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Not Through Annapolis
Noam Chomsky Says Path to Mideast Peace Lies in Popular
Organizing Against U.S.-Israeli “Rejectionism”
As the U.S. convenes a Mideast summit in
Annapolis, Maryland today, we spend the hour on the
Israeli-Palestine conflict with two of the world’s leading
thinkers: former South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu and
world-renowned linguist Noam Chomsky. Chomsky says U.S. backing
of continued Israeli occupation and annexation of Palestinian
land is the biggest obstacle to peace. He says: “The crimes
against Palestinians... are so shocking that the only
emotionally valid reaction is rage and a call for extreme
actions. But that does not help the victims. And, in fact, it’s
likely to harm them. We have to face the reality that our
actions have consequences, and they have to be adapted to
real-world circumstances, difficult as it may be to stay calm in
the face of shameful crimes in which we are directly and
crucially implicated.
Democracy Now! Broadcast 11/27/07
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TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: Leaders from around the
world are gathering in Annapolis, Maryland today to take
part in a US-sponsored summit on the Middle East. President
Bush met separately with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas at the
White House Monday. More than forty organizations and
countries, including Saudi Arabia and Syria, are attending
the conference today. Hamas was not invited.
A final agenda has not yet been drawn up,
but a draft of a joint document was leaked to the Israeli
newspaper Haaretz. It makes no mention of the
situation in Gaza or of core issues like the status of
Jerusalem, settlements, borders, the separation wall and
Palestinian refugees.
Today, we spend the hour on the
Israel-Palestine conflict with two of the world's leading
thinkers: former South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu and
world-renowned linguist and author Noam Chomsky. They
recently spoke at a conference in Boston sponsored by Sabeel,
a Palestinian Christian organization. The conference was
called “The Apartheid Paradigm in Palestine-Israel:
Highlighting Issues of Justice and Equality.”
We begin today with Noam Chomsky, professor
of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
for over a half-century. Chomsky is the author of dozens of
books on US foreign policy. His most recent is called
Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on
Democracy. Noam Chomsky spoke before a packed audience
at Boston's historic Old South Church.
NOAM CHOMSKY: Before saying a
word, I’d like to express some severe personal
discomfort, because anything I say will be abstract and
dry and restrained. The crimes against Palestinians in
the Occupied Territories and elsewhere, particularly
Lebanon, are so shocking that the only emotionally valid
reaction is rage and a call for extreme actions. But
that does not help the victims. And, in fact, it’s
likely to harm them. We have to face the reality that
our actions have consequences, and they have to be
adapted to real-world circumstances, difficult as it may
be to stay calm in the face of shameful crimes in which
we are directly and crucially implicated.
Well, I’ve been asked to talk about the
apartheid paradigm and the proper response here, so I’ll
do that, though not without some additional
reservations. We have to recognize that there will be no
clear answer as to the question of whether the apartheid
paradigm applies in Israel or in Boston, right here, or
elsewhere. The genre has, after all, only one example:
South Africa. And there are similarities elsewhere in
many dimensions, and it’s fair enough to bring them up,
but there's very little point debating whether they are
close enough in one or another case to count as
apartheid, because that will never be settled, we know
that in advance.
I’ve brought up similarities in the
past, when I thought that they were appropriate.
Actually, the one time I recall clearly was exactly ten
years ago. That was at a conference at Ben Gurion
University in Be’er Sheva. It was on the anniversary of
the thirtieth year of the military occupation. And in
the talk there, I quoted from a standard history of
South Africa on elections in the Bantustans, which I’ll
read; and just change a few words, and you'll know what
it’s about.
