Fearing a One-State Solution, Israel’s President Serves Pabulum to
Washington
By Franklin Lamb,
Dissident Voice
"Whatever will happen in the future, we shall not repeat the
mistakes we made in leaving Gaza."
– Shimon Peres to
members of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish
Organizations 2/18/09
"You take my water. Burn my Olive Trees. Destroy my house. Take my
job. Steal my Land. Imprison my Mother. Bomb my country. Starve us
all. Humiliate us all. But I am to blame: I shot a rocket
back."
– Sign carried near
Hyde Park Corner during a demonstration in London on 2/15/09 by a
Member of the British Parliament
February 20, 2009 "Dissident Voice" -- Ain el Helwe Palestinian
Refugee Camp, Sidon, Lebanon —
Israeli President Shimon Peres has participated in shaping the
policies of Israel for most of its existence. His Washington Post
op-ed last week billed as “a peacepartners prod” to the Obama
administration, evidences a major disconnect within the government
of Israel concerning what is urgently required for that country’s
increasingly unlikely long-term survival.
According to a CIA Study currently being shown to selected staff
members on the US Senate Intelligence Committee and the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Israel’s survival in
its present form beyond the next 20 years is doubtful.
The Report predicts “an inexorable movement away from a two-state
to a one-state solution, as the most viable model based on
democratic principles of full equality that sheds the looming
specter of colonial Apartheid while allowing for the return of the
1947/1948 and 1967 refugees. The latter being the precondition for
sustainable peace in the region.”
To President Peres’ chagrin, the Executive Summary states that
“during the next fifteen years more than two million Israelis,
including some 500,000 Israeli citizens who currently hold US green
cards or passports, will move to the United States. Most Israelis
not in possession of these documents will receive ‘expedited
waivers.’ The Report claims that, “Alongside a decline in Jewish
births and a rise in Palestinian fertility, approximately 1.6
million Israelis are likely to return to their forefather’s lands
in Russia and Eastern and Western Europe with scores of thousands
electing to stay, depending on the nature of the transition.”
In his Washington Post piece President Peres desperately attempts
to salvage a two-state solution from a one, a three- or even a
four-state arrangement. He appears to realize that a two-state
solution is seriously jeopardized unless Israel dramatically and
quickly changes course. With the tacking to the right in Israel and
the likely make up of the next government once Peres selects Livni
or Netanyahu in the next few days, and given the swelling mood
among the occupied in favor of another Intifada, Peres plaintively
asserts to the Obama administration that “two states is the only
realistic solution.”
Peres instructed the American people and their government three
times in his op-ed brief for a two-state solution, and that Israel
is “the land of my forefathers.” He laments that the CIA-predicted
one-state solution would, “Undermine Israel’s legitimacy and the
internationally recognized right to exist as a sovereign Jewish
state in the land of my forefathers.”
Peres knows that his forefathers had no connection whatsoever to
Palestine, as is the case with more than 95% of the Zionists who
swept into the area over the past century and demolished close to
600 villages while expelling a majority of the native population.
Historians have established that most arriving Jews were in fact
Slavic converts to Judaism without any historical or genealogical
nexus to Palestine or Hebrew tribes in the area.
Against the historical backdrop of the past century of nearly
global rejection of colonialism, his claim of settled international
acceptance of “Israel’s legitimacy” is a major stretch.
“Legitimacy” is what the conflict continues to be about — whether a
19th Century colonial enterprise can violently uproot and massacre
an indigenous population taking over a land declaring God promised
it to them, as they terrorize and expel the local inhabitants.
Contrary to Peres’ claim of Israel as a “legitimate State,” there
is no internationally recognized right for Israel to exist on
stolen land without the consent of the dispossessed. Peres assures
his American benefactors that Israel’s legitimacy is based “in
international law or morality.” In point of fact, both
International law and morality require the right of return of those
whose lands were taken and lifting the brutal occupation. Surely
Peres is aware, as the CIA Report asserts, that a majority of the
192 countries which make up the membership of the United Nations
would vote this evening to establish one State of Palestine if
given the chance.
The Report concludes that what went wrong will be debated for many
years. In essence the problem was the premise that a “chosen
people” with no link or rights to a land could impose a state by
force. Many Middle East observers believe that the two-state
solution is essentially over, but for the packing, finger-pointing
and assuredly more violence.
Increasingly repelled by Israeli crimes, the international
community is moving toward the majority position of Palestinians,
and is coming to believe that the realistic solution to the Middle
East conflict is one state — secular, multicultural, democratic,
and based on one person one vote.
Peres is loath to accept one state and claims, in promoting a
two-state solution, that he has “personally witnessed the
remarkable progress we have made with the Palestinian Authority in
recent years.”
