JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1995, Pages 9, 10, 70
The Declaration of Principles of Peace
With U.S. Consent, Rabin Is Reneging On Oslo
Agreement With Arafat
by Richard H. Curtiss
"There's no going back. To accept the status quo would
only allow those extremists to prevail and would miss an historic
opportunity to achieve peace and securityan opportunity not
likely to come again. Indeed, the status quo...will only invite
more terror." Warren Christopher, Jerusalem, Dec.
6, 1994.
When U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher voiced the warning
quoted above, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin already had imposed
impossible conditions on the Palestinian elections promised in the
Declaration of Principles of Peace he had signed with PLO Chairman
Yasser Arafat on Sept. 13, 1993. Further, Rabin's cabinet was considering
three options: continuing to implement the Oslo agreement, delaying
its implemention by two years, or reneging on it entirely.
Christopher's timely words, however, were not directed at Israel
but at Syria, and they were irrelevant to what ails the peace process.
The Syrians have offered Israel "total peace for total withdrawal"
from the Golan Heights. The Israelis have spurned the offer. Therefore
there is no Syrian-Israeli agreement to "go back" from.
There are, however, the Oslo agreement and the Cairo agreement
for its implementation between Israel and Yasser Arafat's Palestinian
Authority. But the Israelis now are "going back" from
both. One reason is what Christopher said to the Israelis on the
same visit to Jerusalem: "The fundamental bedrock of these
agreements... is security for the parties, and without that security,
it's clear to me that the agreements cannot properly go forward."
As Los Angeles Times staff writer Norman Kempster put it,
"Christopher's comments seemed to be intended as an endorsement
of whatever course the Israelis might choose. Washington has exhorted
Israel and the PLO to adhere to the agreement signed on the White
House lawn. But Christopher made it clear the United States will
not attempt to pressure Israel to withdraw its troops until it is
ready to do so."
That could be never. Which means that if Israel is allowed to follow
its present course, all the pomp and ceremony on the White House
South Lawn, all the subsequent handshakes between Israelis and Arab
leaders from Morocco to the Arabian Gulf, and all the embraces between
Arab and Jewish Americans will be consigned to the ash heaps of
history with the "endorsement" of the administration of
President Bill Clinton.
You don't have to go back very far to see why the "process"
has not produced "peace." President George Bush made it
clear when he was elected in 1988 that he planned to bring an Israeli-Palestinian
settlement to a head well before the lead-up to U.S. national elections
in 1992.
Saddam Hussain's August 1990 invasion of Kuwait delayed things
for eight months, but created remarkably promising conditions for
serious negotiations on both sides. It refuted Israel's claim to
be a "strategic asset" to the United States. It also fractured
the Arab and Muslim worlds, ending 45 years of empty oratorical
competition as to who could be the most "steadfast." More
important, Yasser Arafat lost all of his financial backing from
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf, which was virtually all the financial
backing he had. He was not just ripe, but desperate, to make a deal.
Linking Aid to Peace
Then, for the first time in history, Bush linked U.S. aid to Israel
to the peace process by vowing to withhold his signature from loan
guarantees for Israel until Israel halted Jewish settlements in
the occupied territories. When challenged by Israel's powerful U.S.
lobby, Bush "went public" with a direct televised appeal
that, according to the only poll taken at the time, won him the
support of 86 percent of the American public. The action went virtually
unnoticed by the Arabs, still in shock after the Gulf war, but rocked
Israel to the core of its fractured society.
In June 1992, Israeli voters turned out intransigent Likud Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir and brought back Labor Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin with a mandate to restore the fraying financial lifeline from
the United States. Within days of his election, Rabin was in Washington,
mending fences. Facing elections himself by then, Bush was only
too happy to promise Rabin a first $2 billion installment of loan
guarantees in exchange for Rabin's vow to freeze Israeli government
support to Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza.
Nevertheless, the leaders of America's five-million-strong Jewish
community mobilized to defeat Bush. They directed large campaign
donations to candidate Bill Clinton's election campaign and inspired
unprecedented media partisanship against Bush. Exit polls showed
85 percent of American Jews voted for Clinton in the 1992 general
election.
Some three million Arab Americans, perhaps two-thirds Christian
and one-third Muslim, who as a community are believed to split their
votes 60 percent for Republicans and 40 percent for Democrats, remained
traumatized by the Gulf war. Many supported Ross Perot. Few supported
Bush.
