Peace Not
Apartheid - Jimmy Carter's Roadmap
By Norman G. Finkelstein
11/13/06 "Counterpunch"
-- -- The historical chapters of
Palestine Peace Not Apartheid
are rather thin, filled with errors small and large, as well
as tendentious and untenable interpretations. But few
persons will be reading it for the history.
It is what Carter has to say
about the present that will interest the reading public and
the media (assuming the book is not ignored). It can be said
with certainty that Israel's apologists will not be pleased.
Although Carter includes criticisms of the Palestinians to
affect balance, it is clear that he holds Israel principally
responsible for the impasse in the peace process. The most
scathing criticisms of Israel come in Chapter 16 ("The Wall
as a Prison"). One hopes that this chapter (and the
concluding "Summary") will be widely disseminated.
Below I reproduce some of
Carter's key statements.
***
Most Arab regimes have accepted
the permanent existence of Israel as an indisputable fact
and are no longer calling for an end to the State of Israel,
having contrived a common statement at an Arab summit in
2002 that offers peace and normal relations with Israel
within its acknowledged international borders and in
compliance with other U.N. Security Council resolutions. (p.
14)
Since 1924, Shebaa Farms has
been treated as Lebanese territory, but Syria seized the
area in the 1950s and retained control until Israel occupied
the Farms--along with the Golan Heights--in 1967. The
inhabitants and properties were Lebanese, and Lebanon has
never accepted Syria's control of the Farms. Although Syria
has claimed the area in the past, Syrian officials now state
that it is part of Lebanon. This position supports the Arab
claim that Israel still occupies Lebanese territory. (pp.
98-9)
The best offer to the
Palestinians [at Camp David in December 2000]--by Clinton,
not Barak--had been to withdraw 20 percent of the settlers,
leaving more than 180,000 in 209 settlements, covering about
10 percent of the occupied land, including land to be
"leased" and portions of the Jordan River valley and East
Jerusalem.
The percentage figure is
misleading, since it usually includes only the actual
footprints of the settlements. There is a zone with a radius
of about four hundred meters around each settlement within
which Palestinians cannot enter. In addition, there are
other large areas that would have been taken or earmarked to
be used exclusively by Israel, roadways that connect the
settlements to one another and to Jerusalem, and "life
arteries" that provide the settlers with water, sewage,
electricity, and communications. These range in width from
five hundred to four thousand meters, and Palestinians
cannot use or cross many of these connecting links. This
honeycomb of settlements and their interconnecting conduits
effectively divide the West Bank into at least two
noncontiguous areas and multiple fragments, often
uninhabitable or even unreachable, and control of the Jordan
Valley denies Palestinians any direct access eastward into
Jordan. About one hundred military checkpoints completely
surround Palestinians and block routes going into or between
Palestinian communities, combined with an unaccountable
number of other roads that are permanently closed with large
concrete cubes or mounds of earth and rocks.
There was no possibility that
any Palestinian leader could accept such terms and survive,
but official statements from Washington and Jerusalem were
successful in placing the entire onus for the failure on
Yasir Arafat. (pp. 151-2)
A new round of talks was held at
Taba in January 2001, during the last few days of the
Clinton presidency, between President Arafat and the Israeli
foreign minister, and it was later claimed that the
Palestinians rejected a "generous offer" put forward by
Prime Minister Barak with Israel keeping only 5 percent of
the West Bank. The fact is that no such offers were ever
made. Barak later said, "It was plain to me that there was
no chance of reaching a settlement at Taba. Therefore I said
there would be no negotiations and there would be no
delegation and there would be no official discussions and no
documentation. Nor would Americans be present in the room.
The only thing that took place at Taba were nonbinding
contacts between senior Israelis and senior Palestinians.
(p. 152)
In April 2003 a "Roadmap" for
resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was announced by
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on behalf of the United
States, the United Nations, Russia, and the European Union
(known as the Quartet).The Palestinians accepted the road
map in its entirety but the Israeli government announced
fourteen caveats and prerequisites, some of which would
preclude any final peace talks. (p. 159)
"Imprisonment wall" is more
descriptive than "security fence." (p. 174)
Gaza has maintained a population
growth rate of 4.7 percent annually, one of the highest in
the world, so more than half its people are less than
fifteen years old. They are being strangled since the
Israeli "withdrawal," surrounded by a separation barrier
that is penetrated only by Israeli-controlled checkpoints,
with just a single opening (for personnel only) into Egypt's
Sinai as their access to the outside world. There have been
no moves by Israel to permit transportation by sea or by
air. Fishermen are not permitted to leave the harbor,
workers are prevented from going to outside jobs, the import
or export of food and other goods is severely restricted and
often cut off completely, and the police, teachers, nurses,
and social workers are deprived of salaries. Per capita
income has decreased 40 percent during the last three years,
and the poverty rate has reached 70 percent. The U.N.
Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food has stated that
acute malnutrition in Gaza is already on the same scale as
that seen in the poorer countries of the Southern Sahara,
with more than half of Palestinian families eating only one
meal a day. (p. 176).
The area between the segregation
barrier and the Israeli border has been designated a closed
military region for an indefinite period of time. Israeli
directives state that every Palestinian over the age of
twelve living in the closed area has to obtain a "permanent
resident permit" from the civil administration to enable
them to continue to live in their own homes. They are
considered to be aliens, without the rights of Israeli
citizens.
To summarize: whatever territory Israel decides to
confiscate will be on its side of the wall, but Israelis
will still retain control of the Palestinians who will be on
the other side of the barrier, enclosed between it and
Israel's forces in the Jordan River valley. (pp. 192-3)
The wall ravages many places
along its devious route that are important to Christians. In
addition to enclosing Bethlehem in one of its most notable
intrusions, an especially heartbreaking division is on the
southern slope of the Mount of Olives, a favorite place for
Jesus and his disciples, and very near Bethany, where they
often visited Mary, Martha, and their brother, Lazarus.
There is a church named for one of the sisters, Santa Marta
Monastery, where Israel's thirty-foot concrete wall cuts
through the property. The house of worship is now on the
Jerusalem side, and its parishioners are separated from it
because they cannot get permits to enter Jerusalem. Its
priest, Father Claudio Ghilardi, says, "For nine hundred
years we have lived here under Turkish, British, Jordanian,
and Israeli governments, and no one has ever stopped people
coming to pray. It is scandalous. This is not about a
barrier. It is a border. Why don't they speak the truth?"
Countering Israeli arguments that the wall is to keep
Palestinian suicide bombers from Israel, Father Claudio adds
a comment that describes the path of the entire barrier:
"The Wall is not separating Palestinians from Jews; rather
Palestinians from Palestinians." Nearby are three convents
that will also be cut off from the people they serve. The
2,000 Palestinian Christians have lost their place of
worship and their spiritual center. (pp. 194-5)
International human rights
organizations estimate that since 1967 more than 630,000
Palestinians (about 20 percent of the total population) in
the occupied territories have been detained at some time by
the Israelis, arousing deep resentment among the families
involved. Although the vast majority of prisoners are men,
there are a large number of women and children being held.
Between the ages of twelve and fourteen, children can be
sentenced for a period of up to six months, and after the
age of fourteen Palestinian children are tried as adults, a
violation of international law. (pp. 196-7)
The unwavering official policy
of the United States since Israel became a state has been
that its borders must coincide with those prevailing from
1949 until 1967 (unless modified by mutually agreeable land
swaps), specified in the unanimously adopted U.N. Resolution
242, which mandates Israel's withdrawal from occupied
territories. This obligation was reconfirmed by Israel's
leaders in agreements negotiated in 1978 at Camp David and
in 1993 at Oslo, for which they received the Nobel Peace
Prize, and both of these commitments were officially
ratified by the Israeli government. Also, as a member of the
International Quartet that includes Russia, the United
Nations, and the European Union, America supports the
Roadmap for Peace, which espouses exactly the same
requirements. Palestinian leaders unequivocally accepted
this proposal, but Israel has officially rejected its key
provisions with unacceptable caveats and prerequisites.
.
The overriding problem is that, for more than a quarter
century, the actions of some Israeli leaders have been in
direct conflict with the official policies of the United
States, the international community, and their own
negotiated agreements.Israel's continued control and
colonization of Palestinian land have been the primary
obstacles to a comprehensive peace agreement in the Holy
Land. In order to perpetuate the occupation, Israeli forces
have deprived their unwilling subjects of basic human
rights. No objective person could personally observe
existing conditions in the West Bank and dispute these
statements. (pp. 207-9)
The United States has used its
U.N. Security Council veto more than forty times to block
resolutions critical of Israel. Some of these vetoes have
brought international discredit on the United States, and
there is little doubt that the lack of a persistent effort
to resolve the Palestinian issue is a major source of
anti-American sentiment and terrorist activity throughout
the Middle East and the Islamic world. (pp. 209-10)
The bottom line is this: Peace
will come to Israel and the Middle East only when the
Israeli government is willing to comply with international
law, with the Roadmap for Peace, with official American
policy, with the wishes of a majority of its own
citizens--and honors its own previous commitments--by
accepting its legal borders. All Arab neighbors must pledge
to honor Israel's right to live in peace under these
conditions. The United States is squandering international
prestige and goodwill and intensifying global anti-American
terrorism by unofficially condoning or abetting the Israeli
confiscation and colonization of Palestinian territories.
(p. 216)
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