|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
Bush "peace initiative" prepares ground for wider
war against Arab masses
By Barry Grey
6 April 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
President George W. Bushs so-called peace initiative
in no way represents a shift in the basic policy of the United
States in the Middle East. In his Rose Garden speech Thursday,
announcing the dispatch of Secretary of State Colin Powell to
the region next week, Bush went out of his way to place the onus
for the bloodshed in Israel and the occupied territories on the
Palestinians and Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat.
Even as Israeli tanks, gunships and troops widened their assault
on Palestinian cities, and Israeli forces continued their siege
of Arafats Ramallah headquarters, Bush declared, The
situation in which he [Arafat] finds himself is largely of his
own making. The head of the nation that has armed and financed
the Israeli apparatus of violence and repression against the Palestinians
for more than four decades went on to accuse Arafat of having
betrayed the hopes of the people he is supposed to lead.
The Bush administration has intervened in the Middle East crisis
essentially for three reasons:
First, to buy time for the Israeli regime and provide it with
a political cover to intensify its assault on the Palestinian
Authority and the Palestinian people.
Second, to ward off the danger of increased European influence
in the region, resulting from the political vacuum created by
Bushs previous hands-off posture. On the same
day as Bushs speech, senior European envoysSpanish
Foreign Minister Josep Piqué and European Union foreign
policy chief Javier Solanacut short a visit to Israel after
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon refused their request to visit
Arafat.
Third, to ease popular pressure on dependent Arab regimes,
especially Egypt and Jordan, upon whom the US is counting for
at least tacit support in the coming American war on Iraq. The
cynicism of Bushs Rose Garden bromides about peace in the
Middle East was highlighted by his saber-rattling attack on Iraq
and his threats against Iran and Syria.
As Bushs speech made clear, the ultimate policy decisions
will be made not in Israel, but in Washington. Bushs injunction
to the Israelis to pull back their troops will be obeyed, because,
in the end, the Israeli regime is a client state wholly dependent
on American imperialism for its survival.
While calling on Sharon to halt the invasion of Palestinian
areas and begin a pullback of his military forces, Bush endorsed
the week-long Israeli assault, saying America recognized Israels
right to defend itself from terror. At another point,
he referred to the military offensive as a temporary measure,
suggesting that further and perhaps even larger temporary
measures might be justified in the future.
Bush deliberately omitted any call for an immediate end to
Israeli hostilities and stipulated no time-line for a military
rollback. He thereby gave Sharon a green light to continue and
escalate the Israeli assault until Powell makes his way to the
region some time next week.
This is precisely what the Israeli regime did, stepping up
its attacks on previously occupied areas on Friday and sending
tanks into Tubas, a town of 20,000 on the West Bank. Friday saw
an increase in the daily toll of reported Palestinian deaths to
more than 20.
Among those killed were the latest targets of Israels
policy of political assassination. Qeis Odwan, head of the military
wing of Hamas in the northern West Bank, was killed along with
five other Hamas militants when Israeli troops stormed their hideout
in Tubas. Nasser Awais, leader of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade
militia in the same region, was killed in Nablus.
The Sharon regime carried out these actions for the calculated
purpose of provoking new suicide bombings by desperate and enraged
Palestinian youth. As with every previous initiative to achieve
a cease-fire and restart political negotiations, Sharons
response is to further inflame Palestinian passions and provoke
reprisals, so as to provide the pretext for a further escalation
of Israeli military action.
These developments demonstrate that Bushs intervention
is a trap for the Palestinians. This was confirmed in the 90-minute
meeting held Friday between US envoy Anthony Zinni and Arafat
in the latters besieged offices. Zinni reportedly issued
warnings and ultimatums to Arafat, in a discussion that Palestinian
spokesmen described as difficult. There is good reason
to believe that behind the talk of peace and negotiations, the
US is laying the basis for cutting off relations with Arafat and
sending him either into exile or to his death.
As James Bennet noted in a New York Times article on
Friday: If Secretary Powells mission is greeted by
another wave of Palestinian suicide attacks, Mr. Sharon may get
the free hand to deal with Mr. Arafat that he has been seeking.
Sharons internal political maneuvers likewise point to
a new and even more violent Israeli invasion and decisive action
against Arafat. Sharon is working to bring into his coalition
the far-right National Religious Party, which opposes yielding
any territory to the Palestinians. Ephraim Sneh, a Labor Party
leader and cabinet minister, told the Times that such a
move would mean Sharon doesnt want a national unity
government but an ultra-right-wing government, and he wants us
out. Sharons Labor coalition partners have opposed
the prime ministers plans to expel Arafat.
Bushs intervention is the latest in a long line of US-sponsored
peace initiatives that follow a definite pattern:
With American backing, Israel pounds the Palestinians militarily,
intensifies its police repression and assassinates leading figures
in the Palestinian resistance. This brute force is used to further
isolate Arafat and batter him politically and diplomatically.
The Americans and Israelis then present him with new and more
onerous ultimatums, forcing him to make commitments to disarm
the population and accept additional political concessionscommitments
he cannot possibly carry out.
Thus a framework is established in which any outbreak of Palestinian
violence is blamed on Arafat and the Palestinian Authority, while
Israel is given a free hand.
The Powell mission and any talks he holds with Palestinian
representatives will contribute nothing to the struggle of the
Palestinian people for their democratic and national rights. The
basic line of the Bush administration remains that of support
for Israeli expansionism and implacable hostility to the aspirations
and rights of the Palestinian masses.
At the most, the US will tolerate a demilitarized Palestinian
ghetto-state that is deprived of any ability to defend itself
and any genuine independence. This is the meaning of Bushs
call, in his speech on Thursday, for a Palestinian state
that is not a haven for terrorism.
Decades of struggle, war and repression have demonstrated that
there can be no peace or social progress in the Middle Eastfor
Arab and Jew alikeuntil the entire framework of the Zionist
state is repudiated. This, in turn, requires a revolutionary settlement
with the bourgeois state system in the whole of the regiona
system imposed historically by Western imperialism and maintained
as the basis for the rule of despotic Arab regimes that are organically
hostile to the democratic rights and social aspirations of the
Arab people.
Genuine peace cannot be achieved through negotiations because
the fundamental social and political issues at stake transcend
the questions of land and relations between a Palestinian and
Israeli state. Peace and social progress can be achieved only
through the united action of the Arab and Jewish working masses,
fighting for the establishment of a democratic, socialist Middle
East.
See Also:
Thousands of Israeli workers and youth
demonstrate against Sharon's war
[5 April 2002]
International protests against assault
on Palestinian Authority
[5 April 2002]
Chronology of a pogrom: How Sharon, US
prepared assault on Palestinians
[4 April 2002]
Thousands rally in Michigan against Israeli
attacks on Palestinians
[2 April 2002]
Israel and Washington debate murder of
Arafat, destruction of Palestinian Authority
[1 April 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |