Mahmoud
Abbas' Time
Has Passed
By John
Taylor
26/06/08
"Antiwar" --
- Mahmoud
Abbas,
president of
the
Palestinian
Authority,
is a
collaborator
with the his
peoples'
chief
tormentors,
Israel and
the United
States.
Without
Israeli and
American
support,
Abbas would
be gone in
an instant.
The general
commanding
Israeli
forces on
the West
Bank, Gadi
Shamni, put
it best:
"He's a
joke, a
nothing. We
are the only
force
propping him
up. Should
we withdraw
from the
cities,
Hamas will
sweep him
and his men
away as they
did in
Gaza."
To be fair,
Abbas'
predecessor
as president
of the
Palestinian
Authority,
Yasir
Arafat, Mr.
Palestine
himself,
made huge
mistakes
dealing with
the
Israelis,
perhaps the
result of
his
addiction to
the
trappings of
power and
statehood.
Arafat loved
to jet
around the
world, meet
kings and
presidents,
and pretend
to govern
Palestine,
which he had
in no way
liberated
from Israeli
occupation.
Not only did
Arafat
indemnify
the Israelis
in the Oslo
Accords for
everything
they had
done in the
West Bank,
Gaza, and
East
Jerusalem
since the
1967 war, he
became the
first leader
of a
national
liberation
movement to
sign an
agreement
with an
occupier to
keep its
occupation
in place.
What Arafat
received
from Israel
was
authority
over a few
non-contiguous
strips of
land, but no
control over
borders, air
space, water
resources,
or Israeli
settlements
already
dotting the
occupied
territories.
Mahmoud
Abbas went
Arafat one
better: he
tried to
stamp out
Palestinian
armed
resistance
to the
Israeli
occupation.
Abbas
demanded "an
end to all
military
action, full
calm, a full
end to
violence."
Thus Abbas
called on
the
Palestinians
to cease
doing what
is legal
under
international
law,
resisting an
occupation,
and accept
what is
illegal
under
national
law, the
colonizing
of an
occupied
territory by
the
occupying
power.
Settling the
West Bank is
so much
easier when
the natives
don't fight
back. No
wonder Abbas
is beloved
in
Washington
and Tel
Aviv!
Just what
have Abbas
and his
cronies
brought the
Palestinians?
Over the
last few
years the
Palestinian
economy
shrunk by
over a third
and the
number of
Palestinians
living below
the poverty
line rose
from 20 to
40 percent.
The number
of Israeli
settlements
on the West
Bank now
total 160,
and their
inhabitants
have
increased
from 150,000
to 250,000.
Palestinian
East
Jerusalem,
the center
of
Palestinian
intellectual,
social, and
political
life, has
been cut off
by Israeli
settlements
from the
West Bank.
Worst of
all, Israeli
settlements,
military
zones,
Israeli-only
roads, and
the
Separation
Wall have
reduced land
available
for a
Palestinian
state by
about 50
percent. And
yet at the
summons of
George Bush,
Abbas
dutifully
turned up
last
November at
the sham
Annapolis
peace
conference,
right after
the Israelis
announced a
major
expansion of
the Har Homa
settlement
in East
Jerusalem.
For Abbas to
rely on the
most
pro-Israel
administration
in U.S.
history, and
that is
saying a
lot, to
bring
justice to
the
Palestinians,
is absurd in
the extreme.
Condi Rice
may claim
the shape of
an
Israeli/Palestinian
peace is "to
be settled
in direct
talks
between the
parties,"
but the
reality is
quite
different.
Not only has
the Bush
administration
done nothing
to restrain
Israeli
colonization
of the
occupied
territories,
it has
publicly
accepted the
de facto
annexation
of large
portions of
the West
Bank: "In
light of new
realities on
the ground,
including
already
existing
major
Israeli
population
centers, it
is
unrealistic
that the
outcome of
final status
negotiations
will be a
full and
complete
return to
the
armistice
lines of
1949…."
Mahmoud
Abbas may
have been
able to
delude
himself into
thinking
that the
so-called
Road Map to
Peace,
pushed hard
by the Bush
administration,
was
something
other than a
final
surrender of
the
Palestinian
patrimony to
a relentless
and wel-funded
Israeli plan
to take over
all of
Palestine,
but his
people were
not fooled.
In January
2006 Abbas'
Fatah Party
was badly
defeated in
elections
for the
Palestine
Legislative
Council,
winning only
45 seats to
Hamas' 74.
Conventional
wisdom holds
that the
Islamists of
Hamas won
the election
because they
were honest
and able to
provide
welfare
services
that the
Fatah Party
had
neglected. A
more
accurate
conclusion
would be
that the
Palestinians
supported
Hamas
because
Abbas has
been unable
to stop
Israeli
settlement
growth and
the
destruction
of the
Palestinian
economy. How
could Abbas
be expected
to wring a
viable
Palestinian
state from
the Israelis
if he was
unable to
convince
them to
remove any
of the 400
roadblocks
strangling
economic and
community
life on the
West Bank?
