This could have been an important document, IF –
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IF all the parties really wanted to achieve a fair
compromise.
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IF Sharon and Co. were really prepared to give back the
occupied territories and dismantle the settlements.
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IF the Americans were willing to exert serious pressure
on Israel.
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IF there were a president in Washington like Dwight
Eisenhower, who did not give a damn about Jewish votes and donations.
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IF George Bush were convinced that the Road Map serves
his interests, instead of being a bone to throw to his British poodle.
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IF Tony Blair thought that it serves his interests,
instead of being a crumb to throw to his domestic rivals.
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IF the United Nations had any real power.
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IF Europe had any real power.
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IF Russia had any real power.
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IF my grandmother had wheels.
All these IFs belong to an
imaginary world. Therefore, nothing will come from all the talking about
this document. The embryo is dead in the womb of its mother, the Quartet.
In spite of this, let’s try to treat the matter in all
seriousness. Is this a good document? Could it be helpful, if all the Ifs
were realistic?
In order to answer this seriously, one has to distinguish
between the declared objectives and the road that is supposed to lead to
them.
The objectives are very positive. They are identical with
the aims of the Israeli peace movement: an end to the occupation, the
establishment of the independent State of Palestine side-by-side with the
State of Israel, Israeli-Palestinian and Israeli-Syrian peace, the
integration of Israel in the region.
In this respect, the Road Map goes further than the Oslo
agreement. In the Oslo "Declaration of Principles" there was a giant hole:
it did not spell out what was to come after the long interim stages.
Without a clear final aim, the interim stages had no clear purpose.
Therefore the Oslo process died with Yitzhaq Rabin.
The Road Map confirms that there now exists a worldwide
consensus about these objectives. This fact will remain even if nothing
comes out of it. Those of us who remember that only 35 years ago there
were hardly a handful of people in the world who believed in this vision
can draw profound satisfaction from this Road Map. It shows that we have
won the struggle for world public opinion.
But let’s not exaggerate: in this document, too, there is
a gaping hole in the definition of the aims. It does not say what the
borders of the future Palestinian State should be, neither explicitly nor
implicitly. The Green Line is not even mentioned. That by itself is enough
to invalidate the whole structure. Ariel Sharon talks about a Palestinian
state in 40% of the "territories" – equivalent to less than 9% of
Palestine under the British Mandate. Does anyone believe that this will
bring peace?
When we pass from poetry to prose, from the mountaintop of
the aims to the road that is supposed to get us there, the warning signs
become more and more frequent. This is a perilous road with many curves
and obstacles. Even a very brave athlete would shudder at the thought of
having to run this course.
The road is divided into phases. In every phase the
parties must fulfil certain obligations. At the end of each phase the
Quartet must decide whether the obligations have been completely
fulfilled, before entering the next one. At the end, the hoped-for peace
will come, God willing.
Even if all the parties were imbued with goodwill, it
would be extremely difficult. When David Lloyd-George, as British Prime
Minister, decided to end the British occupation of Ireland, he observed
that one cannot cross an abyss in two jumps. The initiators of the Road
Map propose, in effect, to cross the Israeli-Palestinian abyss in many
small hops.
First question: who is this "Quartet" that has to decide
at every point whether the two parties have fulfilled their obligations,
and a new phase can be entered?
At first glance, there is a balance between the four
players: the United Nations, the United States, Europe and Russia. It is
rather like a commercial arbitration: each side appoints one arbitrator,
and the two arbitrators together choose a third one. Judgement is reached
by majority decision and is binding on both parties.
This could work. The United States are close to Israel,
Europe and Russia are acceptable to the Palestinians. The UN
representative would have the casting vote.
Not at all. According to the document, the Quartet must
take all decisions unanimously. The Americans have a veto, which means
that Sharon has a veto. Without his agreement, nothing can be decided.
Need more be said?
Second question: When will it end?
Well, there is no clear-cut timetable for passing from one
phase to the next. The document vaguely mentions several vague dates, but
they are difficult to take seriously. The first phase should have started
in October, 2002, and come to a close in May 2003. In the real world, the
Map will be shown to the Israelis and the Palestinians for the first time
in May, and only then will the serious haggling begin. Nobody can foresee
when the implementation of the first phase will actually begin. And in the
meantime…
It should be remembered: in the Oslo agreements many dates
were fixed, and almost all of them were missed (generally by the Israeli
side). As the good Rabin declared: "There are no sacred dates."
Third question: Is there any kind of balance between the
obligations on the two parties? The answer must be "no".
In the first phase, the Palestinians must stop the armed
Intifada, establish close security cooperation with the Israelis and
recognize Israel’s right to exist in peace and security. They must also
appoint an "empowered" Prime Minister (meaning, in effect, the
neutralization of the elected president, Yasser Arafat) and start the
drafting of a constitution that will meet with the approval of the
Quartet.
What must Israel do at the same time? It must enable
Palestinian officials (note: officials. This does not apply to the rest of
the population) to move from place to place, improve the humanitarian
situation, stop attacks on civilians and the demolition of homes and pay
the Palestinians the money due to them. Also, it will dismantle
"settlement outposts" erected since Sharon came to power, in violation of
the government’s guidelines. Who will decide to whom this applies? There
is also no mention of freezing settlement activity in this phase.
Does anyone believe that Prime Minister Abu Mazen could
put an end to Hamas and Jihad attacks without any political quid pro
quo at all, and while the settlements keep expanding?
After this phase, the Palestinians must reform their
institutions, create a constitution "based on strong parliamentary
democracy" (they will not be allowed to have an American presidential
system, for fear of Arafat retaining some powers). Only then, "as
comprehensive security performance moves forward", the Israeli army will
"withdraw progressively from areas occupied since September 28, 2000". Not
immediately, not in one withdrawal, but bit by bit, "progressively". Not
from areas B and C, but only from area A. They will be where they were
before the present Intifada.
(There is an old Jewish joke about a family that complains
about being crowded together in one room. The rabbi advises them to bring
in a goat, too. Later, when the family complains that life has become
intolerable, the rabbi tells them to take the goat out again. Suddenly
they feel that they have a lot of space. This time the Israeli army is
told to remove the goat, but the Palestinians are told to remove father
and mother.)
After all this, the next phase will start; the
Palestinians will adopt their constitution and hold free elections, the
Egyptians and Jordanians will send their ambassadors back to Israel and
the Israeli government will, at last, freeze settlement activity.
The next phase will focus on the "possible" creation of an
independent Palestinian state with "provisional borders". So, long after
all attacks have been stopped, there will be an "option" of creating a
Palestinian state in Area A, a tiny part of what used to be Palestine.
According to the Roadmap, this should happen by the end of 2003, but it is
clear that, if at all, this will come about much later. It is also stated
that "further action on settlements" will be a part of the process. What
does this mean? Not the dismantling of a single settlement, not even the
most remote and isolated one.
After all this comes about, the Quartet will decide
(again: unanimously - only with the agreement of the Americans) that the
time has come for negotiations aimed at a "permanent status agreement",
hopefully in 2005, including discussion of items such as borders,
Jerusalem, refugees and settlements. If Sharon or his successor want it,
there will be an agreement. In not, then not.
The truth is, in this whole document there is not one word
that Sharon could not accept. After all, with the help of Bush he can
torpedo any step at any time.
To sum up: Much Ado about Nothing. As evidenced by the
fact that neither Sharon nor the settlers are upset.