For the last 60 years, all those who have sought a genuinely
peaceful and fair solution for Israel and Palestine have faced the same
obstacle -- Israel's sense of invincibility and military arrogance, abetted by
the US and other Western governments' unwavering support.
Despite recent setbacks on the military front, the Israeli
government is yet to awaken to the reality that Israel is simply not
invincible. The wheel of history, which has seen the rise and fall of many
great powers, won't grind to a halt. Experiences have also repeatedly shown
that neither Israel's nuclear arms nor Washington's billions of dollars in
annual funds could create 'security' for the former.
While Israel can celebrate whatever skewed version of
history it wishes to, it still cannot defeat a people, ordinary people armed
with their will to survive and reclaim what was rightfully theirs. The same
problem confronted the US in Vietnam, France in Algeria and Italy in Libya. The
Palestinian people will not evaporate. Attempts to undermine Palestinian unity,
instigate civil violence, and groom and present shady characters as
'representatives' of Palestinians have failed in the past and will continue to
fail.
Representing and thus dealing with the conflict as one
invented and sustained by Arab greed and Palestinian terrorism helped Israel
garner sympathy, while simultaneously convoluting what should have been an
urgent example of injustice, predicated on colonialism and ethnic cleansing.
More, depicting the mere existence of Palestinians as a
'threat,' a 'problem' and a 'demographic bomb' is inhumane and actually a
full-fledged form of racism. Throughout its 60 years of existence, successive
Israeli governments have treated Palestinians -- the native inhabitants of
historic Palestine -- as undesired and, thus, negligible inhabitants of a land
that was promised only to Jews by some divine power thousands of years ago.
This archaic concept has managed to define mainstream
politics in Israel, and increasingly the US, allowing religious doctrines to
discriminate and brutally repress Palestinians, both citizens of Israel and
residents of the Occupied Territories.
Needless to say, neither a figurative Iron wall, like that
proposed by Vladimir Jabotinsky in 1923, nor an actual massive and menacing
structure as the one being erected in the West Bank can really separate Israel
from its 'problem,' the Palestinians. An area roughly the size of the US state
of Vermont cannot sustain such a complex model -- a country that is open
unconditionally for all Jews who wish to immigrate, and an oppressed population
that is caged in between walls, fences, and hundreds of checkpoints -- without
inviting perpetual conflict.
What Israel has created in Palestine belies its own claim
that its ultimate wish is peace with security. While occupied East Jerusalem is
entirely annexed by an Israeli government diktat, 40 per cent of the total size
of the West Bank is used exclusively for the purposes of the illegal Jewish
settlers and the Israeli military. How can Israel's claim of wanting to live in
peace be taken seriously if it continues to invade the lives, confiscate the
land and usurp the water of Palestinians?
When Israel invaded East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza
in 1967, the Jewish citizens of Israel celebrated the 'return' of biblical
Judea and Samaria and the reunification of Jerusalem. Nearly 300,000 more
Palestinians were ethnically cleansed, adding to the many more who were evicted
from historic Palestine in 1948.
Yet, most Palestinians have remained hostage to the
Israeli-invented limbo that suggests they were neither citizens of Israel, nor
of their own state, nor deserving of the rights of an occupied civilian population
under the Geneva Convention.
Despite this, Israel's insistence on employing military
'solutions' in its dealing with Palestinians have constantly backfired.
Palestinians naturally rebelled and were repeatedly suppressed, which only
worsened the feud and heightened the level of violence.
The PLO's acceptance of Israel's existence, and UN
Resolution 242 as a first step towards a two-state solution was both ridiculed
and rejected by the Israeli government, which continued to arrange for its own
ineffective and ultimately destructive solutions.
Throughout the years, Israel translated its military
strength to erect more settlements and move its population to occupied
Palestinian territories. Even after the Oslo Accords of September 1993, the
construction of settlements didn't slow down, but rather accelerated. After the
most recent peace talks in Annapolis in November 2007, Israel continues to
grant more permits to build more homes in illegal settlements under the guise
of 'natural expansion.'
But it may have gone too far, leaving itself and
Palestinians with few options now.
In a November 29, 2007, interview with Israeli daily
Ha'aretz, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned that without a two-state agreement,
Israel would face "a South African-style struggle for equal voting
rights" in which case "Israel (would be) finished." It's ironic
that Israeli leaders are now advocating the same solution that they vehemently
rejected in the past. However, the Israeli version of the two-state agreement
hardly meets the minimum expectations of Palestinians.
Without Jerusalem, without their refugees' right of return
as enshrined in UN resolution 194 and with a West Bank dotted with over 216
settlements and scarred by a mammoth wall, asking Palestinians to accept an
Israeli version of the two-state solution is asking them to agree to their
eternal imprisonment, subjugation and defeat -- which they have rejected
generation after generation.
If Israel is indeed interested in a peaceful resolution to
this bloody conflict, one that is based on equal human and legal rights,
justice, security and lasting peace, then it must add a new word to its
lexicon: coexistence. Jews and Arabs coexisted peacefully prior to the rise of
Zionism, and they are capable of doing so in the future. Any other solution
would simply institutionalise racism and apartheid, undermine democracy and
human rights and thus further perpetuate violence.
It's time for a secular, democratic state to cease being
part of a removed academic discussion, and instead be integrated into
mainstream debate, if not dialogue in Palestine and Israel. This is the right,
moral and indeed urgent course of action required now.
Ramzy
Baroud is a Palestinian-American author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has
been published in numerous newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book
is The
Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People�s
Struggle (Pluto
Press, London). Read more about him on his website: ramzybaroud.net.