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Annapolis: US prepares Palestinian civil war and rallies Arab
support against Iran
By Chris Marsden
29 November 2007
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There were times when the Annapolis summit looked like a poor
production by an amateur dramatics societyfumbled handshakes,
translations not working, President Bush mispronouncing Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbass name, and Abbas himself dragging
along behind Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert like
he had forgotten his stage directions. But these gaffes only underscored
the fact that this entire production was mounted only in order
to conceal the predatory ambitions of the United States in the
Middle East.
Watching the painful performances of Bush, Olmert and Abbas
was an audience comprising the representatives of 40 nations,
including the European powers and Russia and 16 Arab states, including
Syria and Saudi Arabia, which do not recognize Israel.
They assembled, in part, in order to give an official benediction
to the Bush administrations improbable claim that Annapolis
will inaugurate a yearlong drive to secure peace between Israel
and Palestine and the creation of a Palestinian state. The primary
importance of this pretence is that it provides a vital cover
for their acquiescence in Americas stepping up of hostilitiesboth
economic and militaryagainst Iran.
The plan unveiled at the US Naval facility in Maryland has
been grandiosely described as an end to a seven-year freeze in
peace talks, requiring the personal sponsorship and commitment
from Bush, and necessitating his Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice racking up hundreds of thousands of miles of shuttle diplomacy
to the Middle East diplomacy. The aim, so official propaganda
would have it, is that Bush will leave a just settlement between
Israel and Palestinerather than the debacle in Iraqas
his legacy when he quits office in January 2009. The real timetable
on which both are operating is based on the recognition that Iran
must be neutralized if US hegemony over the oil riches of the
Middle East is to be secured.
To this end, Bush has tried to cast himself as an honest broker
between Israel and Palestine, relying on the readiness of the
media and the Arab regimes to forget the fact that Israel is the
foremost client state of the US. The Annapolis declarationall
437 words of itin fact confirms the pattern in which the
US continues to place no demands that Israel would find unacceptable,
while insisting that the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority crush
all resistance to Israel as a precondition for any settlement.
Not even the agreement on a joint declaration of principles
was reached until 30 minutes before Bush read it out. How it was
finally arrived at paints a vivid picture of the actual political
relations at Annapolisa bloc between the US and Israel dictating
an agenda to their puppet, Abbas.
Haaretz cites Palestinian sources as saying that a stalemate
was resolved at Annapolis itself when, Finally, US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice took Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
out of a three-way meeting with US President George Bush and Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert and pressured him to approve the draft document.
Eventually, he did so, enabling Bush to read it to the conference.
Israeli sources painted an even more damning picture, stating
that when the Palestinians had refused to sign, Foreign Minister
Tzipi Livni, who headed the Israeli team, lost her temper
and told [Palestinian negotiator Ahmed] Qureia to take it
or get lost.
Sections of the Israeli negotiating team told Livni that a
declaration was a waste of time, and suggested
she forget about it.
For months no document could be drafted because Israel refused
to accept being tied to any position on key Palestinian demands,
such as the right of return, an end to Jewish settlement, borders,
water supplies and accepting east Jerusalem as the capital of
a future Palestinian state. Much has been made of the declarations
statement that both parties will undertake negotiations for a
treaty resolving all outstanding issues, including all core
issues without exception. But none of these issues are named.
Abbass own spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeina, dismissed the
statement, explaining, We failed to conclude a document
for the last three, four months. We couldnt agree on one
single point.
And as the New York Times pointed out, While the
two sides said their talks would be aimed at concluding a treaty
that deals with all core issues, they couldnt
agree on naming them and how they might be addressed.
What the statement does say is that implementation of
the future peace treaty will be subject to the implementation
of the road map, as judged by the United States.
This passage assigns to Washington the sole right to decide
whether the provisions of the road map are being met, ending the
pretence that the Quartet, which includes the US,
the United Nations, Russia and the European Union, are equal partners
in seeking peace.
The central demand contained in the road map upon which Abbas
will be judged to have been successful is his ensuring the security
of Israel by dismantling terrorist organizations.
In effect, Abbas has again been placed on notice that he must
crush all resistance to Israel amongst the Palestinians, beginning
by taking back control of the Gaza Strip from Hamas.
Abbas is in a weak position from which to take on Hamas, which
organised a demonstration of tens of thousands in Gaza denouncing
him as a collaborator and traitor for
attending Annapolis. Even in the West Bank stronghold of Fatah,
smaller demonstrations took place. Police violently broke up the
demonstrations, arresting hundreds and killing a 36-year-old man
in Hebron.
The European powers are being subjected to a shakedown by Washington
to fund Abbas in his conflict with Hamas. France will host a donors
conference later next month.