For the
United
States,
Hamas'
overwhelming
election
victory was
anathema.
Hamas is on
the State
Department's
list of
terrorist
organizations
and remains
an advocate
of armed
resistance
to the
occupation.
Further,
Hamas
refuses to
recognize
Israel and
rejects all
the damaging
agreements
that Arafat
and Abbas
signed that
have
corralled
the
Palestinians
into the
desperate
situation in
which they
now find
themselves.
In the wake
of the Hamas
victory, the
pliable
Abbas
embraced
Israeli and
American
policy ever
more tightly
in a
desperate
effort to
cling to
power.
First, Abbas
acquiesced
to the
Israeli
seizure of
the customs
revenue it
collects on
behalf of
the
Palestinians
and refused
to share
critical
cabinet
positions
with Hamas.
Second,
Abbas was a
party to the
planning
with
Israel's
longtime
advocate on
the U.S.
National
Security
Council,
Elliott
Abrams, of a
coup against
the Hamas
leadership
in Gaza.
Unfortunately
for Abbas
and Abrams,
the coup,
which was to
employ Fatah
security
forces in
Gaza loyal
to Mohammed
Dahlan, was
the
worst-kept
secret and
the most
ill-conceived
plot in
recent
diplomatic
history. In
June 2007
Hamas struck
first and
quickly
disposed of
Abbas'
supporters
in Gaza.
After Hamas'
takeover of
Gaza, the
Israelis,
with the
approval of
Abbas, began
to arrest
Hamas
legislators
on the West
Bank,
ultimately
jailing 45
of them.
Abbas, now
utterly
without a
legitimate
mandate of
any sort,
appointed a
new cabinet
and began to
rule by
decree.
Meanwhile,
the Israeli
army
tightened
its control
of West Bank
cities to
keep Abbas'
supporters
in power and
started to
detain Hamas
activists.
In Gaza
itself
conditions
went from
bad to
desperate.
The Israeli
government
severely
restricted
supplies,
with the
exception of
limited
amounts of
food and
fuel. As
Israeli
official Dov
Weisglass
heartlessly
put it,
"It's like a
meeting with
a dietitian.
We need to
make the
Palestinians
lose weight,
but not to
starve to
death." For
lack of raw
materials
all industry
in the Strip
collapsed,
unemployment
soared, and
everyday
life became
a struggle.
But while
1.5 million
Palestinians
were on the
brink of
starvation
in Gaza,
Abbas
continued to
talk with
Israel and
the United
States about
the
so-called
peace
process.
Despite
having to
cope with
the
collective
punishment
of a million
and a half
residents of
Gaza, Hamas
has been
able to move
forward with
its
political
objectives.
Gaza
security
forces were
entirely
rebuilt with
emphasis on
loyalty to
the Hamas
political
leadership.
With the
United
States doing
its utmost
to deprive
Gaza of
financial
aid from the
West,
assistance
from the
Gulf region
and Iran
went
directly to
the Hamas
leadership
and served
to
strengthen
the party's
political
control. And
resistance
to Israel
continued,
albeit in a
rather
desultory
manner in
which crude
rockets were
fired at
Israeli
towns close
to Gaza.
Damage in
Israel was
limited, and
Gazans
suffered
perhaps 50
casualties
for every
one
inflicted on
the
Israelis.
And now, a
severe body
blow for
Abbas and
his rump
regime: de
facto
Israeli
recognition
of Hamas as
Israel and
Hamas agree
to a
cease-fire
without
preconditions.
In return
for an end
to the
firing of
rockets,
Israel
promises to
increase the
range and
quantity of
goods
allowed into
Gaza.
Whether the
cease-fire
will hold
and the
economy of
Gaza will
revive is
uncertain,
but the
Israelis
apparently
decided
trying to
starve Hamas
out of power
was not
going to
work. So
Mahmoud
Abbas'
policy of
shunning the
rejectionists
of Hamas,
dictated by
the United
States and
Israel, has
been
undercut by
the Israelis
themselves,
undoubtedly
hastening
the day
Abbas ceases
to be
president of
the
Palestinian
Authority
and becomes
a resident
of one of
the little
Arab towns
the Israelis
maintain for
the
protection
of
Palestinian
collaborators
whose
usefulness
is at an
end.
John Taylor received an A.B. in Near Eastern Languages from the University of Chicago, a B.A. and an M.A. in Oriental studies from Cambridge University, and an MBA from Columbia University. He served two years active duty in the United States Army, reaching the grade of sergeant, and spent six years in the reserves. Before making his career in the oil and gas business in Texas, he worked in the Middle East as an archaeologist, banker, and civil servant. Taylor is a life-long Republican.