Some five million non-Arab American Muslims, who are extremely
supportive of the Palestinians and generous in sending financial
donations to Palestinian causes seemed, as a group, to make no connection
between those strong sentiments and their growing potential to support
them at the polls. In fact, some Muslim leaders advised their followers
to stay home rather than participate at all in a "corrupt"
electoral system. Bush lost, and not just because he underestimated
the power of the media forces mobilized against him and the "spoiler"
role of Ross Perot.
After his victory, Clinton knew to whom he was indebted. He resisted
strong pressure to make his abrasive campaign director, long-term
pro-Israel activist Mickey Kantor, his secretary of state. But he
made it clear to his choice for the job, Warren Christopher, the
head of his transition team, that America's Jewish community was
to be consulted at every step of Middle East policy-making.
Predictably, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was one of President-elect
Clinton's early visitors. But this time his mission was not further
to increase aid to Israel, which with the $2 billion in annual U.S.
loan guarantees now surpasses $6 billion annually. Remembering his
competition with American Jewish leaders for the president's ear
when he was Israeli ambassador to the U.S. after the 1967 war, Rabin
asked that he, not Israel's self-appointed American representatives,
be Clinton's channel to the Middle East.
Clinton promised to maintain aid to Israel at the current level,
come what may, and instructed Christopher to keep both Israel and
American Jewish leaders happy. Those are the only two "givens"
in U.S. Middle East policy, but they have saddled the secretary
of state of the world's only remaining superpower with a heavy burden.
The trip in which he made the remarks quoted above was Christopher's
ninth to Israel and the Middle East in 1994 alone. His appearances
before American Jewish groups are beyond counting.
Meanwhile, what had begun in 1992 with meetings between Israeli
and Palestinian academics totally outside the Bush-initiated Middle
East peace talks revealed an astonishing flexibility emanating from
an increasingly desperate Yasser Arafat. Deputy Israeli Foreign
Minister Yossi Beilin was dispatched to Oslo to participate. He
returned convinced that a major breakthrough could be had. After
meeting briefly with some of the Palestinian participants to ascertain
whether they really spoke for Yasser Arafat, Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres took the subject to his life-long political rival within the
Labor party, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
The notoriously flexible Peres knew he could not sell the Israeli
public on any agreement with Arafat. The cautious Rabin knew he
could, but was not sure whether he wanted to. Israel was well on
the way to de facto annexation of Jerusalem, and to turning West
Bank Palestinian towns into separate Bantustans via a network of
settlements and highways separating them. The program had been initiated
by Labor's Likud rivals to clear the West Bank of its 1.2 million
Palestinians by making life so unattractive that most would leave
voluntarily and the rest eventually could be "expelled."
Both parties, however, had written off the Gaza Strip as hopeless,
with 800,000 Palestinians crammed into one of the most densely populated
places on earth. Therefore Rabin saw the Oslo agreement as worth
trying.
Without endangering its U.S. aid, Israel could postpone discussion
of Jerusalem for at least another three years while continuing the
settlement activity that would make Jews a solid majority there.
He would be rid of ungovernable Gaza, where too many Israeli soldiers
were dying or becoming disillusioned about Israel's permanent subjugation
of its Palestinian "underclass." And, if he negotiated
shrewdly enough, eventually, the West Bank population centers would
be turned over to an unviable "autonomous" Palestinian
authority that would have to merge with Jordan, which had occupied
the West Bank for 19 years between 1948 and 1967 without creating
serious problems for Israel.
Meanwhile, by entering into this kind of peace, Rabin might be
able to establish economic and even diplomatic relations with some
Arab countries and reap the reward in Israel's 1996 elections. Later,
if things didn't work out, he could blame Arafat.
Rabin's Remaining Problem
Arafat, in fact, is Rabin's only remaining problem. He insists
on free elections that either will give him legitimacy, or will
anoint someone else to finish the negotiations. This is the only
way for any Palestinian leader or party to win the full support
of the Palestinians of Gaza and the West Bank.
Arafat also will insist on negotiating for an eventual sovereign
Palestinian state, able to confederate on an equal basis with Jordan,
rather than the present vaguely constituted "Palestinian Authority."
And he or any other elected Palestinian leader will be adamant about
sharing Jerusalem as the capital of both Israel and of Palestine.
Arafat might have a chance of getting all of those things, and
the world might have a chance for a stable Middle East, if it were
not for Rabin's gradual realization that he now can abandon all
of his own concessions in the Oslo agreement without severing Israel's
lifeline to the United States.
From all the signs, he is succumbing to that temptation. Israel's
powerful clout with the media is paying off in a campaign to discredit
the vulnerable Arafat every bit as intense as was the campaign to
discredit Bush. Palestinian "intellectuals," long denied
access to the mainstream U.S. media, suddenly can have their "op-ed"
articles or letters to the editor published, so long as they confine
the blame for problems in the peace process to Arafat.
