November/December 1993, Page 7-16
The Oslo Agreement: Eight Views
A U.S. Diplomat Supporter
"Gaza-Jericho First" Is Only the
Beginning
By Roben V. Keeley
The term "Gaza-Jericho First," used to describe the Israeli-Palestinian
agreement signed at the White House Sept. 13, does not adequately
express the vast scope and significance of that agreement. Limited
Palestinian autonomy and self-rule are to begin in those two parts
of the occupied territories within three months of the signing of
this "Declaration of Principles," following negotiation
of an interim agreement that, among other things, will call for
accelerated withdrawal of Israeli military forces from Gaza and
Jericho, to be completed within a period not exceeding four months
after the signing of the interim agreement.
But the declaration looks well beyond that timetable. It provides
for the election by the Palestinians, including those residing in
Jerusalem, of a governing council "in order that the Palestinian
people in the West Bank and Gaza Strip may govern themselves according
to democratic principles." These are to be "direct, free
and general political elections" that "will constitute
a significant interim preparatory step toward realization of the
legitimate rights of the Palestinian people and their just requirements."
The stated goal is for elections to be held no later than nine
months after the entry into force of the declaration, or July 1994.
And no later than the eve of those elections, Israeli military forces
will be redeployed outside the areas populated by the Palestinians.
The Palestinian police force to be created "will insure public
order" during the elections, which will be held under international
observation. After the inauguration of the Palestinian Council,
the Israeli civil administration "will be dissolved, and the
Israeli military government will be withdrawn. "That means
the end of the Israeli occupation for the Palestinians inhabiting
these territories.
These procedures clearly contemplate the establishment of a Palestinian
government whose jurisdiction "will cover West Bank and Gaza
Strip territory." Although the council will not have jurisdiction
over certain major mattersspecifically Jerusalem, settlements,
military locations, and Israelis living in the territoriesthese
issues are to be settled in the "permanent status" negotiations
that are to begin in two years and conclude at the latest in five
years, when the interim arrangements will expire. These negotiations
will also deal with the Palestinian refugees, security arrangements,
borders, relations and cooperation with other neighbors, and "other
issues of common interest."
Those in Israel who strenuously oppose this deal negotiated by
Prime Minister Rabin's Labor government are no doubt correct in
stating that it will lead inexorably to the creation of a Palestinian
state in the West Bank and Gaza. They are mistaken, however, in
believing that there is any alternative solution to Israel's Palestinian
problem. Israel will not be able to live in peace and security until
the Palestinian people have exercised their right of self-determination,
a right recognized by the international community as far back as
the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan.
The deal reached between Rabin and Arafat will achieve that aim.
The result may well be a confederation between Jordan and the Palestinian
state, but only after the latter has been created and the Palestinians
have chosen to join with Jordan in some sort of mutually beneficial
union. The critics on the right in Israel who argue that a Palestinian
state would be a "mortal danger" are contradicted by the
realities of power relationships in the Middle East in this post-Cold
War and post-Gulf war era. The challenge for both Israel and the
international community will be to assist the Palestinian state
to become a viable entity, not to check its military power, which
is likely to be nil.
More remarkable than the agreement signed at the White House was
the exchange of letters between Rabin and Arafat that constituted
mutual recognition by Israel and the PLO. That was the indispensable
precondition to the interim and final status negotiations to come.
Yet anyone predicting such a development in the fall of 1993 would
probably have faced derision even a month before it occurred.
The logic of it is evident, however. Labor Party leaders came to
the realization that the only way to reach a workable peace agreement
was to deal with their leading antagonist, the PLO, which for decades
they had vilified as a "terrorist organization." An elementary
principle of negotiation is that you must deal with your antagonist,
and the other party must have the credibility with its constituency
to deliver on any deal struck. Israel, after many months of negotiating
with surrogates for the PLO, finally realized that direct dealings
were the only path to peace.
This was the major concession that brought about this historic
compromise, and it was made by Israel. The PLO has also made concessions,
but they are minor by comparison. Yasser Arafat, in writing, has
recognized Israel as a legitimate state with a right to live in
peace and security, has renounced terrorism and other acts of violence,
has accepted U.N. Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338, and
has committed the Palestinians to try to obtain their rights through
negotiations.
