by Sam Bahour
In today's complicated
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the political assumption that a
Palestinian State is part and parcel of any future peace agreement
is now a common realization that the U.S. and Israel have finally
come to terms with. The U.S. Administration, the Israeli press, and
even the hawkish Israeli government, now openly make public
statements to this regard. I do not question the fact that a
Palestinian State is on the horizon, but I have serious doubt that
the geographic location of this State is the same between the
world's conviction and that of the Israeli government led by Prime
Minster Ariel Sharon.
To understand my suspicion, I
refer to the Sharon of the past and relate it to the, new and
improved, or so we are to believe, Sharon of today.
In 1981, and on several previous
occasions, today's Israeli Prime Minster Ariel Sharon, expressed his
opinion about a Palestinian State as follows:
"I believe that the starting
point for a solution is to establish a Palestinian state in that
part of Palestine that was separated from what was to become Israel
in 1922 and which is now Jordan. [...] The only strangers are the
members of the Hashemite Kingdom ruled by King Hussein. [...] I
don't mind who takes over Jordan." (Time magazine, October 5,
1981)
And as for illegal Israeli
settlers settling on confiscated Palestinian lands, he continued in
the same interview:
"I believe that 30 years
from now, there should be about 1 million Jews living in a ten-mile
radius around Jerusalem. I believe that in the rest of Judea and
Samaria [West Bank] there will be about 300,000 Jews. If there is a
steady influx of 15,000 Jews into Israel and other factors remain
the same, there will be about 4.7 million Jews in Israel by the year
2000. [...] If you are looking at the needs of this population for
security, then the population should be spread out." (Time
magazine, October 5, 1981)
In 1982, in an interview with
Oriana Fallaci, Sharon, while answering a question regarding the
denial of Palestinians of their rights, was quoted as saying:
"But they get a homeland. It
is the Palestine that is called Jordan, yet Transjordan. Listen,
this Palestinian thing has puzzled me for 12 years, and the more I
think of it the more I decide that Jordan...is the only solution.
What counts for me is that a Palestine already exists, so there is
no need to create another one. And I tell you: we shall never permit
another Palestinian state. [...] It will never happen. Judea and
Samaria shall not be touched. Nor Gaza. Forget it..."
(Washington Post, August 29, 1982)
Disturbingly enough, most
recently in April 2001, more than 20 years later, the
"Millennium Model" Ariel Sharon was quoted in an exclusive
interview to an Israeli newspaper as stating:
"I have not changed my world
view. The one thing that has changed is my view of Jordan as
Palestine - and that only because there is a reality [on the ground]
here. I never believed there should be two Palestinian states. That
is the sole change that has taken place in my positions." (Ha'aretz,
11/4/2001)
In 2001, in the midst of a Middle
East powder keg, the Israeli "Jordan is Palestine"
strategy was raised by Sharon without anyone asking him. This is
clearly an Israeli option that not only remains in their political
lexicon, but also most likely is in the Israeli government's
political bag of tricks.
Adding injury to insult, Sharon
also this month answered a reporter when asked about the illegal,
renegade Israeli settlers that rampaged through the heart of the
Palestinian City of Al-Kahlil (Hebron), by stating:
"Those living in Hebron are
not preserving the city of the patriarchs for themselves, but for
all of us." (Jerusalem Post, April 2001)
Why this glimpse into the past?
Because General Sharon's infamous 100 day aggression plan, which has
culminated, thus far, by Israel militarily entering sovereign
Palestinian areas and bulldozing over 25 homes and making homeless
over 500 persons, may not be as big of a secret as is being
portrayed in the media. I believe that Sharon's single goal is to
remove this unfortunate "reality", as he calls it, that is
burning in his chest.
In other words, with the
dismantling of the "reality" of today's internationally
recognized Palestinian National Authority, Sharon can return to his
true conviction and begin to lobby the callow U.S. Administration on
a regional solution that would promise to bring the Jordanian
economy back to life, while simultaneously ending the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict. A seemingly civilized approach to a
final status solution, that is, if you are naïve of history and the
facts.
The Israeli government, Sharon in
particular, and a great number of Israeli citizens are living in a
dream world to believe that the indigenous Palestinian people would
accept anything less than a full independent Palestinian State on
the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and Jerusalem. This State, which the
Palestinians are calling for, would amount to a Palestinian
concession to Israel of 78% of historic Palestine.
Rather than continuing to dream
of a Palestine with no Palestinians, General Sharon should be having
nightmares, for himself and his people, thinking about the vengeance
brewing in the hearts of those that have been made homeless or have
lost their mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, husbands and wives
by Israel's well-oiled U.S. war machinery.
Note:
The historical quotes were taken
from the book, Palestine Is, But Not in Jordan, Sheila Ryan and
Muhammad Hallaj, AAUG Press, 1983.
Mr. Sam Bahour is a
Palestinian-American businessman, born and raised in Youngstown,
Ohio, who relocated to his family's home in Al-Bireh, West Bank
immediately following the signing of the 1993 Oslo Peace Accords. He
is co-author of HOMELAND: Oral Histories
of Palestine and Palestinians (1994).
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