“South African retention of effective
power, through its officials in the Bantustans, its
overwhelming economic influence and security
arrangements, gave to this initiative of elections
elements of a farce. However, unlikely candidates as
were the Bantustans for any meaningful independent
existence, their expanding bureaucracies provided jobs
for new strata of educated Africans tied to the system
in a new way and a basis for accumulation for a small
number of Africans with access to loans and political
influence. Repression, too, could be indigenized through
developing homeland policy and army personnel. On the
fringe of the Bantustans, border industry growth centers
were planned as a means of freeing capital from some of
the restraints imposed on industrial expansion elsewhere
and to take advantage of virtually captive and
particularly cheap labor. Within the homelands, economic
development was more a matter of advertising brochures
than actual practical activity, though some officials in
South Africa understood the needs from their own
perspective for some kind of revitalization of the
homelands to prevent their economies from collapsing
even further.”
Well, I won’t waste time expressing the
similarities to the Occupied Territories, but you can do
that quite easily. Ten years ago, that was the
optimistic prospect for the Occupied Territories. By
now, even that’s remote, and reality is far more grim
than it was then. There’s no time and, I presume, no
need to review the harrowing details.
We’re now approaching George Bush's
historic Annapolis conference, as it’s called, on
Israel-Palestine, so we can anticipate a flood of deceit
and distortions to set the proper framework. And we
should be prepared to counter the propaganda assault,
which has already begun. Just to pick a couple of
examples, Bostonians could read in the Boston Globe
a few days ago that at the Taba Conference in January
2001 -- now quoting -- “Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak accepted ideas floated by President Bill Clinton
that would have produced a Palestinian state in 97
percent of the West Bank and 100 percent of Gaza,” but
these forthcoming gestures failed. The evil Palestinians
refused Israel's generous offers, keeping to their
time-honored insistence on seizing defeat from the jaws
of victory and proving they’re not partners for
negotiation.
Well, there’s one fragment of truth in
this conventional fabrication: there was a conference in
Taba. And, in fact, it did come close to a possible
settlement, but the rest is pure invention. In
particular, the conference was terminated abruptly by
Prime Minister Barak. The truth is completely
unacceptable, so the facts are either suppressed, as
they generally are, or, as in this case, just inverted.
And we can expect a good deal more of that. Actually,
the truth about the Taba Conference merits attention.
That week, in one week in January 2001, that was the one
moment in thirty years when the United States and Israel
abandoned the rejectionist stance that they have
maintained in virtual isolation until the present.
And that may suggest some thoughts about
another familiar fairytale that you could read about a
couple of days earlier in the New York Times,
where the respected policy analyst and former high
government official, Leslie Gelb, wrote that every US
administration since 1967 has privately favored
returning almost all of the territory to the
Palestinians for the purposes of creating a separate
Palestinian state. Note the word "privately." Crucial.
We know what the administrations have said publicly.
Publicly they have rejected adamantly anything remotely
of the sort ever since 1967 -- ’76, when the United
States vetoed a Security Council resolution calling for
a two-state settlement on the international border,
incorporating all the relevant wording of UN 242 -- it’s
the basic diplomatic document to which Washington
appeals when it’s convenient. The US veto -- it’s worth
bearing in mind -- is a double veto. One part of the
veto is that the actions are barred, of course. And it’s
also vetoed from history, as in this case, so you’ll
work really hard to find it, even in the scholarly
literature.
AMY GOODMAN: We’ll come back to
Professor Noam Chomsky’s address in Boston, and then we’ll
go on to South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu. They were
both speaking at the Sabeel conference.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: We return to MIT
professor and author Noam Chomsky speaking recently in
Boston at the Old South Church at a conference called the
Apartheid Paradigm in Palestine-Israel.