Does he have in mind the increasing bantustanization (what Noam
Chomsky calls “unviable fragments”), the ever-snaking apartheid
wall and other barriers, the illegal outposts which increased yet
again last year? The blockade of and depraved slaughter in
Gaza?
Or does President Peres have in mind this week’s announcement by
outgoing Prime Minister Olmert that Israel has the right to keep
building in large West Bank settlement blocs, including Efrat, by
adding 423 acres so that 21,000 more residents can join the current
9,000, according to Efrat mayor Oded Revivi? Olmert claims its part
of the annexation that will be considered in a future final peace
deal with the Palestinians.
President Peres has passed nearly a lifetime devoted to undermining
prospects for a viable Palestinian state and offering a wink and
nod to the building of more than 430 colonies while offering lip
service to the “peace process.” His “Message to the American
People” fails to communicate what the Israeli and Palestinian
public knows well about the real nature of the two-state option he
has in mind and which he considers to be “the best resolution to
this age-old conflict.” Both populations know that the two-state
option that long time politician Peres has consistently run on, is
the Yigal Allon Plan.
The Allon scheme to expel the Arab population from Palestine has
been Peres’ electoral platform during his campaigns in 1974, 1977,
1981, 1984, and 1987 and it shaped Israel’s settlement policies
from 1967-1977. Peres worked to make the Allon Plan part of the
1978 Camp David agreement and 1993 Oslo Accords.
As the American public begins to stir from its long slumber on the
Question of Palestine and hopefully dramatically changes American
Middle East policy, it should consider that the Peres favored
“moderate” Allon Plan continues to be Israeli policy. As formulated
by its author and adhered to by successive Israel governments, it
contains the following “moderate” elements:
Seeking
“maximum land with minimum Arabs”
Annexes approximately 40% of the West Bank and Gaza, taking the
choicest parts
Dispossess Palestinians from land Israel wants for
Jews
After Israel’s attack in 1967, Yigal Allon presented to the cabinet
a solution to the Arab problem. The Allon Plan called for annexing
the following areas: “a strip of land ten to fifteen kilometers
wide along the Jordan River; most of the Judean desert along the
Dead Sea; and a substantial area around Greater Jerusalem,
including the Latrun salient.” The plan was crafted to include as
few Arabs as possible in the area claimed for Israel and included
building permanent colonies and army bases in these areas.
The two-state solution that Peres is trying to sell the American
public and administration is a Palestinian “state” in 76.6% of the
West Bank, carved up into sealed enclaves, with the largest of the
430 plus settlements/colonies remaining in place under Israeli
sovereignty. Israel would take another 13.3% outright and continue
to occupy the remaining 10.1% for a period of up to thirty years.
During this period Israel would continue building new and expanding
current settlement/colonies. The above percentages do not include
the subtracted East Jerusalem and the territorial waters of the
Dead Sea. In point of fact the 76% offer is based not on 100% of
the occupied territories, but merely those parts that Israel was
willing to discuss. Consequently, the “just and moral solution”
President Peres favors would amount to slightly less than 16% of
historic Palestine being given to those driven from their homes and
land.
Peres claims Israel has worked tirelessly for peace. Yet the record
is clear that Israel has only worked tirelessly for expansion at
the expense of the indigenous Arab population while obstructing
more than two-dozen “peace initiatives” over six decades, while
targeting the Palestinian people, culture, and economy.
Peres claims in his op-ed that Libyan leader Muammar Qadaffi agrees
that Israel deserves Palestine and that “this is salient in his
fundamental and central premise that the Jewish people want and
deserve their homeland.” Peres takes Qadaffi’s words out of context
and misrepresents his thesis, which in fact calls for one state
shared by both peoples. Qadaffi insists that the Middle East
welcomes Judaism but not racist Zionism. It is the latter which
underpins the founding of Israel and which has led to history’s
condemnation.
As the President of Israel seeks yet more indulgence and largesse
from the American taxpayers and the Obama administration, there is
something he can do to shore up waning trust and waxing
disillusionment with the two-state option. He can announce
immediately that he fully accepts UN Security Council Resolution
242 and advocates the removal of all settlements and the total
withdrawal of the Israeli military from the West Bank and
Gaza.
Israel’s President urges the American people and government to,
“commit our most concerted effort to allow two states to flourish.”
Unless he and his fellow leaders of Israel are prepared, without
further delay, to commit to a complete withdrawal to the June 4,
1967 armistice line, in a serious effort at peace, Israel will
continue to lose American and international support and one state
is the likely future for Palestine.
Israeli President Peres can avert his eyes from reality, but the
Obama administration and the American people cannot afford this
fatal delusion.
Franklin
Lamb is author of the recently released book,
The Price We Pay: A Quarter Century of Israel's Use
of American Weapons in Lebanon. His volume Hezbollah: A Brief
Guide for Beginners is due out soon. He can be reached at
fplamb@gmail.com. Read other articles by Franklin.