be underestimated.
For by voluntarily voiding its claims to any affinity with the land,
Israel will have deemed itself indelibly an “occupier” and all
settlements “illegal,” since it would have no power to legalize their
existence. Now, while this is an outcome that might not be overly
disagreeable to the authors, it does create some considerable
difficulty for their next proposal.
While ostensibly acknowledging that some lesson might be learned from
the disengagement experience, they sally forth with a suggestion that
reveals just how flat their learning curve really is. To read is to
be amazed.
“Under our proposal, the Israeli Army would remain in the West Bank
until the conflict was officially resolved with a final-status
agreement. And Israel would not physically force its citizens to
leave until an agreement was reached.”
But why should the Palestinians offer any quid pro quo to negotiate
the withdrawal of the IDF when Israel has apriori acceded sovereignty
to them and ceased all construction of the settlements, condemning
them to inevitable decay and eventual disintegration? Indeed, what
would be the justification for any further IDF deployment in the
sovereign territory of others – especially as that deployment itself
is likely to be cited as the major grievance precipitating the
belligerency between the sides.
A giant ‘South Lebanon’
Thus, unless one ascribes copious quantities of altruism to the
Palestinians – hitherto a trait largely conspicuous by its absence –
this is an irresistibly tempting invitation for them to draw out the
resolution of the conflict endlessly. After all, in the situation
created, time would be unequivocally on their side – with zero
incentive to make any concession.
In effect, Judea and Samaria would be transformed into a giant “South
Lebanon” with the added burden of a resident Israeli civilian
population.
With prolonged Israeli military presence indefensible
internationally, and prolonged Israeli civilian presence untenable
physically, what possible reason would there be for the Palestinians
to negotiate? In such circumstances, the most compelling policy
choice for them would be to do nothing and wait for time to take its
course, for inexorable international pressure on the IDF to withdraw
from their sovereign territory and for the strangled settlements to
be depopulated and fall apart.
True, the authors do suggest that some preparatory measures should be
undertaken. Thus they propose that Israel “should create a plan to
help 100,000 settlers who live east of the barrier to relocate within
Israel’s recognized borders.”
Conveniently – but predictably – the authors offer no information not
only as to how this multi-billion-dollar plan – involving about 10
times more people than in the disengagement – is to be financed; nor
as to where this envisioned relocation is to be implemented, the
impact it will inevitably have on the cost of housing (and thus
on “social justice”), on the labor market, the environment, among a
host of other factors that would be significantly, and even
dramatically influenced by relocating even this small percentage of
the “settlers who live east of the barrier” to areas west of it.
Palestinian attitudes
The Ayalon et al. piece is riddled with additional defects, non-
sequiturs and fallacies – which constraints of time and space compel
me to refrain from responding to. Perhaps the best way to convey just
how detached from reality this harebrained scheme is, is to confront
its proposals and prognoses with the positions of senior Palestinian
Authority officials (i.e. from the allegedly “moderate” Fatah rather
than the overtly radical Hamas).
For example, the article claims that “Palestinian statehood would
undermine the Palestinians’ argument for implementing a right of
return for Palestinian refugees, since the refugees would have a
state of their own to return to.” Really? Compare this with the
position articulated by Abdullah Abdullah, Palestinian ambassador to
Lebanon during last year’s debate on the Palestinians’ unilateral bid
for statehood – which Ayalon et al. warmly endorse.
In a September 2010 interview with the Lebanese Daily Star, Abdullah
asserted that statehood “will never affect the right of return for
Palestinian refugees” and that even refugees in the Palestinian
territories “will not be considered citizens.”
He went on to declare: “When we have a state accepted as a member of
the United Nations, this is not the end of the conflict. This is not
a solution to the conflict. This is only a new framework that will
change the rules of the game.”
Abdullah was not the only senior Palestinian official to express this
view. Take for example Saeb Erekat. While still functioning as the
head of the Palestinian Steering Committee, he wrote in the Guardian
(December 10, 2010): “Today, Palestinian refugees constitute more
than 7 million people worldwide – 70 percent of the entire
Palestinian population. Disregarding their legitimate legal rights
enshrined in international law… to return to their homeland, would
certainly make any peace deal signed with Israel completely
untenable.”
So if you were a betting man, who would you put your money on for
having a firmer grasp of Palestinian perspectives: senior Palestinian
officials or Ayalon et al.?
Palestinian attitudes (continued)
Many Palestinians may well enthusiastically embrace the call made
by “Peace Without Partners” (Did they really call it that?). One of
them might well be Abbas Zaki, a member of Fatah’s central committee,
who in a May 7, 2009 interview on ANB TV let the cat out of the bag,
when he declared: “With the two-state solution, in my opinion, Israel
will collapse, because if they get out of Jerusalem, what will become
of all the talk about the Promised Land and the Chosen People? What
will become of all the sacrifices they made – just to be told to
leave? They consider Jerusalem to have a spiritual status. The Jews
consider Judea and Samaria to be their historic dream. If the Jews
leave those places, the Zionist idea will begin to collapse. It will
regress of its own accord. Then we will move forward.”
Of course he is right. And everyone – deep in their gut – knows it.
Even the two-staters.
The only ray of light?
Perhaps the only ray of light in the whole preposterous proposition
of unilateral peace is that it does in fact specify measures that
should be implemented – only in reverse! Instead of withdrawing
claims of sovereignty over Judea and Samaria, Israel should impose it.
Instead of giving financial inducements to Jews to leave Judea and
Samaria, they should give Palestinians them to do so, as I have
argued on previous occasions. Well, at least we have established the
principle that financing population movements is acceptable – and
that could be a big step forward. Now all we have to do now is decide
which population and in which direction. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem
Post 05/25/12)
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