|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
Sharon seeks destruction of Palestinian Authority
By Chris Marsden
19 December 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
With the declaration last week that Israel would no longer
recognise Yasser Arafat, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has publicly
refuted the 1993 Oslo Accords and the perspective of achieving
a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians.
The Likud-led government, with the support of the far-right
settler and ultra orthodox parties, has long sought a pretext
to implement the military destruction of the Palestinian Authority
and any organised political leadership and infrastructure for
the Palestinian people. Israel ended all contact with Arafat on
December 13, citing his alleged failure to deal with terrorist
groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad, following the previous
days bus bombing that killed 10 Israelis. From our
point of view, Arafat no longer exists. Period, Sharon told
his security cabinet. A cabinet statement held Arafat directly
responsible for the attacks, and therefore is no longer
relevant to Israel, and Israel will no longer have any connection
with him. The next day, Israeli helicopters targeted Arafats
West Bank headquarters in Ramallah. Israeli military incursions
and killings have since taken place throughout the West Bank and
Gaza every day.
A week prior to the bus bombing and the issuing of the cabinet
statement, Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit had spoken on
the phone with Sharon, who told him Israel wanted to be rid
of Arafat. It became very clear that Israel was inclined
towards war, Ecevit said. Sharon told the Bild newspaper
on Friday last week that Arafat was history and threatened
a permanent deployment of Israeli forces in the Palestinian territories.
He said that he was already negotiating with alternative local
figures who might replace the Palestinian leader in what would
amount to a coup to set up a client regime.
The entire course of Sharons political career, and above
all his actions since the start of the present conflict, have
been aimed at provoking a decisive military confrontation with
the Palestinians that would enable Israels armed forces
to retake control of the Occupied Territories they had first seized
in the 1967 War. Sharon has spent over a year attempting to bury
the Oslo process and prevent the formation of the Palestinian
entity agreed by the Labour Party at Camp David last year. It
was Sharon who provoked the present Intifada, with his
September 28, 2000 visit, under heavy armed guard, to the Al Aqsa
mosque/Temple Mount complex. At every major turning point since
he came to power on February 6 this year, he has continued this
policy of provocation. Sharon has deliberately fostered unrest
and set out to destabilise the PA regime: ordering the assassination
of Arafats more radical or Islamic fundamentalist critics,
bombing the West Bank and Gaza and sending tanks and troops into
nominally Palestinian-controlled territory in at least nine major
incursions.
To claim that Arafat is still seeking the destruction of Israel
and is masterminding a terrorist offensive behind closed doors,
as Sharon does, is patent nonsense. At Camp David, Arafat tied
his political future to securing a political compromise with Israel
that would lead to the creation of a truncated Palestinian entity
in parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. His efforts to preserve
this compromise have largely discredited him amongst the Palestinian
masses, leading to pitched battles against his police when they
have tried to round up leaders of Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Even within the US, where the media is overwhelmingly pro-Zionist,
some commentators have acknowledged that Sharon is the main instigator
of the present conflict and that his aim is to destroy not just
Arafat but the Palestinian Authority as a whole.
H.D.S. Greenway of the Boston Globe explained on December
10, ...When Sharon says that Arafat is guilty of everything
that is happening here and that Arafat is the greatest
obstacle to peace and stability in the Middle East, he is
speaking of his version of peace. It was Hamas that sent the suicide
bombers, but it is Arafat, not Hamas, that stands in the way of
Sharons worldview. For only Arafat has the international
standing and command of what is left of the Palestinian peace
camp to stand as a negotiating partner. That helps explain why
Sharon has been undermining the Palestinian Authority ever since
he came to power. Get rid of Arafat and the Palestinian Authority,
the reasoning goes, and you get rid of what is left of the dangerous
Oslo process.