NOAM CHOMSKY: Sometimes the
public rejection of a separate Palestinian state is more
articulate and considerably more extreme, so it takes a
George Bush no. 1, who is reputed to be the most hostile
to Israel of US presidents. In 1988, as you know, the
Palestinian National Council formally accepted a
two-state settlement, and the Israeli government
responded. This was the coalition government of Shimon
Peres and Yitzhak Shamir. They responded by issuing a
formal declaration that there can be no additional
Palestinian state between Jordan and Palestine --
“additional” because for Shimon Peres and his Labor
coalition, Jordan already was a Palestinian state. It’s
a view that’s attributed to the right wing, but that’s
mistaken. This is Shimon Peres. The United States
reacted to that with what was called the Baker Plan --
James Baker, Secretary of State. The Bush Baker Plan
endorsed Israel's position without qualification and
went on to add that any Palestinian negotiators would
have to accept that framework, namely no second
Palestinian state in addition to Jordan. That’s Bush no.
1, the alleged critic of Israel, and the respected
diplomat James Baker. Again, the truth is inconvenient,
so virtually none of this was reported, and you’ll have
to work -- search hard to extricate it from the web of
self-serving propaganda that dominates commentary and
reporting, of which Leslie Gelb's article in the New
York Times is a typical, but not unusual, example.
Well, I’m not going to go on with that,
but the diplomatic record is one of uniform
rejectionism, apart from the week in Taba, and
unilateral rejectionism, increasingly so. By now,
virtually the entire world agrees on the two-state
international consensus of the past thirty years, pretty
much along the lines that were almost agreed upon at
Taba. That includes all the Arab States, who actually go
beyond to call for full normalization of relations with
Israel. It includes Iran, although you won’t find that
published here, which accepts the Arab League position.
It includes Hamas; its leaders have repeatedly endorsed,
called for a two-state settlement, even in articles in
the US press. That also includes Hamas's most militant
figure, Khaled Meshaal, who’s in exile in Syria. And it
includes the rest of the world. Israel rejects it, and
the United States backs that rejection fully, not in
words just, but in actions.
Bush no. 2 has gone to new extremes in
rejectionism. He’s declared the illegal West Bank
settlements must remain part of Israel. That’s in accord
with the Clinton position, expressed by his negotiator
Dennis Ross, who explained that what he called “Israel's
needs” take precedence over Palestinian wants. That’s
Clinton. But the party line remains undisturbed. Facts
don’t matter. Bush, Rice and the rest are yearning to
realize Bush's vision of a Palestinian state --
somewhere, someplace -- persisting in the noble endeavor
of the longtime honest broker.
Well, what’s happened in the past is --
of course, rejectionism goes far beyond words. It
includes settlement programs, the annexation wall,
closures, checkpoints, and so on. Settlements increased
steadily right through the Oslo years, peaking actually
in Clinton's last year, the year 2000, right before the
Camp David Accords. And the story is now being repeated
before our eyes -- shouldn’t surprise us.
So to take just one example, with the
Annapolis conference approaching, Israel has just
confiscated more Arab land to build a bypass road from
Palestinians -- I’m quoting now -- “in order to push the
Palestinian traffic between Bethlehem and Ramallah deep
into the desert and effectively bar Palestinians from
the central part of the West Bank." That’s part of the
so-called E1 project, which is designed to incorporate
the town of Ma’ale Adumim within Israel and effectively
to bisect the West Bank. “With such policies” --
continuing to quote -- "With such policies enacted by
the government, the famous Annapolis conference is
emptied of all meaning long before it convenes." This is
quotes from the Israeli peace organization Gush Shalom.
All of this is backed by the honest brokers in
Washington and paid for by US taxpayers, who,
incidentally, overwhelmingly join the international
consensus, in opposition to their own government. But
that’s not what we’re going to hear.
Well, in fairness, it should be added
that there is occasional public criticism of the
settlement programs. So in the New York Times a
couple of weeks ago, there was a favorable review of a
very important study, which has just been translated
into English, Lords of the Land by Idith Zertal
and Akiva Eldar, which bitterly condemns the US-backed
Israeli programs in the West Bank and the takeover of
Israeli political life by their advocates. It’s a strong
and important book.
