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CAMP DAVID PEACE
PROPOSAL
OF JULY,
2000
FREQUENTLY ASKED
QUESTIONS
Map of the Camp David
Proposal
1. Why did the Palestinians reject the Camp
David Peace Proposal?
For a true and lasting peace between
the Israeli and Palestinian peoples, there must be two viable and
independent states living as equal neighbors. Israel's Camp David
proposal, which was never set forth in writing, denied the
Palestinian state viability and independence by dividing Palestinian
territory into four separate cantons entirely surrounded, and
therefore controlled, by Israel. The Camp David proposal also denied
Palestinians control over their own borders, airspace and water
resources while legitimizing and expanding illegal Israeli colonies
in Palestinian territory. Israel's Camp David proposal presented a
're-packaging' of military occupation, not an end to military
occupation.
2. Didn't Israel's proposal give the
Palestinians almost all of the territories occupied by Israel in
1967?
No. Israel sought to annex almost 9% of the Occupied
Palestinian Territories and in exchange offered from Israel's own
territory only the equivalent of 1% of the Occupied Palestinian
Territories. In addition, the Israel sought control over an
additional 10% of the Occupied Palestinian Territories in the form
of a "long-term lease". However, the issue is not one of percentages
- the issue is one of viability and independence. In a prison for
example, 95% of the prison compound is ostensibly for the prisoners
- cells, cafeterias, gym and medical facilities - but the remaining
5% is all that is needed for the prison guards to maintain control
over the prisoner population. Similarly, the Camp David proposal,
while admittedly making Palestinian prison cells larger, failed to
end Israeli control over the Palestinian population.
3. Did
the Palestinians accept the idea of a land swap?
The Palestinians were
(and are) prepared to consider any idea that is consistent with a
fair peace based on international law and equality of the Israeli
and Palestinian peoples. The Palestinians did consider the idea of a
land swap but proposed that such land swap must be based on a
one-to-one ratio, with land of equal value and in areas adjacent to
the border with Palestine and in the same vicinity as the lands to
be annexed by Israel. However, Israel's Camp David proposal of a
nine-to-one land swap (in Israel's favor) was viewed as so unfair as
to seriously undermine belief in Israel's commitment to a fair
territorial compromise.
4. How did Israel's proposal
envision the territory of a Palestinian state?
Israel's
proposal divided Palestine into four separate cantons surrounded by
Israel: the Northern West Bank, the Central West Bank, the Southern
West Bank and Gaza. Going from any one area to another would require
crossing Israeli sovereign territory and consequently subject
movement of Palestinians within their own country to Israeli
control. Not only would such restrictions apply to the movement of
people, but also to the movement of goods, in effect subjecting the
Palestinian economy to Israeli control. Lastly, the Camp David
proposal would have left Israel in control over all Palestinian
borders thereby allowing Israel to control not only internal
movement of people and goods but international movement as well.
Such a Palestinian state would have had less sovereignty and
viability than the Bantustans created by the South African apartheid
government.
5. How did Israel's proposal address
Palestinian East Jerusalem?
The Camp David Proposal required
Palestinians to give up any claim to the occupied portion of
Jerusalem. The proposal would have forced recognition of Israel's
annexation of all of Arab East Jerusalem. Talks after Camp David
suggested that Israel was prepared to allow Palestinians sovereignty
over isolated Palestinian neighborhoods in the heart of East
Jerusalem, however such neighborhoods would remain surrounded by
illegal Israeli colonies and separated not only from each other but
also from the rest of the Palestinian state. In effect, such a
proposal would create Palestinian ghettos in the heart of
Jerusalem.
6. Why didn't the Palestinians ever present a
comprehensive permanent settlement proposal of their own in response
to Barak's proposals?
The comprehensive settlement to the
conflict is embodied in United Nations Resolutions 242 and 338, as
was accepted by both sides at the Madrid Summit in 1991 and later in
the Oslo Accords of 1993. The purpose of the negotiations is to
implement these UN resolutions (which call for an Israeli withdrawal
from land occupied by force by Israel in 1967) and reach agreement
on final status issues. On a number of occasions since Camp David -
especially at the Taba talks - the Palestinian negotiating team
presented its concept for the resolution of the key permanent status
issues. It is important to keep in mind, however, that Israel and
the Palestinians are differently situated. Israel seeks broad
concessions from the Palestinians: it wants to annex Palestinian
territory, including East Jerusalem; obtain rights to Palestinian
water resources in the West Bank; maintain military locations on
Palestinian soil; and deny the Palestinian refugees' their right of
return. Israel has not offered a single concession involving its own
territory and rights. The Palestinians, on the other hand, seek to
establish a viable, sovereign State on their own territory, to
provide for the withdrawal of Israeli military forces and colonies
(which are universally recognized as illegal), and to secure the
right of Palestinian refugees to return to the homes they were
forced to flee in 1948. Although Palestinian negotiators have been
willing to accommodate legitimate Israeli needs within that context,
particularly with respect to security and refugees, it is up to
Israel to define these needs and to suggest the narrowest possible
means of addressing them.
