A week ago I wrote in this column that “the house
is on fire and it’s time to wake up before everything we have
built is destroyed by our own doing.”
I was, of course, not referring to the tragic fire in the Carmel
Forest. The fire is now out and Nature will have to work its
wonders to bring life back where cinders now took over, but
Nature knows how to recover.
The fire I wrote about is the proverbial fire under the house of
the Zionist enterprise, and I wonder how it will be defeated.
The country is facing the most crucial period in its history,
with a need to make unprecedented decisions, and it seems that
the decision makers are not even aware.
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has defined one of the most
significant threats as the movement to delegitimize Israel. If
he doesn’t put out the fire, he ain’t seen nothin’ yet! Israelis
must wake up to the reality that ending the occupation and
creating a Palestinian state are no longer negotiable.
The right of the Palestinians to live as a free people in their
own state is not questioned today anywhere in the world except
here. The world is tired of this conflict. The world is tired of
Israeli excuses, including its refusal to stop building in
settlements.
The world does not understand what Israel wants. The world
cannot understand what Netanyahu’s strategy is, and where it’
leading. The world also cannot accept that because of a belief
that only the IDF can prevent terrorism, millions of
Palestinians should be denied their basic freedom, dignity and
self-determination.
ISRAEL HAS no strategy, no policy and no direction with regard
to negotiating peace. I recently spoke with one of its
negotiators – a rather senior fellow. He too admits that he does
not know what the strategy is, or what the prime minister seeks
to achieve.
The Palestinian negotiators submitted a full plan to US envoy
George Mitchell. He came back with questions and they provided
answers. Israel has not done the same.
Mitchell, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and even President
Barack Obama have no idea what Netanyahu wants or how he plans
to do it.
After 18 years of peace process, it is clear that the
Palestinians refuse to enter another open-ended negotiation. In
light of Israel’s continuing to create facts on the ground,
especially in Jerusalem, they cannot agree to negotiations
unless there is a settlement freeze. It is true that they
negotiated in the past without such a freeze, but look where it
got them. Since the beginning of Oslo, the number of settlers
has more than doubled.
During Netanyahu’s first term, Har Homa was still a forest-
topped hillside. Palestinians cannot stand by and negotiate
forever while more possibilities for creating their state are
removed by more settlements.
Israelis seem quite prepared to manage the conflict with no real
resolve to end it. The amazing thing is that ending the
occupation and creating a Palestinian state is not a favor to
the Palestinians, it is the most urgent strategic necessity for
Israel.
It seems that Israelis have no concept of the reality on the
other side. Israel has removed checkpoints and the Palestinian
economy is blossoming. We have seen the new clubs, hotels and
restaurants in Ramallah on our news channels. The work of the
Palestinian Authority under Prime Minister Salam Fayyad is
indeed impressive.
But the entire logic of the successful Fayyad project is the
establishment of a state in 2011. The rebuilt PA security
forces, trained and equipped by the US, have eliminated
terrorism and terror infrastructure in the West Bank because
they are preparing for a state, not to provide security for the
continuation of the occupation.
Why should any Palestinian policeman provide security for any
settler? If the Palestinians come to understand that they are
serving the occupation and not its end, the entire logic on
which the PA is built collapses. And at that point there is no
reason at all for any PA official to continue to serve.
Abbas’s threat to disband the PA should not be understood as an
empty declaration. There are significant forces within the PA
and the PLO which are seriously lobbying for it. In the absence
of negotiations with substance and a timetable, there is no
sense in continuing to play the game of false independence.
IN TODAY’S reality, Palestinians still live in a cage controlled
by Israel. Their economy is subjugated to Israel’s, their rights
of movement in and out of the West Bank are controlled by
Israel. The population registry is under Israel’s control.
Israeli forces move in and out freely in all areas of the West
Bank. President Abbas requires Israel’s permission to move
around. Any planning, licensing or building in 60% of the West
Bank called Area C requires Israeli approval.
Netanyahu must be called to task – are you ready to grant
Palestinians their independence or do you wish to continue to
control them? There is no middle ground. We who work for peace
had hoped that the US would help us reach an agreement, but it
seems it will not be providing the friendly push to help make
the difficult decisions. But the creation of a Palestinian state
is a Zionist imperative, not an American one. It is in Israel’s
interest to midwife its birth.
The implementation of the two-states-for-two-peoples solution
must come from the inner belief that we are making a choice not
to be enemies of the Palestinian people. The more painless the
birth of the Palestinian state, the more likely that we can move
on to a process of real reconciliation and create the stability
and security that both peoples require.
There are places in the Land of Israel which represent the
cradle of our heritage. We should be glad to visit them as
welcome guests of the Palestinian state.
We have the Coastal Plain, the Galilee and the Negev and we will
share Jerusalem, but the West Bank is Palestine. If Israel would
prefer to trade the Coastal Plain for the West Bank, I am quite
sure the Palestinians would agree.
In peace we will have our state on 78% of the land between the
river and the sea, and the Palestinians will accept the
principle of some minor swaps that will allow some 75% of the
settlers to remain in their homes, but the rest will have to
come back to Israel or move into the annexed areas. The price of
our freedom is the freedom of the Palestinians. Either we accept
it now, while we have the overwhelming support of the West, or
we will accept it later after we lose most of our supporters and
most of our legitimacy.
The writer is co-CEO of the
Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information
(www.ipcri.org) and is in the process of founding the Center for
Israeli Progress (http://israeli-progress.org).