The review, however, goes on with
conventional fairytales. Among them, it tells us that
within the Green Line in Israel itself, Israel is what
it calls a “vibrant democracy” in which non-Jews have
equal rights and, unlike the West Bank, there are no
Arab villages made inaccessible, because their roads
have been dug up by army bulldozers. Well, again,
there’s a fragment of truth in the description. So take,
for example, the village Dar al-Hanoun in the so-called
Triangle, Wadi Ara, it’s older than the state of Israel,
but it’s one of the innumerable unrecognized villages in
Israel. So it’s true that there’s no road dug up by
bulldozers, and the reason is that there’s no road. No
road is permitted by the state authorities, and no
construction is permitted. No services are provided.
That’s not an unusual situation for Palestinian
citizens, who are also effectively barred from over 90%
of the land by a complex and intricate web of laws and
administrative arrangements. Technically, that was
overruled by the high court seven years ago, but, as far
as I can determine, only technically. And we may recall
that in the United States it took over a century for
even formal implementation of the Fourteenth Amendment,
guaranteeing equal rights to all persons, and actual
implementation of it is still remote a
century-and-a-half later.
Well, let’s turn briefly to the
important question, the most important question: what
can we do about it? Here, it’s useful to think about the
apartheid analogy, and it’s useful to remember a little
history.
In 1963, the UN Security Council
declared a voluntary arms embargo on South Africa. That
was extended to a mandatory embargo in 1977. And that
was followed by economic sanctions and other measures --
sometimes officials, countries, cities, towns -- some
organized by popular movements. Now, not all countries
participated. In the United States, the US Congress did
impose sanctions over Reagan's veto, but US trade with
South Africa then increased by various evasions, along
with concealed support for South African terrorist
atrocities in Mozambique and Angola, which took a
horrendous toll. It’s about 1.5 million killed and over
$60 billion in damage during the Reagan years, the
Reagan years of constructive engagement, according to UN
analysis. In 1988, the Reagan administration declared
Mandela's African National Congress to be one of the
world's most notorious terrorist groups -- that’s 1988
-- while it described RENAMO in Mozambique merely as an
indigenous insurgent group. That was after it had just
killed about 100,000 people, according to the State
Department, with, of course, US-backed African support.
Thatcher's record was similar or maybe worse. But most
of this was in secret. There was just too much popular
opposition.
And the popular opposition made a
difference. There was a very significant anti-apartheid
movement decades after the global decision of the
Security Council to bring apartheid to an end. In 1965,
boycotts and other measures would not have been
effective. Twenty years later, they were effective, but
that was after the groundwork had been laid by activist,
educational and organizing efforts, including within the
powerful states, which is what matters in an ugly world.
Well, in the case of Israel-Palestine,
the groundwork has not been laid. The quotes that I just
gave are perfectly representative examples; you can fill
them out in books, yeah. The kind of popular measures
that were effective against apartheid by the late 1980s
are not only ineffective in the case of Israel-Palestine
today, but in fact sometimes backfire in harming the
victims. We’ve seen that over and over. It’s going to
continue until the organizing and educational efforts
make real progress. It’s not just the United States; the
European Union is hardly different. So, for example, the
European Union does not bar arms deliveries to Israel.
It joined the United States in vicious punishment of
Palestinians, because they committed the grave crime of
voting the wrong way in a free election. And there was
very little internal protest in Europe. Populations
support the international consensus, but they don’t
react when their governments undermine any hope for its
realization.
Well, in the coming weeks and the longer
term, there's plenty of educational and organizational
activity that will have to be carried out among an
American population that happens to be largely
receptive, though deluged with propaganda and deceit.
And it’s not going to be easy. It’s never been easy. But
much harder tasks have been accomplished with dedicated
and persistent effort.
AMY GOODMAN: MIT Professor Noam
Chomsky, speaking recently in Boston at a conference called
“The Apartheid Paradigm in Palestine-Israel,” sponsored by
the Palestinian Christian organization Sabeel.
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