Jackson Diehl of the Washington Post drew a connection
between Hamas and Sharon because both want to turn the clock back
a decade, before Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization
agreed to recognize each other at Oslo... Sharon and those who
egg him on want to lead Israelis into a new era of bloody struggle
that will consolidate their control over far larger stretches
of territory than could ever be obtained in a negotiated deal.
In Europe, criticism of the Sharon/US stance is more widespread.
The BBCs correspondent in Jerusalem, Barbara Plett,
stated that Israels attacks are clearly designed to
systematically destroy the Palestinian Authority infrastructure.
The Guardians Suzanne Goldenberg wrote on December
15, Underlying the Israeli raids is a long-term plan by
the Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, to weaken Mr Arafat to the point
that Palestinians feel encouraged to rise up and end his rule.
Then, Mr Sharons argument goes, a leader will emerge who
will be willing to make peace on Israels terms.
Within the Bush administration, however, even the mildest criticism
of Sharon has been abandoned, in favour of overt support for his
latest offensive. Sharons government has clearly been emboldened
by this US backing, to the point where Public Security Minister
Uzi Landau declared, Now we are standing before a golden
opportunitya window of opportunity that must not be missedto
strike at the [Palestinian] infrastructure of terrorism, to its
very foundations.
Sharon saw the September 11 bombing of the World Trade Center
and Bushs declaration of a war on terrorism
as an opportunity to solicit support for his own efforts to crush
the Palestinians militarily. Initially, Sharon met with opposition
from within the Bush administration. Secretary of State Colin
Powell, in particular, was concerned that Sharons bellicose
stance would undermine Washingtons efforts to secure a broad
agreement amongst the Arab regimes to support the US offensive
against Afghanistan. The military successes against the Taliban
regime, however, have strengthened the more hawkish and pro-Israeli
elements grouped around Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and
his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, who view Israel as the most dependable
US ally in the Middle East and one that must be cultivated, particularly
under conditions where there are plans for military action against
Iraq.
A December 17 article in the Guardian bemoaned the growing
control of foreign policy by the Washington hawks,
citing the views of Doug Feith at the Pentagon, and Frank
Gaffney, his former colleague at the Center for Security Policy
(CSP).
Gaffney wrote on the CSP website: The so-called Middle
East peace process, which began with secret Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations in Oslo, has materially contributed to the present,
catastrophic situation... Successive concessions made in the name
of advancing the peace process by both Labour and Likud-led
governments of Israel have not appeased demands for further concessions,
only whetted Arab appetites for more.
During Arafats speech to mark Eid al-Fitr on Sunday,
the Islamic celebration coming at the end of the holy month of
Ramadan, he once again called for an end to terrorist killings,
especially the suicide attacks that we condemn always.
He also urged a resumption of peace talks and pledged his belief
in the right of the state of Israel to exist. In the past few
days he has shut down 14 Hamas and Islamic Jihad offices in the
West Bank and arrested an estimated 180 militants. This time,
Powell responded extremely negatively. Recalling US Middle East
envoy Anthony Zinni back to Washington, Powell told the media
that terrorist attacks by the Palestinians had blown up
Americas peace initiative. He openly defended Israeli reprisals
that have killed more than 60 Palestiniansin comparison
with the 40 Israelis killed by Hamas and Islamic Jihadinsisting
that Sharon has a responsibility to defend the people of
Israel.
Powell has spent the past week co-ordinating efforts to ensure
the isolation of Arafat by placing maximum pressure on the European
powers and the Arab regimes. A US official said that Powell had
urged the European Union (EU) not to invite Arafat for talks,
but to hold his feet to the fire instead. The US has
also used its veto in the United Nations Security Council to block
a resolution calling for international monitors to be sent to
the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It was the second US veto this year
against a resolution proposing the sending of an observer force.
