Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Abbas Needs a Miracle
by Ramzy Baroud
Time is running out for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Although both men are still committed to their risky venture of marginalising Hamas at any cost, the latters obduracy and recent events in Gaza point to the inescapable conclusion the undertaking was doomed from the start.
For Olmert the issue demographics remains. He told Israeli daily Haaretz in an interview published in November 2007 that if it didnt agree to an independent Palestinian state, Israel would face a South African-style struggle for equal voting rights, and as soon as that happens, the state of Israel is finished.
The Apartheid analogy is of course not a new one. Leading South
Africans themselves were the first to make the comparison, and Israels
history of aiding and abetting the infamous Apartheid South African
governments is no secret either.
But Olmerts belated
rude-awakening aside, it is Mahmoud Abbas who is running out of
options. Unlike Olmert, Abbas has no real, measurable powers. For one,
his popularity amongst his own people has never been high. Past
quarrels with late Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat during
the early years of the Palestinian Uprising singled Abbas out as an
untrustworthy opportunist.
The late professor, Edward Said once called him
moderately corrupt. The formidable intellectual died before seeing
the moderate corruption of Abbas morphing into a wholesale onslaught on
democracy, freedom and every noble principle the Palestinians ever
fought for. I wonder what Said would have said after seeing the people
of Gaza suffering beyond comprehension while Abbas and Olmert meet in
the latters Jerusalem residence, exchanging words of praise and vowing
their undying commitment to peace.
A photo released by the
Israeli government Press office on February 19 showed both leaders
leaving another futile meeting in Jerusalem, with Olmert aware of the
cameras flashing all around them holding an umbrella for the widely
grinning Abbas. The post card-like scenario is of course part of the
continuing charade of peace talks, deadlines and deadline extensions,
interrupted by temporary quarrels, which are sorted out by US envoys
before resuming more talks.
But how long can Abbas and Olmert carry on with this charade?
For
Olmert, the objective and endgame are clear: stall until a solution
can be finalised and imposed on the Palestinians. This in turns depends
on the finalisation of the construction of the illegal settlements, the
wall and the network of Jewish-only bypass roads in Occupied Jerusalem
and the West Bank. However, Olmerts poor standing among the Israeli
public and the aforementioned demographic threat will not make it
possible for him to stall indefinitely. Still, with the US record of
unconditionally backing Israeli policies, Olmert will remain in a
relatively safe spot, regardless of which major presidential candidate
goes on to claim the White House.
One can hardly say the same
about Abbas. His usefulness for Israel, and thus the US administration,
is entirely dependent on his level of cooperation, which essentially
means ensuring Palestinian disunity, fighting Hamas, and remaining a
pawn in the US imaginative view of the entire region (whereby
moderates stand united against extremists and rejectionists).
Yet,
unlike other Arab moderates, Abbas lacks all leverage. He presides
over an ever shrinking entity, itself under military occupation. Many
of his people regularly accuse him of treason, or at best, of
selling out. On top of this, his party is falling apart. Mohammed
Dahlan is already acting with the air of presidency. Now based in
Egypt, he has been gathering support for himself amidst scattered talks
about his desire to form an alternative party to Fatah.
Worse
yet, Mohamed Nazzal, a visible member of Hamas political bureau in
Damascus told Aljazeera.net on February 19 that despite Hamas
insistence on the inclusion of Marwan Barghouti (a leading Fatah figure
who is greatly supported by the movements youth and strongly disliked
by the old guard) in any future prisoner swaps, Israel has removed the
latters name from the list, at Abbas behest.
Abbas lack of
any meaningful political vision is also promoting other members of his
team to speak of political programmes entirely inconsistent with his
own style. Yasser Abed Rabbo, the Secretary General of the PLO
Executive Committee told Reuters in an interview on February 20 views
which he repeated to AFP and Palestinian radio in Arabic what
Palestinians should consider should talks continue to falter. If
things are not going in the direction of actually halting settlement
activities, if things are not going in the direction of continuous and
serious negotiations, then we should take the step and announce our
independence unilaterally.
Abbas answer was his intent to continue negotiating, and that he was optimistic and hopeful.
Its
unclear where from Abbas hope originates. He stands on very shaky
grounds, not only in his conditional relationship with Israel, the US
and his own party, at home and abroad, but with Hamas as well. His
earlier rhetoric about Hamass ties to Al Qaeda and the forces of
darkness are softening, but he knows he has no mandate to reach out to
his opponents. But it is increasingly clear to the world that isolating
Hamas means the continuation of Gazas mass hunger and suffering. This
is so extreme that even Europeans are reportedly rethinking their
stance on Hamas, which the EU had deemed terrorist.
If Abbas,
however, tried to rethink his relations with Hamas, he would be
abandoned by Israel and the US, and might find himself a victim of a
calculated coup led by his partys strongmen. If he continues with the
charade of endless and futile talks with Israel, the patience of his
people would eventually run out. Considering all of this Abbas
shared responsibly for the plight of Gaza, his anti-democratic legacy
and his inability to reunite his faltering party the president seems
condemned to a lose-lose scenario, one which would take no less than a
miracle to put right.
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).