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Analysis : Middle
East
Washington talks provide cover for Israeli repression
By Jean Shaoul and Julie Hyland
6 August 2003
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No sooner had Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon finished
his Washington talks with President George W. Bush on July 29,
than his regime stepped up its oppression of the Palestinian people.
Just two days later, the Israeli parliament passed a blatantly
racially discriminatory law preventing Palestinians who marry
Israeli citizens from obtaining Israeli citizenship and thus living
in Israel. The law applies only to Palestinians and will mean
couples having to live separately or the Israeli citizen moving
into a Palestinian area.
Israels security forces have also gone on the offensive.
Its armed forces fired rubber bullets at hundreds of protesters
demonstrating in Qalqilya against the 600 km security
wall that Israel is building to seal off the West Bank. At the
high security Shikma jail, housing some 650 mostly Palestinian
prisoners in Ashkelon, just north of the Gaza Strip, police used
tear gas to suppress a riot by inmates over intrusive cell searches.
Twenty-two prisoners were injured.
In the last days, Sharon has also issued a tender to build
22 new homes in Neve Dekalim, a Jewish settlement in Gaza, in
defiance of agreements to freeze settler activity.
Such events are not aberrations but were implicit in Sharons
discussions with Bush. Whilst political commentators had claimed
the Washington talks would see the US exert heavy pressure on
Israel to make concessions to the Palestinian Authority so as
to secure the so-called Road Map to Peace, which envisages
the establishment of a Palestinian state by 2005, the reality
is that the accord holds nothing progressive for the Palestinian
people.
Drawn up by the QuartetUS, Russia, the European Union
and the United Nationsand presented as a means for ending
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the road map is but the latest
charade by which the Middle East is to be reorganised in the interests
of US imperialism and Israels ruling elite.
Conceived as a sop to gain the support of various Arab regimes
in return for their support for the war against Iraq, the road
map set out conditions even more stringent for the Palestinians
than those contained in the failed Oslo Accord.
The agreement was predicated on the marginalisation and isolation
of PLO chairman Yassir Arafat, now virtually imprisoned in his
Ramallah headquarters, and the installation of businessman Mahmoud
Abbas, regarded by Washington as a more pliant tool for its interests,
as prime minister.
Under his leadership, the Palestinian Authority is charged
with ending all resistance to Israels ongoing and illegal
occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Only after this had
been achieved, and verified by Washington, is Israel required
to withdraw its forces from those areas occupied since September
2000.
The future of any Palestinian state was also made dependent
upon the Quartet reaching a comprehensive peace agreement in the
Middle East, including between Israel, Syria and Lebanon. Moreover,
the final settlement in 2005 is to encompass such contentious
issues as borders, sovereignty over East Jerusalem settlements,
and the right of return for nearly four million Palestinian refugees
to the land from which they were driven in 1948 and 1967.
Were all the conditions met, however, the outcome would be
a weak, truncated Palestinian state, more akin to an apartheid-style
bantustan. Even this is unacceptable to Sharon. No sooner had
the road map been published than the Israeli government tabled
more than 100 objections.
At his last meeting with Bush in June 4, following the US presidents
talks with leaders of the pro-American Arab regimes in Egypt,
Sharon had come under pressure to make some concessions to get
the road map up and running. Nevertheless, he offered nothing
more than the dismantling of a few illegal settler outposts. Since
then, opposition has escalated with numerous armed clashes between
the Palestinians and Israeli armed forces and Israeli assassination
attempts on the lives of Palestinian militants.
Sharons objective has been to provoke retaliatory action
that would enable Israel to blame the Palestinian Authority and
Mahmoud Abbas, the new Palestinian prime minister selected by
Washington as part of its efforts to sideline and isolate Palestinian
chairman Yassir Arafat, for their failure to stamp out resistance.
It knows perfectly well that such a goal is unattainable. Nonetheless,
the PAs failure would provide Israel with the pretext to
annex further areas of the West Bank, expelling the population
of these areas into a narrow Palestinian strip of territory that
would then be cordoned off like the Gaza Strip so that it resembles
a high security prison rather than any sovereign state.