But the PLO chairman already had made all of these commitments
in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly in December 1988, and they
were never subsequently repudiated. In the years since, he also
has agreed by implication that Israel cannot be rolled back from
its 1967 borders, and that what the Palestinians seek is a state
in the West Bank and Gaza alone (22 percent of historical Palestine),
certainly not the "liberation of Palestine."
There are really only two new elements in his most recent declarations:
a promise to rescind the articles of the Palestinian Covenant that
deny Israel's right to exist, and a promise to bring the intifada
to an end. The former is mainly a paper exercise, and the latter
will become irrelevant nine months from now, for if there are no
Israeli troops patrolling in Palestinian population centers by then,
no Palestinian kids will be throwing stones at them.
The single concession by the Israeli side in this exchange between
Arafat and Rabin was what made the historic breakthrough possible:
the government of Israel recognized the PLO as the representative
of the Palestinian people and agreed to negotiate peace directly
with it. Implicit in this simple statement is the recognition that
the Palestinians are a distinct people, with rights, including the
right of self-determination.
There is an amazing asymmetry between the amount of compromising
each side has had to do and the relative power positions of the
antagonists. The Israelis, with the most powerful military machine
in the Middle East, unstinting backing of the world's only superpower,
physical possession of all the territory in dispute, and without
great public pressure at home to make peace if it risked the security
of the state, have made the single concession that was hardly predictable.
The Palestinians, divided and disputatious, led from exile, with
the PLO losing popular support in the occupied territories to extremist
rejectionist factions such as Hamas, bankrupt in the aftermath of
the Gulf war, with no hope of challenging Israel militarily, and
with a weakened political position even in the Arab world, could
be expected to make concessions, so long as they were not as fundamental
as abandoning their wish for their own state.
Perhaps the lesson is that the weaker party cannot make major concessions
because that only makes it weaker, while the stronger party can
afford to concede because it retains its relative strength even
after the concession.
What seems to have won out on both sides was weariness with the
unending and costly struggle and a desire for peace, not at any
price, but at an acceptable price, along with a mutual recognition
that this was probably the last chance for peace in the lifetimes
of the leaders on both sides. And both sides were concerned that
extremists, who prefer continued conflict to peace, were gaining
ground.
With the Palestinian problem in the process of resolution, the
peace treaties between Israel and its other Arab neighbors that
have been under negotiation for the past 22 months should move forward
rapidly. The result will be the de jure recognition of Israel
by all the Arab states and its acceptance into the state system
of the Middle East as a normal and unexceptional member.
Jordan and Israel have already agreed on the agenda for their peace
negotiations. They have no major disputes, and progress was impeded
solely by the impasse on the Palestinian track. As for Syria and
Israel, the makings of a deal are present and are self-evident:
full Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights (perhaps in phases)
and normal peaceful relations with Syria. These have been on the
table for some time, but the antagonists have engaged in an Alphonse-Gaston
charade of who would speak first. There may be a delay because of
psychological overload in Israel. As for Lebanon, no territorial
claims are at stake, only security issues, and with peace breaking
out all over, the necessary arrangements should not be difficult
to conclude.
An interesting question is why the U.S. was left on the sidelines
while Norway refereed the secret talks that have made possible the
resolution of this century-old conflict. One can only hazard a guess.
Of all the principal players in the Middle East peace process, Washington
is probably the leakiest.
Realizing how necessary it was to maintain secrecy, especially
so as not to enable the extremist enemies of peace on both sides
to sabotage the deal after premature disclosure, both the Israeli
and Palestinian readerships apparently opted to leave Washington
in the dark because Washington can't keep a secret.
For good reason, Washington has not been noted for its evenhandedness
in dealing with the parties to this dispute. More than that, however,
the PLO has justifiably been irritated that Washington has held
it at arm's length and even terminated its earlier dialogue with
the PLO on irrational grounds. As for the Israelis, they also bristle
at pressure from Washington, which, though long a loyal patron,
can behave in ways that appear patronizing.
Probably Rabin decided that if he was going to make concessions,
he would make them on his own, not because someone told him it would
be necessary. Ultimately, however, the important thing is not who
gets the credit, but that peace is now in process.
Robert V. Keeley is president of the Middle East Institute in
Washington, DC. A retired American career diplomat, he served as
ambassador to Greece, Zimbabwe and Mauritius. |