The European Union also issued a statement insisting that Arafat
dismantle Hamas and Islamic Jihad and issue a public
appeal in Arabic for an end to the Intifada against Israel,
but there are clear tensions between the US and Europe over the
blank cheque Washington has handed Sharon. Unlike Washington,
the EU urged Israel to stop assassinating Palestinian militants,
withdraw its tanks from Palestinian cities, and insisted Sharon
should not destroy the Palestinian Authority, which was an indispensable
partner for peace. European envoys have continued to pursue
contact with Arafat, the French and Russian envoys visiting his
Ramallah headquarters last weekend, followed by an EU delegation
this week.
French President Jacques Chirac criticised Israel for attempting
to destroy what subsists of the Palestinian Authority and
the Oslo accords. It was France that proposed the UN resolution
on sending observers, which condemned all acts of terror but which
US ambassador to the UN, John Negroponte, accused of being one-sided
and an attempt to isolate politically Israel by throwing
the weight of the Council behind the PA.
There is no reason to believe, however, that the European powers
will continue to support Arafat in order to oppose US ambitions
in the Middle East region. They too may look to some other element
within the PA as a counterweight to both Israel and the US. On
December 18, the Guardian, which just days earlier had
been defending Arafat, called on him to stand down voluntarily,
before he is pushed and to make way for a stronger,
less compromised leader who is a fit match for Mr Sharon and his
ruthless kind.
Arafats personal fate is bound up with the failure of
the political perspective of bourgeois nationalism.
It was following the defeat suffered by the Arab armies in
the Six-Day War in 1967 that Arafats Fateh faction took
the leadership of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO).
It advanced the perspective of armed resistance to the Israeli
military and independence from the various Arab bourgeois states
that had either used the Palestinians as a pawn in their own designs
or had made their peace with Israel.
But the PLO subordinated the struggle for the national and
democratic rights of the Palestinians to a pro-capitalist perspective
that accepted the existence of the Arab regimes and the system
of states founded inside the boundaries drawn up by the regions
former colonial rulers. It therefore rejected any genuine revolutionary
mobilisation of the oppressed masses of the region. As such it
could never make a genuine appeal for the unity of the Palestinian
and Israeli working class against their common oppressors.
The PLOs perspective of armed struggle was
dependent on Soviet backing, but in return the Stalinist bureaucracy
insisted that Arafat did not challenge the Arab regimes that were
friendly to Moscow and opposed any manifestation of political
independence within the Arab working class and oppressed masses.
Once the Kremlin bureaucracy under Gorbachev began its push
to restore capitalism in the USSR and seek a final rapprochement
with the US, Arafats perspective lay in tatters. Having
lost the possibility of Soviet backing, he was to lose the support
of the Arab regimes, which virtually unanimously lined up behind
the US during the Gulf War against Iraq in 1991.
Arafat then trod the same path, offering himself and a future
Palestinian regime as a loyal client of Washington. As early as
1988, he had opened formal talks with the Reagan administration.
The precondition for the setting up of a Palestinian entity was
his delivery of a statement dictated by the US State Department,
in which Arafat agreed to guarantee the security of Israel and
renounce all forms of terrorism.
Thirteen years later, Arafats hopes of securing US patronage
have been dashed. Meanwhile, the Palestinian people live in utter
squalor on the most inhospitable parts in the West Bank and Gaza,
suffering levels of poverty worse than they had faced in 1988.
After the killing of almost a thousand Palestinians at the hands
of Israel since last September, they now face the very real prospect
of a pogrom being launched by Sharon, one worse than those he
presided over at the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps in 1982,
and for which he was indicted for war crimes.
The Islamic fundamentalist opponents of Arafat offer no genuine
alternative. Behind their religious obscurantism, they too advance
a nationalist and pro-capitalist perspective, and are politically
in thrall to Iran or one or more of the Arab bourgeois regimes.
Only the construction of an independent party of the working class,
pledged to the unification of the Arab and Jewish workers in a
common struggle for the Socialist United States of the Middle
East, offers a way forward.
See Also:
Israel targets Arafats headquarters:
US gives green light for war against Palestinian Authority
[5 December 2001]
US Middle East proposals strengthen
Sharons position in Israel
[27 November 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |