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With US backing, Israel prepares new military assault on Palestinians
By Chris Marsden
10 May 2002
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Israel has promised harsh reprisals against what it calls terrorist
targets in retaliation for the May 7 suicide bombing at
a pool hall in the suburb of Rishon Letzion, near Tel Aviv. Fifteen
Israelis were killed and more than fifty wounded in the attack.
Most observers predict a major military strike on the Gaza
Strip, but whatever happens is certain to be brutal and bloody.
It will be carried through with the tacit approval of the United
States.
The Palestinian Authority condemned the pool hall suicide attack,
with PA leader Yasser Arafat ordering his security forces to prevent
all terrorist operations against Israelis. We
will not be light-handed in punishing those who have caused great
harm to our cause, his statement read.
Arafat added that he was committed to the US-led war
on terrorism and appealed to the international community
to help his forces implement my order. The bombing
has been attributed to the Islamic militant group Hamas, but the
group has made no official statement. Nevertheless, PA police
have arrested 16 Hamas militants.
Arafats willingness to abide by US and Israeli demands
will not prevent Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon from continuing
to implement his long-term aim of destroying the Palestinian Authority.
The Rishon Letzion suicide bombing took place 15 minutes after
Sharon had sat down to a discussion with US President George W.
Bush in the Oval Office. Sharon cut short his US trip and flew
back to Israel to convene a cabinet meeting. He told the press
that the bombing was proof of the true intentions of those
who lead the Palestinian Authority, warning, He who
rises up to kill us, we will pre-empt it and kill him first.
Education Minister Limor Livnat, who travelled with Sharon,
said she thought it was very possible that, in the end,
there will be no choice and it will be necessary to expel Arafat.
Israels army chief, Lt. Gen. Shaul Mofaz, had earlier warned
that if terror attacks resumed, Israel would carry out an offensive
at least as extensive as the one leading up to the siege of Jenin.
The US has made no calls for restraint on Israels part.
When asked whether he urged Sharon to exercise restraint, Bush
told the press, Israel is a ... sovereign nation but whatever
response Israel decides to take, my hope, of course, is that the
prime minister keeps his vision of peace in mind.
Bush, who was meeting with Jordans King Abdullah II at
the White House, made a token effort to appear even-handed, hailing
as an incredibly positive sign the fact that Arafat
had gone on television to denounce, in Arabic, acts of terror,
and had ordered Palestinian security forces to prevent attacks
on Israeli civilians. This type of political balancing act has
led to a great deal of speculation as to the extent of the differences
between the Bush administration and the Sharon government. There
are indeed differences between the two allies, but only of a tactical
character.
The White House is the main sponsor of Sharon, but Bush has
spent the past weeks in intensive discussions with various Arab
rulers, and Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia in particular, attempting
to formulate a Middle East peace plan that calls for
Arab recognition and normal relations with Israel once a Palestinian
state is established. Bush has been supportive of the Saudi plan
because, though it recognises a Palestinian state, this is understood
only as a vassal regime run by the Palestinian bourgeoisie on
behalf of the US.
Far from bringing peace, moreover, the cessation of hostilities
between Israel and Palestine is meant to clear the way for the
long-planned military offensive by the US against Iraq. The Middle
East regimes have repeatedly warned the US that they would find
it extremely difficult to restrain opposition within the Arab
working class should the US declare war on Iraq while it is openly
backing Sharons bloody incursions into the West Bank and
Gaza.
Sharon went to Washington to argue against any limits being
placed on his ongoing offensive against the PA. The Israeli security
service Mossad had prepared dossiers, supposedly proving not only
Arafats connection with terrorism, but also charging Saudi
Arabia with the same offence. In the end the documents were never
discussed, but Bush was hardly firm in his commitment to the Saudi
proposals. Instead, while reiterating his support for the eventual
creation of a Palestinian state, Bush generally responded favourably
to Sharons counterproposals.
Sharon said talk of establishing a Palestinian state was premature
and that there could be no question of dismantling Zionist settlements
within the Occupied Territories. He presented what he called a
three-stage peace plan, calling for an end to terror and a cease-fire,
to be followed by an interim period of unspecified
duration during which the parameters of peace would be discussed,
and then final peace negotiations. This proposal, which amounts
to an indefinite delay in any serious moves toward a Palestinian
state, is bound up with Sharons determination to continue
his military offensive. What was new was his proposal to reform
the Palestinian Authority to make it less dependent on the
will of one man. This, however, was merely another way of
denying Arafats legitimacy.
In various interviews with the press, most notably with William
Safire of the New York Times and Jim Hoagland and Jackson
Diehl of the Washington Post, Sharon said that he had proposed
to Bush that Arafats role be diminished within the PA to
that of symbolic leader. Real power should be turned
over to a prime minister ostensibly subordinate to Arafat,
but in reality more powerful, he said. Sharon had also proposed
the creation of a unified internal Palestinian security
force under a suitable figure.
Sharon said Bush had been receptive to his proposals and had
not urged major changes in Israels approach. I felt
no pressure whatsoever, he said. According to Israels
Haaretz newspaper, sources in Sharons entourage
said that Bush had specifically agreed that peace talks between
Israel and the Palestinians had to wait until internal reforms
within the PA had brought about a governing body that would
be headed by a different person or different people than
Arafat.
No such position has been officially taken by the Bush administration,
but there were clear indications that Sharons account was
not too far off the mark. Bush himself told the press that he
did not advocate either the Saudi or the Sharon positions. He
added, I still havent changed my position on
statehood, but he agreed with Sharon that the first priority was
to reform the PA.
He announced that he was sending CIA Director George J. Tenet
back to the Middle East to help design the construction
of a security force, a unified security force, that will be transparent,
held accountable.
Others within the Bush administration are even more open than
the president in outlining their aim of creating a US-Israeli
puppet regime to rule the Palestinians. Last weekend, National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said that whereas it was up
to the Palestinian people to choose their own representatives,
We are going to be very clear that the Palestinian leadership
that is there now, the Authority, is not the kind of leadership
that can lead to the kind of Palestinian state that we need.
Regarding Sharons supposed dossier on the Palestinian
leader, she added, I assume that the Israeli prime minister
is going to give the documents that he believes to be true. Thats
good enough for us.
The Arab bourgeoisie, for obvious reasons, cannot openly be
seen to be supporting the agenda of the US and Sharon, but there
is common ground regarding their plans for the Palestinians and
the desire to reach an accommodation with Israel. One senior Arab
official was quoted in the US media as stating that their goal
was also to turn Arafat into, at best, a figurehead in a
modernised Palestinian Authority. Such off-the-record remarks
led Sharon to express his own optimism regarding the possibility
of building a new coalition for peace that could include
Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, one or two of the Arab emirates
and, perhaps, Morocco.
See Also:
New York Times op-ed piece: another
nothing to hide apologia for Israeli war crimes
[9 May 2002]
US Congress backs Israeli assault on
Palestinians
[7 May 2002]
Israel on Jenin: Nothing
to hide ... but no one can look
[30 April 2002]
Bush defends Sharon as Jenin
massacre provokes international condemnation
[20 April 2002]
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