The king of deception
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=377058
Outgoing
Israeli president Shimon Peres talked in a recent interview about a peace
agreement he reached with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas in 2011.
According to
Peres, the Israeli prime minister rejected the draft understanding telling him
"to wait a few days Tony Blair could get a better offer." The
President continued, "The days passed and there was no better offer,"
and there was no peace agreement.
Peres
interview reveals three important issues regarding the peace process and the
botched role of the so called peace mediators.
The first,
Benjamin Netanyahu is more interested in maintaining his anti-peace government
coalition than a peace accord.
Second, the
peace mediators are undermining the prospects of peace.
Third,
Palestinian leaders need to go back to the drawing board and take a crash
course in the art of negotiation 101.
On the first
point, Israel must be pleased with the status quo, building illegal colonies
with impunity under the guise of peace negotiations with no urgent need to reach
a peace agreement. Not that Israel doesn't want it, but not until it realises
its demographic programme.
This is not
an opinion. It is well established fact that the parties forming the current
Israeli government are ideologically opposed to the peace process and to
halting the expansions of the "Jewish only" colonies on occupied
land.
According to
the official Israel's central bureau of statistics report for 2013, the
Netanyahu government increased by 123.7 per cent number of building permits for
"Jewish only" housing in the West Bank. The largest majority were
during the "peace negotiation" in the last six months of the year.
This is
consistent with the bonafide position of the various Israeli governments which
saw the number of illegal Jewish settlers grow three-fold since the start of
the deeply flawed Oslo process over 20 years ago.
Responding
to ICB report, Israeli Peace Now organisation concluded that Netanyahu's
government is "committed to only one thing: building settlements,"
not peace.
A fact that
wasn't absent from the mind of American officials who - politically and
financially - empowered Israel's violations of the peace process. Interviewed
by former Israeli soldier-turned American journalist Jeffrey Goldberg,
president Barack Obama lamented, "We have seen more aggressive settlement
construction over the last couple years than we've seen in a very long
time."
The second
revealing point is when an Israeli premier counts on the mediator of the
Mideast peace quartet, Tony Blair, to bring him a "better offer" than
his own Zionist president. Netanyahu must have known this since his former
adviser and ex-Israeli army officer Lianne Pollak was Blair's consultant.
Another
mediator, US secretary of state, keeps reminding us of his "commitment to
Israel," with his lead team negotiator Martin Indyk, a former policy
director from the strongest US foreign lobby, America Israel public affairs
committee.
Last point,
one can't comprehend the Palestinian leaders' wisdom in negotiating agreements
that couldn't be carried out. They did it in the 2001 Taba agreement with
outgoing Israeli premier Ehud Barak. It was rejected by Ariel Sharon when he
came to office.
Abbas
negotiated an understanding at the end of Ehud Olmert's reign which was trashed
by succeeding Israeli prime minister Netanyahu.
And now,
Abbas was hoodwinked "again" by the "king of deception,"
the ceremonial Israeli president. Side negotiations are Machiavellian Israeli
tactics. For each time and with every meaningless agreement,
"deceptive" unofficial Israeli negotiators chip on a piece of the
Palestinian pie, with nothing reciprocated from the "official"
Israeli government.
Before the
pie disappears, the upcoming Palestinian unity government should be tasked not
just with elections, but in parallel it must join "real" UN
organisations taking the process away from phony peace mediators.
It would be
impossible to reach a just agreement when "peace" intermediaries are
"ideologically committed" to one side and when an Israeli premier
expects better results from them than his own president.
* Mr Kanj (www.jamalkanj.com) writes
weekly newspaper column and publishes on several websites on Arab world issues.
He is the author of “Children of Catastrophe,” Journey from a Palestinian
Refugee Camp to America. A version of this article was first published by the
Gulf Daily News newspaper.
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