George S. Hishmeh
The Jordan Times (Opinion)
May 27, 2011 - 12:00am
http://www.jordantimes.com/?news=37884


Why is Benjamin Netanyahu, the right-wing Israeli prime minister, so ungracious to the United Nations, which helped create the state of Israel, and to Barack Obama, the American president who is eager to end the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, and who declared that time may not be on the side of Israel, especially when the Arab Spring is still sweeping the Middle East?

The arrogant Israeli leader “lectured” - others described it as “chastising” even “rebuking” - the American president in their face-to-face meeting last week when all Obama did was to repeat the American position vis-à-vis a Palestinian-Israeli settlement, a position voiced by all his predecessors since the creation of Israel by the UN General Assembly 63 years ago this month. The only change was that Obamamentioned the date, 1967,when Israel occupied all of Palestine and Syrian and Egyptian border areas.

Weeks before Britain terminated its mandate in Palestine on May 15, 1948, the UN General Assembly, which had been debating that Middle East crisis, realised that a vote on the proposed partitioning of Palestine would not pass.Only 30 countries, against 16 and 10 abstaining, favoured the draft resolution, that is, one short of the two-thirds majority needed for its passage. Both sides applied pressure on the members and reportedly with some American arms twisting, Haiti, Liberia and the Philippines switched their votes, facilitating the passage of the creation of Israel and giving a smaller portion to the Palestinian Arabs.

(For the record, then Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru said Zionists had tried to bribe India with millions of dollars and Liberia’s ambassador in Washington complained that the US delegation threatened to cut financial aid to several countries.)

Now, Israel is vehemently against the Palestinians seeking recognition from the UN General Assembly in September and, much to the shock of Palestinians, Obama has joined hands with the Netanyahu government just as he did when Israel refused, last year, to freeze all Israeli settlement activity in the West Bank, a position that derailed the peace talks about to start then.

The so-called “Middle East Week”in Washington was hardly a game changer. Netanyahu has repeated his rejection of Obama’s position that peace talks should resume on the basis of the 1967 armistice lines, wanting sanction for Israeli landgrab, amounting to an additional 25 per cent of the occupied Palestinian territoryit won beyond its proposed 1948 borderline and in the 1967 war against Syria, Jordan and Egypt.

Moreover, Netanyahu declared last Tuesday before the US Congress,where he was applauded more than two dozen times, often members standing up and cheering, that Israel will refuse dividing Jerusalem andallowing Palestinian refugees to return to their occupied homes, in compliance with the UN General Assembly Resolution 194, passed on December 11, 1948.

President Obama’s suggestions for a Palestinian-Israeli settlement were interestingly voiced on the eve of Netanyahu’s arrival in Washington.He noted that “at a time when the people of the Middle East and North Africa are casting off the burdens of the past (as ushered by the Arab Spring), the drive for a lasting peace that ends the (Palestinian-Israeli) conflict and resolves all claims is more urgent that ever”.

In a “non-militarised” Palestine state, he proposed that the attention of the two parties focus primarily on defining the borders of the two states, as well as on all related security issues.

In a statement at the State Department before a large audience that included Arab and Israeli ambassadors, he suggested that the other “core issues” - Jerusalem and the case of the Palestinian refugees - be discussed at a second stage.

Obama’s remarks, including a later address before the pro-Israel lobby American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), hardly generated new ideas.

Although the Palestinians appeared satisfied that Obama rekindled the focus on the 1967 armistice line, his suggestion that the Palestine state be demilitarised and that the unity agreement between the two Palestinian factions, Fateh and Hamas, raised “profound and legitimate questions from Israel” upset many Arabs.

His failure to underline the occupation of the Arab sector of Jerusalem as well as the continued Israeli settlement activities in the West Bank where some Israeli Cabinet ministers and senior officials live, are shocking.

If Obama chooses to be even handed, as he sometimes appears to be, he ought to suggest to his Democratic Party to invite Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to address Congress and hear the other side of the story; and certainly pay a visit to the White House. This would certainly amount to more than the half step he has taken so far.




TAGS:



American Task Force on Palestine - 1634 Eye St. NW, Suite 725, Washington DC 20006 - Telephone: 202-262-0017