In talks on Friday July 25, Abbas had complained to Bush at
Israels action, singling out its ongoing construction of
the West Bank wall, which cuts through Palestinian territory,
destroying homes and farms, and encircles land occupied by illegal
settlements. For his part, Bush had praised Abbas as a leader
of vision and courage and pronounced the wall to be
a problem.
In the later meeting with Sharon, much was made of the fact
that Israel was implementing some of the measures agreed in June,
including the release of 342 Palestinian prisoners and authorising
the removal of three roadblocks and a few unauthorised outposts.
(On August 5, Israel announced it was calling a halt to military
withdrawal from Palestinian cities, and said there would be no
further prisoner releases in addition to those already agreed,
citing the wounding of a Jewish settler near Bethlehem two days
earlier).
However, Bush made clear that he supported Sharons insistence
that any concessions to the PA were dependent upon it fulfilling
the agreement to act ruthlessly against all opposition to Israel.
The commitment to fight terror... will make it a lot
easier to deal with difficult issues, including the settlement
issue, Bush said. Prime Minister Abbas made a public
declaration that we would work together to dismantle terrorist
organisations, and that is exactly what is going to happen.
Bush overruled Abbas and his chief security officer, Muhammad
Dahlan, who argued that a confrontation with Hamas, Islamic Jihad
and the Al Aqsa Brigade would jeopardise the fragile three-month
truce declared by the three groups on June 29, and demanded more.
With Sharon looking on, Bush insisted that the PA mount sustained,
targeted and effective operations to confront those engaged in
terror and to dismantle terrorist capabilities and infrastructure.
Whilst describing the West Bank wall as a sensitive issue,
Bush insisted that the best way of addressing Israels security
was for the PA to crack down on the terrorist groups that threatened
Israel, making the wall an irrelevance in the long term.
A White House official quoted Bush as saying The process
needs to start immediately and it would be good for it to end
as quickly as possible. Everyone one wants to help Abu Mazen [as
Abbas is also known] but the main help is what he can give himself.
Sharon in turn praised Bushs fight against terrorism
and suggested that Israel, like the US, would never compromise
with terror and evil. As far as Israel was concerned,
it was now up to Abbas to fulfil his promise to take action against
Hamas and other opposition groups.
The Palestinian leadership was doing nothing to eliminate
or dismantle terrorist organisations, Sharon went on, going
so far as to equate the Palestinian Authority with Hitlers
Germany. The most outstanding mistake took place in the
30s in Europe when Nazi Germany routinely violated all the agreements
signed with it, Sharon stated, cynically ignoring that it
is Israel which has violated international agreements by maintaining
its illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories.
Sharon was well satisfied with his talks with Bush. His inscription
in the White Houses official visitors book said it
all: True friendship among allies can overcome every obstacle.
Bushs refusal to censure Israel illustrates that under
the guise of peace, the interests of the US and Israeli ruling
elite are to be forcibly promoted against the Palestinian people
and, increasingly, the Israeli working class.
The ever-worsening economic and social conditions within Israel
have played an important role in Sharons calculations. The
world recession, the intifada that has led to a fall of more than
50 percent in tourism, Israels lifeblood, and the war against
Iraq has led to a catastrophic decline in Israels economy.
The recently introduced Economic Austerity Plan that seeks to
place the full burden of the crisis onto the working class and
the most vulnerable layers of the population has exacerbated social
tensions to breaking point.
Sharons security rhetoric provides a means by which the
ruling elite hopes to divert these tensions away from its real
sourcethe economic policies required by international capitalinto
a war against the Palestinians and thereby justify the establishment
of a garrison state, that will suppress both Palestinian and Israeli
workers alike.
For the US, Sharons praise for the attack on Iraq as
just the first step in the war against terror underlines
the fact that in the foreign policy machinations of the Bush administration,
the road map is part and parcel of the White Houses project
to establish its grip over the Middle East under a Pax Americana.
To this end, the only Palestinian entity that will satisfy US
imperialism is one that exists as a virtual prison camp for its
inhabitants, policed by such politicians as can be found or bought,
on its behalf.
See Also:
US, Israel push Palestinian
prime minister to launch crackdown
[8 July 2003]
Sharon blows up the Road
Map
[19 June 2003]
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