[Peace-discuss] Our client

C. G. Estabrook galliher at alexia.lis.uiuc.edu
Wed Jan 19 16:11:09 CST 2005


[Dr. Ran HaCohen was born in the Netherlands in 1964 and grew up in
Israel, where he is now a university teacher.  His "Letter from Israel"
appears occasionally at Antiwar.com. --CGE]

 January 19, 2005
 The Threat of Peace
 by Ran HaCohen
 After Arafat

As Oscar Wilde once said, there are only two tragedies in life: one is not
getting what one wants, and the other is getting it. Israel is now facing
the latter tragedy. For years on end, we knew what we wanted: we wanted
Arafat dead. Not that we just sat and waited for it: we used ceaseless
incitement to prepare world opinion for his proactive elimination; we even
endorsed a government decision to get rid of him, and we held the old man
prisoner in his destroyed headquarters under conditions that would sooner
rather than later kill the healthiest senior (the Palestinians missed a
good point by propagating the legend that Arafat was poisoned, as if his
incarceration by Israel was not enough to kill him). Anyway, Arafat is now
dead, we got what we wanted, and we are not happy.

On the contrary. Together with Arafat, Israel buried its best excuse for
perpetuating the occupation. How long can you blame the dead for
terrorism? How long can you refuse to negotiate with the dead, to meet
with him face to face? Not very long. More than two months after Arafat's
death, even anemic Europe understands: "the 'Arafat excuse' no longer
exists" (Jean Asselborn, president of the European Union Council of
Ministers, Ha'aretz, Jan. 18, 2005). And what is worse: the Palestinians
have now got a new leader who was elected democratically (goodbye to
"ruthless dictator"), and, on top of all that, a leader who consistently
and openly -- in English and in Arabic -- renounces the armed struggle
against the occupation. On the other hand, Abu Mazen still demands
complete Israeli withdrawal from all Palestinian lands, and an independent
Palestinian state. This, of course, is in total harmony with international
law, with UN Security Council resolutions, even with President's Bush Road
Map: in short, it is totally unacceptable for Israel.

Puppet or Scarecrow

Israel can live with only two kinds of Palestinian leaders. It can live
with a puppet who accepts Israel's sovereignty over the Palestinian
territories (we may give him some "autonomy" in return), who is ready to
give up 60 percent of the West Bank for Israeli settlements and apartheid
walls (we may temporarily remove a checkpoint or two in return), who is
willing to forget the Palestinian refugees (we may not insist on his
conversion to Judaism in return). Israel has made several attempts to find
or tame such a Palestinian poodle, but so far failed.

Alternatively, Israel can live with a fanatic, terrorist Palestinian
scarecrow, with a murderous, uncompromising hardliner. The settlers often
say it aloud: we prefer the Islamic Jihad, who want to throw us all to the
sea. It is very easy to deal with such a leader, both nationally and
internationally.

What we cannot live with is a moderate, sane Palestinian leader who wants
peace in return for his people's lands, rights, and freedom. A leader who
speaks good English and does not dress like bin Laden, who does not want
to throw us to the sea but insists that Jerusalem is also a Palestinian
city. Such a leader exposes Israel's rejectionism, and there lies the
great danger of Abu Mazen. We cannot convince the world that we are the
eternal peace-loving victims when a majority (54 percent) of Palestinians
living in the occupied territories, as polls show, support a two-state
solution on the basis of the 1967 lines, with border corrections and no
massive return of refugees (Ha'aretz, Jan. 18, 2005). Because if this is
the case, it becomes obvious that the only obstacle to peace is Israel's
rejectionism, its refusal to make peace along these internationally
accepted lines.

Demonizing Abu Mazen

So what can Israel do against this threat? Against the danger that it
would be blamed for what it should be blamed, namely, for desiring peace
much less than it desires the occupied Palestinian lands and water?

There are means, luckily. Obviously, Abu Mazen should be pushed into
either of the two desired options for a Palestinian leader: if he cannot
be turned into Israel's subcontractor, he should be portrayed as a
terrorist. Attempts are already underway. The Israeli media was "appalled"
when during his election campaign Abu Mazen referred to Israel as "the
Zionist enemy." Appalling indeed: after all, only Israelis are allowed to
call Palestinians "the enemy" -- Palestinians are expected to call us
their beloved big brother -- and labeling Israel as Zionist is even a
greater insult.

The context of Abu Mazen's angry words was not taken into consideration.
Abu Mazen used these words upon hearing the news from Beth Lahia (Gaza
Strip), where an Israeli tank had just fired at what the Israeli army
shamelessly described as "Hamas activists," killing Mahmoud Raban (12
years old), his brother Bissam (17), their cousins Rajah (10), Jabir (16),
Mohammed (22), and Hani (17), as well as their friend Jibril Kassih (16),
and leaving Mohammed Raban (17) on a respirator with barely one leg and
one arm, Issa Relia (13) with both his legs amputated above the knee, and
the two cousins Imad al-Kaseeh (16) and Ibrahim al-Kaseeh (14) each with
two legs amputated (Gideon Levy, Ha'aretz, Jan. 14, 2005). That's not
appalling: it's "an exception" perhaps, though the army never bothered to
express sorrow, not to mention apology or regret. But calling Israel "the
Zionist enemy" in the aftermath of the bloodbath -- now that's appalling.

Let's Engage Gaza

Portraying Abu Mazen as a terrorist is going to take some time, though;
but Israel is impatient, it wants to act now. The dangers of peace are
best coped with by the army: Israel has done this several times before,
using the army to ignite the scene just when a cease-fire was at hand,
most notably when it re-occupied the West Bank in "Operation Defensive
Shield" (2002), the biggest military operation in the territories since
1967, just one day after the Arab League had adopted the Saudi Peace
Initiative, acknowledging Israel's right to live in peace once it ended
the occupation.

We are now in a similar situation. A big military operation can divert
attention from "the new era," from the pressure to cease-fire; it can
unify the masses behind our brave soldiers, and, above all, help Sharon
postpone indefinitely his vague promises to dismantle Gaza settlements â €
“ a "plan" that, as Tanya Reinhart convincingly argues, he has little
intention to carry out. So expect a large-scale operation in Gaza, soon.
The immediate excuse -- missile attacks on Israel -- does not really
matter: Abu Mazen, so the argument goes, does not stop the missiles, so we
are forced to send the army to stop them; at the same time, the army
itself admits it has no means to stop the missiles. So we are sending the
army to do what it cannot do, because Abu Mazen does not do it either.
After all, occupation is not about logic -- it's about breaking bones.

A Liberal Demands War Crimes

There is no better seismograph for Israel's intentions than "liberal"
senior columnist Yoel Marcus from the highbrow daily Ha'aretz:

"Our patience boiled over long ago. (...) There is a breaking point and a
time when the government must take off its gloves and present the other
side with a flat ultimatum: For every indiscriminate round of fire on a
civilian target, we will retaliate in kind on the closest and most
populated Palestinian city. We will give it to them good. An eye for an
eye." ("An Eye for an Eye," Ha'aretz, Jan. 18, 2005)

When Marcus resorts to the style of propagandists of the darkest
dictatorships in the 20th century, when he openly urges the government to
take revenge on innocent Palestinian civilians, preparing the hearts of
his readers for war crimes on a large scale, you can be sure the army
won't lag behind.

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