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WSWS : News
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East
Bush gives Israel blank check in assault on Palestinians
By Bill Vann
26 June 2002
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Even in the annals of Middle East peace proposals,
the speech delivered by George W. Bush on the White House lawn
June 24 stands out for its cynicism.
Speaking as Israeli tanks and infantry rampaged through every
major city and town on the West Bank, killing innocent civilians
and subjecting hundreds of thousands to round-the-clock curfews,
the US president lectured the Palestinian people on the need for
democratic self-reform while demanding the removal
of their elected president, Yasser Arafat.
The Bush plan offers nothing to the Palestinians and advances
not a single new proposal for settling the protracted and bloody
conflict. It does, however, give a green light to the Israeli
state to continue its policy of reoccupying the territories nominally
placed under the control of the Palestinian Authority and to physically
annihilate this entitys leaders as well as its security
forces.
The line advanced by the US administration represents a radical
shift in relation to what is known as the Palestinian question.
World diplomacy has long seen the core of this problem as how
to accommodate the rights of a people turned into refugees, repeatedly
driven off their land, from the creation of Israel in 1948 to
the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967 and the subsequent
wave of Zionist settlements in the occupied territories.
Bush sought to recast the problem by portraying the Palestinians
as a terrorist people and its leadership, the Palestine
Liberation Organization, long recognized as a legitimate bourgeois
nationalist movement, as a criminal organization.
The attempt to outlaw Arafat and other Palestinian officials
represents the codification of a policy that Washington has pursued
for over a year, sanctioning the Israeli assassination of selected
leaders seen as hostile to Israeli and US interests.
Israeli ruling circles reacted to the speech by saying it could
have been written by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon himself and represented
a complete victory for his policy. Israels ruling party,
Likud, said the speech would be remembered as the
end of the Arafat era.
Even among Israels staunchest defenders, however, there
were concerns that Bushs plan failed to place a single demand
on the Israeli regime. Mr. Bush seemed to be telling Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon that he is free to reoccupy the entire West
Bank until a new, democratic Palestine emerges, the New
York Times editorialized. How the Palestinians can be
expected to carry out elections or reform themselves while in
a total lockdown by the Israeli military remains something of
a mystery.
Nor did any serious observer see any likelihood that the plan
would have the slightest effect in halting the wave of suicide
bombings in Israel, much less the crushing repression of the Israeli
military in the occupied territories.
Neither Bush nor Sharon has any interest in Palestinian reform
or democracy. Their policy is one of naked force aimed
at destroying whatever institutions and infrastructure have been
created in the occupied territories since the 1993 Oslo accords
between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization and the
subsequent creation of the Palestinian Authority.
The American president had not a word of criticism for the
Sharon government, warning instead that any attempt by the Palestinians
to resist occupation would be futile: Israel will continue
to defend herself, and the situation of the Palestinian people
will grow more and more miserable.
His preposterous comments stood reality on its head. The root
of the present conflict, according to Bush, is nothing more than
terrorism and the failure of the Palestinian leadership to fight
it.
Today the Palestinian people live in economic stagnation
made worse by official corruption, he declared. Why? According
to Bush, poverty and oppression are merely the byproduct of the
perfidy of the Palestinian Authoritywhich has exercised
unsteady control over the area for barely seven yearsand
its failure to embrace a market economy. The repeated
mass expulsions of Palestinians from their land, the seizure of
large swathes of territory for Zionist settlements in Gaza and
the West Bank, and the continuous disruption of economic life
by decades of military occupation are beside the point.
Bush insisted that peace could come only through a break
with the past, which he spelled out as a purge of the entire
leadership of the Palestinian Authority, including Arafat, and
the installation of new leaders not compromised by terror.
No such break, however, was demanded of Israel,
whose prime minister is implicated in multiple war crimes. Indeed,
Bush delivered his speech on the eve of court proceedings in Brussels
to determine whether Sharon can be tried there for crimes against
humanity stemming from his role 20 years ago in organizing the
massacre of hundreds of unarmed Palestinian refugees in the Sabra
and Shatila refugee camps in Lebanon.
What would a Palestinian state modeled on the Bush plan look
like, were it ever allowed to come into being? One can say with
certainty that its president would be a puppet of Washington,
in all likelihood a longtime asset of the Central
Intelligence Agency within the Palestinian movement. Its economy
would be subordinated to US and Israeli interests and run directly
by the International Monetary Fund. Its security forces would
be led by the CIA and the Israeli secret police, Mossad, directed
at suppressing any elements opposing the US-backed regime.
With Zionist settlements maintained, the territory of this
pseudo-state would remain divided into a patchwork of unviable
units, keeping intact the Israeli roadblocks, checkpoints and
patrols that turn life into a daily ordeal and humiliation for
Palestinians.
In short, a provisional Palestinian state would
resemble nothing so much as the bantustans created by the apartheid
regime in South Africa as a means of maintaining the black population
under conditions of abject misery and repression.
According to press accounts, the final form of the US presidents
speech emerged from a sharp debate in the Bush administration
in which the most right-wing, pro-Israeli elements, led by Vice
President Richard Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
prevailed.
As a congressman in the 1980s, Cheney was one of the staunchest
US defenders of apartheid in South Africa, voting repeatedly not
only for continued US economic ties to the white racist regime,
but against a resolution urging the release of Nelson Mandela
from over two decades of imprisonment and negotiations between
Pretoria and the African National Congress.
To this day, Cheney defends his vote on the grounds that the
ANC was terrorist. His views have not changed and
are representative of a US ruling elite prepared to relegate the
bulk of humanity in the oppressed countries to dictatorship and
misery.
Bush, who became president through massive fraud, exhorted
the Palestinians to build a practicing democracy based on
tolerance and liberty and pledged US aid in organizing fair
elections.
What was clear from his Monday speech, however, was that the
US would reserve to itself the right to decide who would be a
legitimate leader and who would not. This is as true in Palestine
as it is in Afghanistan. There is no place in the Pax Americana
envisioned by the Bush administration for even formal self-determination.
Washington will decide, by military might if necessary.
This conceptionshared by the Bush administration and
the Sharon regimethat force will solve the intractable historical
problems of the Middle East, can lead only to a social catastrophe.
See Also:
Israel dismembers Palestinian Authority
Pledges crushing and decisive military offensive
[24 June 2002]
Bush backs Sharons refusal to hold
talks with Palestinian Authority
[12 June 2002]
Israel tightens grip on West Bank and
Gaza
[1 June 2002]
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