The
Israeli Text and Context of the Geneva Accord
Shiko Behar
and Michael Warschawski
(Shiko
Behar is director of the Alternative Information Center, a joint
Palestinian-Israeli organization based in Jerusalem and Beit Sahour.
Michael Warschawski is co-chairman of the board of the Alternative
Information Center.)
November 24,
2003
|
Further
Info
The
Alternative Information Center's home page is http://www.alternativenews.org/
The
text of the Geneva Accord is accessible online at the website
of the Israeli Haaretz
daily:
Amos
Oz's article in the Guardian is accessible online .
For
a sample of Palestinian and Israeli responses to the Geneva
Accord, see http://www.badil.org/Press/2003/press322-03.htm
and http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/357239.html
On the
approach governing the Israeli Geneva school vis-à-vis the
right of return see Shiko Behar, "There Is a Right of Return,"
al-Ahram Weekly, September 25-October 1, 2003. The article
is accessible online .
For
the role of Labor and Meretz in the Oslo process, see Shiko
Behar, "The
Peace Process and Israeli Domestic Politics in the 1990s,"
Socialism and Democracy, 16/2 (Summer 2002). The article
is accessible online.
On Israel's
"peace camp," see Yitzhak Laor, "The Tears of Zion,"
New Left Review 10 (July-August 2001). The article is accessible
online.
For
additional analysis of the Geneva Accord and its relation
to domestic Israeli politics, see Azmi Bishara, "A Glimmer of Nothing,"
al-Ahram Weekly, October 23-29, 2003. The article is accessible
online. |
The Geneva
Accord, the latest unofficial framework for Israeli-Palestinian
peace made public in mid-October 2003, has not become the basis
for official negotiations. But the initiative has already been
successful in one respect: it has uncorked as many vocal hopes
as it has protests among Israelis and Palestinians, even though
the Israeli government has rejected it and the Palestinian Authority
(PA) has not formally endorsed it. Essentially a repackaging of
President Bill Clinton's peace plan of late 2000, the Geneva Accord
stipulates several basic tenets upon which to finalize a permanent
peace agreement.
The Geneva
initiative calls for serious critical scrutiny from those who
are interested in a lasting peace -- one that is as just as possible
-- between Israelis and Palestinians. Its negotiation involved
an impressive number of prominent figures, headed by Yossi Beilin,
a former minister in Israeli Labor governments, and Yasser Abed
Rabbo, until recently the PA's minister of cabinet affairs and
a major player in past official talks. As of the present time,
the Geneva Accord is the most far-reaching draft document agreed
upon by mainstream Palestinian and Israeli politicians. However,
in a manner reminiscent of the Clinton-era initiatives, this seemingly
bold document is inherently flawed. It is also being portrayed
in misleading -- and ultimately self-defeating -- ways by its
Israeli drafters.
DOUBLE URGENCY
Under the
accord, Israel is allowed to legalize and retain settlements in
the occupied West Bank that house roughly 300,000 settlers, including
all the post-1967 Jewish settlements in Arab East Jerusalem; in
exchange, the Palestinians receive equivalent territorial compensation
from Israel. The Palestinians are granted sovereignty in the territory
gained by the land swap and in the remaining parts of the West
Bank and Gaza, including the Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem.
This sovereign Palestinian entity remains non-militarized. Security
for the Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif, the holy places in Jerusalem,
is overseen by a permanent international force while the site's
non-security aspects fall under Palestinian control; full Jewish
access to the site is granted. While Palestinians made refugees
in 1948 are to receive some compensation, it is up to the sole
discretion of Israel to decide how many refugees -- out of a total
of over 4.1 million registered with the UN -- will be allowed
to return to their homes in Israel.
This clause
constitutes a massive compromise by the Palestinian side with
regard to the right of refugee return -- though not its total
abandonment. In this respect, opposition among Palestinians to
the document is legitimate not only from the political and moral
standpoints but also from the vantage point of humanitarian and
international law. To justify this concession, the Palestinian
participants in the Geneva process point to a double urgency that
presently dominates other issues in the Israeli-Palestinian political
arena.
The first
is that time is running out for an agreed-upon solution: in the
near future, there might well be nothing substantial left to negotiate,
given Israel's continued settlement of the Occupied Territories,
and Israel's construction of a wall inside the West Bank that
is, in effect, enforcing a system of apartheid. The second urgency
results from the increasing conviction among the Palestinian and
Israeli publics that no partner exists on the other side. Hence,
the Palestinian negotiators argue, it might soon become impossible
to persuade Palestinians and Israelis that some sort of negotiated
solution to the conflict can be reached. The Israeli participants
of the Geneva process share this feeling of double urgency. This
is why they justify the importance of their initiative by highlighting
its potential to reverse the spiral of (Israeli) despair, or at
least to stop it.
LESSONS OF
OSLO
Though the
Geneva Accord's prospects are uncertain, another Palestinian minister,
Ghassan al-Khatib, echoed many commentators when he said that
it is "creating useful noise" in Israel. Coming after
three years of no official negotiating initiatives from the Sharon
government, and amid outspoken criticism of Sharon's crackdown
in the Occupied Territories from Moshe Yaalon, chief of staff
of the Israel Defense Forces, and four former Israeli intelligence
directors, the Geneva initiative has the potential to interrupt
the rightward drift of Jewish Israeli public opinion. But analysis
of the accord's impact must take into consideration the experience
of the 1993 Oslo agreement, which also seemed to promise peace,
and the disintegration of that initiative in the second half of
the 1990s.
Many who
thought that the Oslo accord would produce a peace that was as
just as possible limited their analysis to the text, leading to
their premise that the agreement met the minimum aspirations of
the Palestinian people. Although the Oslo agreement did not come
close to meeting these aspirations, it still could have been a
modest starting point for an Israeli-Palestinian peace that satisfied
the very basic needs of Israelis and the Palestinians (only in
Gaza and the West Bank) -- provided that Palestinians and Israelis
had understood the text in a similar manner and provided that
they handled the negotiations in good faith. Regrettably, this
was very far from being the case.
Whereas the
Palestinian negotiators seemed genuinely intent upon reaching
what they termed "historical compromise" based on UN
Security Council Resolution 242 -- which meant renouncing nothing
short of 78 percent of their initial national demands for all
of mandatory Palestine -- Israeli politicians used the Oslo document
to further consolidate their colonial grip over Palestinian lives
and land. Throughout the "peace process," existing settlements
expanded, additional ones were built and the number of settlers
more than doubled. These facts lead to a single conclusion: Prime
Ministers Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres intended from the outset
to exploit the asymmetrical balance of forces between the occupying
Israeli state and the occupied Palestinian society to impose on
the PA a conception of peace which rested on continuous domination.
Many observers
of the Geneva process overlook the fact that the 1990s in Israel
were primarily a period of left-Zionist rule, rather than a period
ruled by the Likud and the ultra-nationalist right. Between Rabin's
election in June 1992, and Sharon's overpowering of ex-Prime Minister
Ehud Barak in February 2001, there were nearly six full years
of government by the Labor Party and the left-leaning Meretz Party.
Contrary to the prevailing perceptions, then, it is the Zionist
left -- rather than the right -- that bears the principal responsibility
for the failure of the "peace process" in the 1990s.
Since the Geneva accord emerged from the same Israeli school that
produced the Oslo process, Beilin and his associates could have
increased the political viability of their new Geneva process
had they publicly admitted their failures throughout the 1990s.
They did not, once again neglecting to offer the Israeli public
an alternative explanation for the intifada to the standard line
that the Palestinians "chose violence."
In 1993,
rather than trying to convince Israelis that a new era based on
peaceful coexistence and equality was about to start, the leaders
of the Labor-Meretz coalition based their marketing strategy solely
on security, separation from the Palestinians and the continuity
of Israel's colonial supremacy. The Labor-Meretz leadership was
unwilling to assume any Israeli or pre-state Zionist responsibility
for over 100 years of conflict. Instead, this leadership consciously
linked the conflict, both politically and rhetorically, to Palestinian
"terrorism" and permanent historical rejectionism.
By listening
attentively to the prominent Israelis linked to the Geneva process
-- particularly when they speak Hebrew -- it is readily apparent
that they have not forgotten, or learned from, their self-made
Oslo failure. In fact, identical behavior and marketing strategies
vis-à-vis Israeli public opinion are sewn into the fabric of the
Geneva initiative.
"REALISM"
AND "GENEROSITY"
The text
of the Geneva accord has little meaning outside the political
and journalistic context within which it is being marketed to
the Israeli public. In essence, the true substance of the process
is embedded in the verbal and written exegesis that surrounds
the text of the agreement. These explanatory contexts already
allude to the political fiasco that appears to await the text
in the near future.
An article
published in the Guardian by one of the senior Israeli participants
in the Geneva process, the internationally acclaimed novelist
and commentator Amos Oz, illustrates this claim. Oz's article,
headlined "We Have Done the Gruntwork of Peace," was
based upon a Hebrew article he published in Israel. Oz explains
that the Geneva talks differ from previous Israeli-Palestinian
interactions. For example, there is no longer a discussion of
"the right of refugee return," but instead of "a
solution to the refugee issue." There is no longer a discussion
of "return to the 1967 borders," but of "a logical
map that also takes the present into account, and not just history."
Innocent readers may conclude that logic is the mental property
of left Zionists alone and that the Israelis, unlike the Palestinians,
never based any of their national claims on history. Oz's governing
message is this: in the Geneva accord, the Palestinians have finally
chosen to be "realistic," and to renounce not only the
right of return, but also the demand for a full withdrawal to
the 1967 borders.
A leading
guru of the Israeli Peace Now movement, Oz makes an extra effort
to reiterate that Palestinian stubbornness led to the failures
of Oslo and the July 2000 Camp David summit. Oz suggests that
the Israeli peace camp finally succeeded in convincing the irrational
Palestinians that they must accept the red lines of the Israeli
left. These red lines, according to one of Oz's colleagues, represent
a huge sacrifice on his part since he is "ready to relinquish
no less than a part of my religious faith, inasmuch as I am prepared
to agree, with a broken heart, to Palestinian sovereignty on the
Temple Mount." Further on, Oz resorts to similar propagandistic
symbolism, declaring that "we surrender sovereignty in parts
of the Land of Israel where our hearts lie." What, then,
are the chief problems of Oz, and the Israeli Geneva school that
he so aptly represents, so far as Israeli public opinion is concerned?
Lacking the
capacity for self-criticism, Oz reinforces Israel's self-righteousness
and confiscates from the Palestinians the position of the victim
by representing himself and Israel as the true victims. He makes
no attempt to comprehend the gigantic sacrifices made by his Palestinian
counterparts. His prose mirrors the assumptions that underlay
Barak's "generous" offer to PA leader Yasser Arafat
at Camp David in July 2000.
In order
to convince Israeli public opinion, the Israelis of the Geneva
process have to show -- or so they believe -- that the Israelis
have "won" and that the Palestinians have "given
up." The greatest defect of the Geneva accord is that the
basic notion of the inalienable human and political rights of
the Palestinian people is entirely ignored by Oz and his associates,
as was the case in the Oslo process. Following Barak, Oz replaces
the notion of rights with the notion of charity -- "if we
would have offered them in 1967 what we offer them today...."
When no place for rights exists, and the balance of forces so
blatantly favors the illegal occupier, the standard Israeli narrative
reads like this: the Palestinians gave up their destructive objective
(since for Oz and the Geneva school "'return' is a code word
for the destruction of Israel"), so we, the Israeli peace
camp, decided to be extremely generous.
SYSTEMATIC
COUNTERPRODUCTIVITY
Apart from
its moral valences, the contextual "marketing" argumentation
of the Israeli participants in Geneva is politically counterproductive
for the goal of engendering a change in Israeli public opinion.
If political and human rights do not exist and if the conflict
results from an irrational Palestinian determination to eradicate
Jews, what Israeli is going to believe that Palestinians may change?
Furthermore, if Palestinians change only because the Israeli peace
camp were tough enough in dealing with them, than why not be even
tougher and force them to accept Israeli domination with no concession
whatsoever?