The result is a flood of articles depicting him as an incompetent
administrator and an egomaniacal autocrat. In fact, he had virtually
nothing to administer until December, when the Israelis reluctantly
turned over to the Palestinian Authority the Palestinian tax rolls
and the authority to collect taxes in Gaza and Jericho. Nor could
Arafat exercise any autocratic tendencies except in his dual role
as mayor of impoverished Gaza and minuscule Jericho.
Meanwhile, Israel's clout with the U.S. government has been exercised
through Dennis Ross, the State Department's politically appointed
"czar" of Middle East policy and a former volunteer in
AIPAC-backed political campaigns. Ross has the power to pour financial
assistance into providing jobs and an infrastructure in Gaza, which
had been totally neglected first by Egyptians and then by Israelis
for 46 years of military occupation.
Instead Ross has allowed bureaucrats to impose "bookkeeping"
requirements on Arafat's Palestinian Authority before fulfilling
major pledges of aid by the U.S. government, the international monetary
institutions in which the U.S. has significant influence, and even
by most of America's European allies. However, the U.S. levies no
such "bookkeeping" requirements on annual U.S. aid to
Israel, which is more than double all of the $2.4 billion pledged
by the entire world to the Palestinian Authority for the next
five years.
As the catastrophic effects of this invisible embargo on aid to
Gaza became evident, the World Bank and the "donor nations"
which haven't yet donated produced another flurry of promises to
provide $100 million by March 31, 1995 to balance the Palestinian
budget. First, however, Arafat again will be asked to agree to "accounting
reforms."
As for the free elections Arafat so desperately needs to gain the
credibility to rein in his Islamist rivals and impose order in turbulent
Gaza, they'll have to be run by Rabin's rules. Rabin will bar any
party that does not accept the existence of Israel and the Declaration
of Principles. That would bar Hamas and leave Yasser Arafat to enter
the only slate of candidatesand be called an egomaniacal autocrat.
The absurdity of the Rabin edict is illustrated by the totally
different standard for Israeli elections. Benyamin Netanyahu, leader
of the principal opposition party, Likud, does not accept the existence
of any kind of Palestinian entity and has vowed, if elected in 1996,
to abrogate the DOP, despite the fact that it has been signed by
Israel and witnessed by the United States.
Perhaps most unfair of all is Rabin's ostensible reason for delaying
the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the West Bank which, under
the agreements, must precede the Palestinian election. Rabin charges
that the Oct. 19 suicide bombing of a bus in Tel Aviv, which left
22 Israelis dead, and the kidnapping and killing of Israeli Corporal
Nahshon Wachsman, demonstrate that Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority
cannot protect the Israeli settlers who would be left behind after
an Israeli withdrawal.
Yet the perpetrators of both tragedies came neither from Gaza nor
Jericho, but from the West Bank. In fact, the homes of the families
of all of the participants, dead or alive, have been destroyed or
sealed by the Israel Defense Forces. However, the IDF has left intact
the home in the West Bank settlement of Kiryat Arba of Dr. Baruch
Goldstein, whose Feb. 25 machine gun attack on Palestinian worshippers
in Hebron's Ibrahimi mosque left at least 29 Palestinians dead.
Palestinians who dared to trust the Israelis are aghast. "We
have been told it takes the Israelis a long time to come to an agreement;
but once they come to an agreement they stick to it," lamented
Palestinian negotiator Nabil Shaath as he resumed negotiations with
an Israeli delegation in Cairo on Dec. 6. "Everything that
stops the peace process worries me very much and this peace process
is very clear. It has a time schedule and anybody who wants to change
that will be violating the agreement."
With the help of a sympathetic U.S. government and American media
establishment, however, Rabin can obscure from Americans that it
was he, not Arafat, who welshed on the solemn pledges which President
Clinton signed as a witness. But the facts aren't so easily hidden
in the Middle East. Hamas hard-liners and their sympathizers will
say, "We told you so." So will the Arab countries that
have opposed or been skeptical about the "peace process."
Angriest, and most jeopardized of all, will be the Palestinian
moderatesand the Arab regimes that opened diplomatic or economic
relations with Israel, welcomed Israeli diplomats and journalists
to international meetings, and expressed willingness to participate
in an overall Arab-Israeli settlement. They never will be allowed
to forget an Israeli betrayal "endorsed" by a U.S. secretary
of state.
Richard
H. Curtiss is the executive editor of the Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs. |