7. Why did the peace
process fall apart just as it was making real progress toward a
permanent agreement?
Palestinians entered the peace process
on the understanding that (1) it would deliver concrete improvements
to their lives during the interim period, (2) that the interim
period would be relatively short in duration - i.e., five years, and
(3) that a permanent agreement would implement United Nations
Resolutions 242 and 338. But the peace process delivered none of
these things. Instead, Palestinians suffered more burdensome
restrictions on their movement and a serious decline in their
economic situation. Israeli colonies expanded at an unprecedented
pace and the West Bank and Gaza Strip became more fragmented with
the construction of settler "by-pass" roads and the proliferation of
Israeli military checkpoints. Deadlines were repeatedly missed in
the implementation of agreements. In sum, Palestinians simply did
not experience any "progress" in terms of their daily
lives.
However, what decisively undermined Palestinian
support for the peace process was the way Israel presented its
proposal. Prior to entering into the first negotiations on permanent
status issues, Prime Minister Barak publicly and repeatedly
threatened Palestinians that his "offer" would be Israel's best and
final offer and if not accepted, Israel would seriously consider
"unilateral separation" (a euphemism for imposing a settlement
rather than negotiating one). Palestinians felt that they had been
betrayed by Israel who had committed itself at the beginning of the
Oslo process to ending its occupation of Palestinian lands in
accordance with UN Resolutions 242 and 338.
8.
Doesn't the violence which erupted following Camp David prove that
Palestinians do not really want to live in peace with
Israel?
Palestinians recognized Israel's right to exist in
1988 and re-iterated this recognition on several occasions including
Madrid in 1991 and the Oslo Accords in September, 1993.
Nevertheless, Israel has yet to explicitly and formally recognize
Palestine's right to exist. The Palestinian people waited patiently
since the Madrid Conference in 1991 for their freedom and
independence despite Israel's incessant policy of creating facts on
the ground by building colonies in occupied territory (Israeli
housing units in Occupied Palestinian Territory - not including East
Jerusalem - increased by 52% since the signing of the Oslo Accords
and the settler population, including those in East Jerusalem, more
than doubled). The Palestinians do indeed wish to live at peace with
Israel but peace with Israel must be a fair peace - not an unfair
peace imposed by a stronger party over a weaker
party.
9. Doesn't the failure of Camp David prove
that the Palestinians are just not prepared to
compromise?
The Palestinians have indeed compromised. In the
Oslo Accords, the Palestinians recognized Israeli sovereignty over
78% of historic Palestine (23% more than Israel was granted pursuant
to the 1947 UN partition plan) on the assumption that the
Palestinians would be able to exercise sovereignty over the
remaining 22%. The overwhelming majority of Palestinians accepted
this compromise but this extremely generous compromise was ignored
at Camp David and the Palestinians were asked to "compromise the
compromise" and make further concessions in favor of Israel. Though
the Palestinians can continue to make compromises, no people can be
expected to compromise fundamental rights or the viability of their
state.
10. Have the Palestinians abandoned the two-state
solution and do they now insist on all of historic
Palestine?
The current situation has undoubtedly hardened
positions on both sides, with extremists in both Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian Territories claiming all of historic Palestine.
Nevertheless, there is no evidence that the PA or the majority of
Palestinians have abandoned the two-state solution. The two-state
solution however is most seriously threatened by the on-going
construction of Israeli colonies and by-pass roads aimed at
incorporating the Occupied Palestinian Territories into Israel.
Without a halt to such construction, a two-state solution may simply
be impossible to implement - already prompting a number of
Palestinian academics and intellectuals to argue that Israel will
never allow the Palestinians to have a viable state and Palestinians
should instead focus their efforts on obtaining equal rights as
Israeli citizens.
11. Isn't it unreasonable for the
Palestinians to demand the unlimited right of return to Israel of
all Palestinian refugees?
The refugees were never seriously
discussed at Camp David because Prime Minister Barak declared that
Israel bore no responsibility for the refugee problem or its
solution.Obviously, there can be no comprehensive solution to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict without resolving one of its key
components: the plight of the Palestinian refugees. There is a
clearly recognized right under international law that non-combatants
who flee during a conflict have the right to return after the
conflict is over. But an Israeli recognition of the Palestinian
right of return does not mean that all refugees will exercise that
right. What is needed in addition to such recognition is the concept
of choice. Many refugees may opt for (i) resettlement in third
countries, (ii) resettlement in a newly independent Palestine
(though they originate from that part of Palestine which became
Israel) or (iii) normalization of their legal status in the host
country where they currently reside. In addition, the right of
return may be implemented in phases so as to address Israel's
demographic concerns.
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