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The True Aim of Annapolis, and Why It Failed
by Ramzy Baroud The US-sponsored peace conference in Annapolis, Maryland was neither a success nor failure, if one accepts that its so-called objective was indeed peacemaking.
From a US perspective, the meeting was, at best, a diplomatic manoeuvre on the part of the Bush administration, a last chance for becoming relevant to a region that is quickly escaping its grip. At worst, the conference was a desperate public relations charade aimed at convincing the American public that the administrations plans for democracy and peace in the Middle East are unfolding smoothly.
In both scenarios, the conference was a necessary but fleeting distraction from the prevailing criticism that the Iraq war is a nightmare without end.
Bushs words at Annapolis suggested he was playing exactly the
part Israel expected of him. His emphasis on the Jewish identity of
Israel, itself a crude violation of the principles of secularism, seems
more than a mere gesture to appease the concerns of Israel and its
backers in the US; it was actually a subtle acceptance of the ethnic
cleansing that continues to define Israels treatment of Palestinians.
After all, millions of Palestinians have for decades been expelled from
their land for no other reason than not being Jewish, while millions of
Jews around the world are welcomed back to Israel a land that they
never lived in or had prior ties to. Could Bush not have known about
this when he emphasised the need for a Jewish state? I doubt it.
So
what kind of peace process are we talking about? By any reasonable
definition, peacemaking usually occurs to bridge the gap and resolve
disagreements between antagonists; friends dont need to negotiate
through the use of initiatives and painful compromises to find a
common ground. While both Israelis and Palestinians are in urgent
need for peace to replace the hostility caused by Israels illegal
military occupation, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert could hardly qualify as enemies
caught in a state of hostilities from which they require escape.
Indeed, both men are individually beleaguered in many ways and engaged
in a war of their own but not against one another. If anything, both
Abbas and Olmert are in a state of political symbiosis, a mutual
dependency that borders, strangely enough, on solidarity.
Annapolis was the perfect platform for both leaders to alleviate their individual woes.
Abbas
needed the international validation after his non-constitutional
response to the clash with Hamas in Gaza. Being unpopular among
Palestinians, the survival of his regime is solely dependent on his
ability to sustain the patronage system of his authority in the West
Bank. Without international funds, US validation, and Israeli
permission, Abbas cannot run his nepotistic empire, itself under
Israeli military occupation. Therefore he needs to keep up the
balancing act, and cannot be expected to infuriate Israel by pushing
for serious demands at the negotiating table, scheduled to begin
December 12.
Olmert, overseeing a shaky coalition, is
gripped by two daunting realities: one, he has no mandate to make any
compromises, painful or otherwise, and two, the fact that a two-state
solution is close to becoming obsolete.
In a rare frankness, he
expressed these fears in an interview with the daily Haaretz right
after returning from Annapolis. The day will come when the two-state
solution collapses, and we face a South African-style struggle for
equal voting rights...As soon as that happens, the state of Israel (as
an exclusively Jewish state) is finished.
In retrospect, this helps to explain Bushs insistence on the Jewish identity of Israel.
Whats
ironic is that the same parties that once considered the recognition of
the word Palestine as blasphemous and anti-Semitic are now advocating
a Palestinian state. David A. Harris, Executive Director of the
American Jewish Committee told the Los Angeles Times, November 30, that
even the two-state solution has to be qualified. No. no.
Two-space-nation-space-states. Not just two states, two nation states.
A Jewish state called Israel, and a Palestinian Arab state called
Palestine. This is the language that Prime Minister Olmert has been
using, that Foreign Minister Livni has been using, that President Bush
has embraced, and (was also used by) President Sarkozy (of France).
Olmert,
like many Israeli and Jewish Zionist leaders (as opposed to non-Zionist
Jews who refuse to subscribe to this archaic mindset) increasingly
realizes that Israels colonial euphoria is backfiring; the failure to
define Israels borders left open with the hope of further
territorial expansion is making it impossible for Israel to achieve
total dominance of Jews over Arabs, while still calling itself a
democracy. There is hardly a doubt that the bad choices made by Israel
in the past are now irrevocable, and that indeed the future struggle
will be that of equality within one state.
Rather than being a
right, or wrong, step toward peace between two conflicting parties,
Annapolis has provided a stage for much sweet talk, hyped expectations
and soundbytes for leaders with pressing motivations. Reporters may
have been told that Annapolis offered hope...cautious hope, but hope
by Olmerts spokesperson, but neither hope, nor breaking the seven year
of deadlock - as prophesized by Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat
are relevant here. The meeting and the year of negotiations expected
to follow it are part of Israels last attempt at preserving its
Jewish identity, and creating a South Africa-style Palestinian
Bantustans. Palestinians will be granted the freedom to call such
disconnected islands whatever they wish, and to hoist their flag within
the caged entities, if they must, but nothing more.
Although
both Bush and Abbas are willing collaborators in this undemocratic
endeavour, Israelis must wake up to the fact that their country is
knee-deep in Apartheid, and nothing is significant enough to salvage
their racially-selective democracy, except true democracy. Its time
for people like Harris to stop talking of
two-space-nation-space-states and other such nonsense, but instead to
invest sincere efforts in finding a formula that guarantees peace,
justice and security for both Palestinians and Israelis, without
overlooking the historic responsibility of Israel over the plight and
dispossession of the Palestinians.
Ramzy Baroud
(www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers
and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian
Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).