Even political
alchemists of the Geneva school's caliber cannot build trust based
on a lie: in order to harness Israeli public opinion, some of
the Geneva participants argue that, this time, the Palestinians
have given up their right of return. A simple reading of Article
7 of the accord reveals that the Palestinian participants in the
Geneva process are indeed ready to make remarkably far-reaching
compromises on the rights of Palestinian refugees. However, they
certainly have not gone so far as to relinquish the "right
of return," as established by UN Resolution 194 passed in
1948, as such a move would ruin completely and instantaneously
their legitimacy in the eyes of the Palestinian public.
Those who
are interested in a lasting peace -- one that is as just as possible
-- between Israelis and Palestinians must therefore pose one question:
why does the Geneva school try to buy Israel public opinion by
marketing the complete opposite of what their Palestinian counterparts
say to their own public opinion precisely in order to harness
its support for the joint initiative? The end result of the Geneva
process is guaranteed to split the difference between the Israeli
and Palestinian readings, setting the stage yet again for the
Israeli accusation, most likely echoed by doyens of the Geneva
school themselves, that the Palestinians are liars.
Some of the
more cynical Israeli participants in the Geneva process know perfectly
well that there is a volatile contradiction between the Palestinian
reading of the agreement and the way that they market it to the
Israeli public. These Israelis seem to believe that a misrepresentation
of the Palestinian position can assist them in inducing Israelis
to bring the Labor Party back to power, where it will find ways
to enforce the "agreement."
But Labor
will not succeed in regaining power, because its politics are
a pale replica of the right-wing parties' beliefs. The resignation
of Labor's last candidate for prime minister, Amram Mitzna, as
party chairman, coupled with the resignations of left Laborites
such as Beilin and Yael Dayan to form a new social-democratic
party, testify to the impossibility of serious reform of the party.
In the socio-economic domain, the Labor party holds neo-liberal
positions similar to those of Likud's Binyamin Netanyahu. On the
Israeli-Arab conflict, Labor parliamentarians like Generals Binyamin
Ben Eliezer, Efraim Sneh and Dany Yatom are probably worse than
some of the Likud MKs. The question for the average Israeli voter
remains unchanged: why vote for a (Labor) copy when you can vote
for the (Likud) original?
WHAT SHOULD
BE DONE?
If they are
truly interested in a viable and sustainable peace for their people,
Israeli politicians will ultimately need to present a peace accord
that can earn the backing of non-elite Palestinians. To this end,
Israeli public opinion will have to develop a much more sober
understanding of the socio-political dynamics underlying the Arab-Israeli
conflict. Rather than focusing on this or that textual clause
of the Geneva Accord, Israelis interested in reaching a just and
lasting peace must immediately focus on the candid verbal and
written explanations that are necessary in order to contextualize
these understandings productively.
First, critical
Israelis must tell the Israeli public is that the conflict is
not the result of Palestinian terrorism or fanaticism, but rather
the result of Israeli dispossession and occupation; Israel's responsibility
in the conflict must be unmasked by Israelis. Basic Palestinian
human and political rights that are denied by Israeli policies
of occupation and colonization must be addressed in any agreement
intended to reach a just peace. It must be made clear to the Israeli
public that the only "generous offer" within the Israeli-Palestinian
arena is the readiness by some Palestinians to renounce 78 percent
of their claims to their historical homeland.
The right
of return is a basic human right. The readiness of some Palestinians
to consider it the object of negotiation, while taking into consideration
the demographic worries of Israel, must be understood as another
generous Palestinian offer. Critical Israelis must ask their fellow
Israelis -- the Geneva school included -- how can they demand
from the Palestinians to renounce their right of return before
Israel has recognized its mere existence?
What is needed
further from critical Israelis -- and ultimately from Israeli
politicians -- is to consistently promote a positive notion of
peace based on coexistence and human equality. The notion of peace
that must be adamantly rejected, not only because of its moral
bankruptcy, but because it stands no chance of working, is the
notion of Oz and his Geneva associates, who understand "peace"
as a means of keeping the Palestinians out of sight on the other
side of a wall, and consider Palestinians to be an existential
danger.
As was the
case with the 1993 Oslo agreement, in the Geneva Accords the context
is far more important than the text, all the more so when Israeli
public opinion is concerned.