It may be that Israel decides that it will intervene on his
behalf by mounting a military incursion into Gaza. This was suggested
as a strong possibility in the right-wing Jerusalem Post,
which noted that even as Annapolis was concluding, the defense
establishment began gearing up for the possibility that Defense
Minister Ehud Barak, upon his return from the United States, will
order a large-scale military operation into the Gaza Strip.
It cited a defence official stating, Israel held back
from launching such an operation ahead of the summit since it
didnt want to be blamed for ruining the summit. Once that
the summit is over, there is an opportunity to go into Gaza and
strike back at Hamas.
A large operation in Gaza would require the IDF to call
up large numbers of reservists and to mobilize almost two divisions
from the Infantry, Armored and Engineering Corps, it concluded.
The Los Angeles Times credited Abbas with having tried
to demonstrate to Israel that hes serious about asserting
control, starting in the West Bank. He has deployed hundreds of
extra police officers to the unruly city of Nablus. He has closed
dozens of Hamas charities, fired Hamas preachers, arrested hundreds
of Hamas activists, including many gunmen, confiscated weapons
and issued a decree aimed at drying up millions of dollars in
donations to Hamas from abroad.
But this is not enough for Israel. Abbas is faced with nothing
less than a demand that he launch a full-scale civil war, which
could precipitate his own downfall as a result of popular opposition.
A Hamas official warned, Abbas would be a fool to return
to the Gaza Strip aboard an Israeli tank. Any Palestinian who
enters the Gaza Strip with Israels assistance will be treated
as an enemy.
Olmerts own hold on power is precarious. Even the verbal
concessions he has made have provoked a furious response from
the opposition parties led by Likud, the settlers and his far-right
and orthodox coalition partners, which could bring down his government.
Prior to Annapolis, the Knesset approved a bill barring any
agreement to divide Jerusalem. Eli Yishai, leader of Shas party,
threatened to pull out of the government if Jerusalem was
mentioned at Annapolis. An estimated 25,000 took part in
a mass prayer service at the Western Wall protesting Annapolis,
before moving on to Olmerts Jerusalem residence and nationalist
groups blocked streets in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
Following the summit Zevulun Orlev, chairman of the National
Union party, declared that the State of Israel is facing
a liquidation sale and called on Shas chairman Eli Yishai
and Yisrael Beitenu head Avigdor Lieberman to resign from the
ruling coalition immediately. Yishai defended himself by stating
categorically that the division of Jerusalem was not on the table
because the Palestinian leadership has failed to implement
the first phase of the Road Mapthe dismantling of terror
organizations.
The real measure of success for Bush was the participation
of the Arab regimes in the Annapolis charade and its endorsement
by the European powers and Russia.
When Bush declared in his speech that a battle is under
way for the future of the Middle East and we must not cede victory
to the extremists, the assembled delegates were clear that
he was not merely targeting Hamas. The most honest appraisal of
Annapolis in the US media was made by Steven Erlanger in the New
York Times, who wrote, The Middle East peace conference
here on Tuesday was officially about ending the Israeli-Palestinian
dispute. But there was an unspoken goal just below the surface:
stopping the rising regional influence of Iran and Islamic radicalism.
An adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, told Erlanger, The Arabs
have come here not because they love the Jews or even the Palestinians.
They came because they need a strategic alliance with the United
States against Iran.
Dan Gillerman, Israels ambassador to the United Nations,
added that the Arab regimes were in attendance because of their
fear of Islamic extremism and Iran, which they call the Persian
threat. This is what brought them here.
The Jerusalem Post was also candid stating that Olmerts
meeting with Bush following Annapolis would try to translate
the summits momentum into a more effective effort to thwart
Teherans nuclear drive. It was pleased that Along
with the Arab states, vital potential partners of the US and Israel
in the bid to thwart Iran were notably present at Annapolis, with
France, Britain, Germany, Italy, China and Russia all represented
at the level of foreign minister.
China and Russia, described as the two key holdouts against
intensified sanctions, have said they would reassess
their positions following next months United Nations
Security Council discussions centering on the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) of its scope and of the degree of
Iranian compliance with inspection requirements, the Post
noted with satisfaction.
Iran was clear that it was the target of the manoeuvres by
Washington at Annapolis. Tehran responded by announcing on the
same day as the meeting that it had developed a new Ashura missile
system, which has a range of 1,200 miles and is capable of hitting
Israel and American bases in the Middle East.
See Also:
Annapolis talks: A cover for fomenting
Palestinian civil war and preparing assault on Iran
[26 November 2007]
US secretary of state seeks
to impose Israeli diktats on Palestinians
[22 October 2007]
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