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Camp David
II
Joel Beinin
(Joel Beinin,
a contributing editor of Middle East report, teaches Middle East
history at Stanford University.)
July 26, 2000
The failure
of the Palestinian-Israeli-American summit at Camp David did not
surprise most Palestinians or those who understand Palestinian opinion
on the issues. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak's well-publicized
"red lines" going into the negotiations delineated a position very
far from the minimum that the Palestinian national consensus could
accept as a resolution of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
Barak loudly
announced that Israel would not return to its pre-1967 war borders.
He sought to annex settlement blocs containing about 80 percent
of the 180,000 Jewish settlers in the West Bank (excluding Jerusalem)
to Israel. Like every Israeli leader since 1967, Barak demanded
that the Palestinians accept all of Jerusalem as Israel's "eternal
capital." And Barak insisted that Israel would accept no moral
or legal responsibility for the creation of the Palestinian refugee
problem. In essence, Barak demanded that the Palestinians give their
blessing to Israel's many violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention
and dozens of UN resolutions since 1967--most notably the confiscation
of land for civilian purposes, settling civilians in occupied territories,
the unilateral and internationally unrecognized annexation of East
Jerusalem and the installation of some 175,000 Jewish settlers there.
DEEP FLAWS
IN THE OSLO PROCESS
Nor is it surprising
that Prime Minister Barak, and less directly, President Clinton
blamed Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat for the failure
of the summit. In remarks following the breakup of the talks, Clinton
praised Barak for moving much farther from his initial positions
than Arafat during the negotiations. Clinton apparently expected
that both parties would meet midway between their opening positions
at Camp David. This is a deeply flawed understanding of what can
produce a just and stable Palestinian-Israeli peace agreement. Clinton's
unreasonable expectations stem directly from the structure of the
Oslo process and the US alliance with Israel.
All international
parties except the United States were excluded from an active role
in the negotiations. The 1993 Oslo Declaration of Principles only
nominally acknowledged the relevance of UN resolutions 242 and 338
requiring Israel to withdraw from the territories it occupied in
1967. Other UN resolutions--recognizing the Palestinian right to
statehood, censuring Israel's annexation of East Jerusalem, affirming
the Palestinian refugees' right of return and condemning Israel's
illegal actions in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip since 1967--were
ignored, as were the relevant principles of international law. Well-established
historical facts detailing Israel's forcible expulsion of many Palestinian
refugees in 1948 and 1967 were disregarded.
ARAFAT'S
MANY COMPROMISES
The Palestinians
made their principal concessions at the beginning of the Oslo process.
They agreed to abandon armed struggle against Israel and recognize
a Jewish state occupying about 78 percent of their historic homeland
of Palestine (stretching from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean
Sea). In exchange, they expected that Israel would recognize a Palestinian
state in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem,
and acknowledge some measure of responsibility for the Palestinian
refugees. However, Israel refused, with support from the US, to
codify any of these Palestinian expectations in any agreement signed
by the two parties at Oslo or subsequently.
Until Camp
David II, Israel refused to make commitments on any of the key Palestinian
national demands. Despite the 1993 Oslo agreement, both Labor and
Likud governments continued to expropriate land in the West Bank,
to build new settlements, to expand existing settlements, especially
in and around Jerusalem, and to construct a vast network of bypass
roads intended to divide Palestinian population centers from each
other and facilitate the annexation of Jewish settlements. Until
only weeks before the Camp David summit, no Israeli prime minister
was willing to acknowledge that some Jewish settlements would be
included in territory transferred to the Palestinians as part of
a peace agreement. When Barak announced that some 20 percent of
the settlers would not remain under Israeli sovereignty in the final
status settlement he envisaged, he infuriated the Israeli right
wing, leading to the collapse of his government the day he left
for the summit.
MOVEMENT
IN ISRAEL'S POSITION
Barak apparently
did go far beyond his opening positions at Camp David. He agreed
to recognize a Palestinian state on as much as 94 percent of the
West Bank and to transfer some desert areas near the Gaza Strip
to Palestinian control in exchange for annexing territory, including
three large Jewish settlement blocs in the West Bank, to Israel.
He broke the Israeli taboo on negotiating over Jerusalem and talked
about Palestinian administrative autonomy over Arab neighborhoods
in East Jerusalem and Muslim control and a Palestinian flag flying
over the Noble Sanctuary/Temple Mount, though Israeli sovereignty
over the entire city would remain. He agreed to the resettlement
of some 100,000 Palestinian refugees inside Israel proper in the
framework of a family unification program, and to Israeli participation
in an international fund to compensate the 4-5 million other refugees.
Certainly, no other Israeli leader has gone this far.
COMING TO
TERMS WITH HISTORY
Both Barak
and Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat agreed that the main sticking
points were Jerusalem and the refugee question. Barak refused to
accept any form of Palestinian sovereignty in Jerusalem. The Palestinians
do not demand that a border be erected dividing Jerusalem. They
are open to creative arrangements for joint administration and divided
sovereignty of the city with open access to the holy places of the
three religions. Barak announced that on the refugee issue the differences
are "conceptual" and not "technical." In other words, he continued
to insist that Israel had nothing to do with the Palestinians becoming
refugees. The Palestinians do not insist that every refugee exercise
the right to return. They do expect that Israel acknowledge that
the creation of the Jewish state entailed the destruction of Palestinian
society. Recognition of this historical reality can go a long way
towards reconciling both peoples to the fact that Israel/Palestine
is now the homeland of two national communities who cannot easily
be physically separated from each other.
Israel's failure
to come to terms with its own history and that of the Palestinians
and its inability to accept the principle that two peoples have
equal rights to the land they jointly inhabit, presaged the failure
of the Camp David summit. Prime Minister Barak may well face a bruising
political fight in the coming weeks and months. He will be attacked
by hard-line settlers and their supporters for going as far as he
did at Camp David. He will need to reconstruct his government or
call new elections. Israeli opinion polls indicated that 59 percent
of the public hoped that Barak would return from Camp David with
a peace agreement, but only 42 percent would support an agreement
that included a change in the status of Jerusalem. Is Israel ready
for peace? The real debate has only now begun.

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