Wednesday, September 14, 2011 - 6:06 PM

While the relentless pace of developments in the Middle East shows little sign of flagging, the region will briefly cast its gaze to New York next week -- with the backdrop for the next installment on Israel-Palestine being provided by Manhattan's East side digs of the United Nations. Any thoughts of the Arab awakening "proving" that Palestine was in fact a marginal concern in the region were unequivocally banished in recent weeks. To imagine that a popular Arab push for democracy, freedom, and dignity would ignore Israel's denial of those same aspirations for Palestinians was a flight of fancy. The opposite is unsurprisingly proving true -- Arab democracy will be less tolerant of Palestinian disenfranchisement than was Arab autocracy.
What is actually likely to happen to the Palestinian effort at the United Nations and what might it mean for all concerned?
Even at this late stage it is unclear exactly which U.N. option, if any, the Palestinian Liberation Organization (for it is the PLO that is still the diplomatic-political address for the Palestinians) will pursue. That should not be such a surprise -- opacity is part of any negotiation and last minute decisions are the bread and butter of international diplomacy, in this case compounded by the uncertainty and absence of a clear strategy on the part of the Palestinian leadership. Their U.N. options basically fall into three baskets: do nothing, go for membership at the Security Council, or go for an upgrade at the General Assembly.
The United States is still applying pressure on the Palestinians to pull back altogether from any U.N. effort and U.S. envoys will be in the region again this week arm-twisting (Palestinian arms that is; Israeli arms will be free to continue their post Arab Spring flailing routine).
The Quartet also continues to be engaged with producing a joint statement, the goal of which -- beyond demonstrating that they still know how to issue statements -- is difficult to fathom. Another Quartet run at producing parameters for a two-state deal or for resuming negotiations (after July's debacle) would likely produce an unhelpful text and be of strictly limited utility at this stage. The kind of Quartet compromise that the United States is willing to promote will not break the negotiations logjam and may even set back any revival of belief in a two-state peace. It would also waste a potentially potent Quartet tool by having it deployed in such unpromising circumstances. All a Quartet statement might achieve is to help the United States heap further blame on the Palestinians for "running to the U.N." and further confuse European member states, providing some with new reasons to oppose a Palestinian U.N. resolution and others with more cover to support one.
A combination of pressure and Quartet statements is still unlikely to dissuade the Palestinians from their U.N. course. For the current Palestinian leadership to drop the U.N. bid without getting something dramatic (and clearly not on offer) in return would amount to political hara-kiri -- not something that U.S. or Israeli leaders (or Europeans for that matter) should, on reflection, have much of an appetite for. As a new International Crisis Group (ICG) report argues:
Attempts to persuade or pressure Abbas to renounce the UN bid also make short shrift of -- or, worse, misread - the realities of Palestinian politics. If he were to postpone it...he would likely face a crippling domestic challenge by constituents who have long lost any faith in negotiations and to whom the leadership has built up the UN option for months. Most Palestinians do not strongly support the UN bid; but they would strongly oppose a decision to retract it without suitable compensation.
Assuming therefore that the Palestinians do intend to pursue something at the United Nations, their choices are to go to the Security Council or the General Assembly, or both, in either order.
Despite some suggestions to the contrary, the only viable Palestinian path to full U.N. membership is via the Security Council, and that route is blocked by the certainty of a U.S. veto. Failure at the Security Council may itself be a drawn-out process. Any application would almost certainly have to be considered by a technical committee of the whole and that could take time. The Palestinians would then deny themselves the option of going from defeat at the Security Council to an immediate win at the General Assembly during this window of heightened U.N. attention. They might even find their entire U.N. moment sidestepped by extended committee deliberation.
While neither the United States nor the Palestinians will emerge unscathed from a Security Council showdown, this course of action might actually be the easiest fix for preserving the status quo (undesirable as that is). The Palestinian leadership could rue the injustice of the world and indulge in its favored pastime of righteous indignation, but it would be spared the hard choices associated with going down the path of accumulating leverage and challenging Israel. The journey back to the golden cage of Palestinian Authority (PA) co-habitation with Israeli occupation is a shorter one from the Security Council than it is from the General Assembly.
Israel could much more easily brush off a Palestinian Security Council failure than a General Assembly success. One can imagine Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu berating Palestinian President Abbas but asserting that he is still ready for negotiations without conditions at any time -- a tri-fecta of domestic political win, great PR message, and an easier path for continuing to work with the PA as if nothing had happened (remembering that the continued functioning of the PA and security cooperation are above all an Israeli interest). Israeli messaging might even encourage Congress to maintain its PA and especially PA security funding.
There are certainly more ingredients in play if the Palestinians go to the General Assembly and secure, albeit by increment, an improvement in their leverage vis Israel. The details of the text of any resolution at the General Assembly will become the focus of attention, given the reasonable assumption of obtaining a majority. There is a consensus that one element of a General Assembly resolution will be for the Palestinians to upgrade their status to non-member state. This is often described as the "Vatican option," but it should be remembered that more "real" countries have often spent time in the non-member state antechamber: Switzerland, South Korea, the former West Germany, and others. This upgrading would enhance the Palestinian capacity to join several international organizations and accede to certain human rights treaties, which could then be appealed to were Israel in violation of provisions covered by those treaties. The most powerful example of this is the International Criminal Court (ICC) (the minutiae of that issue are well-covered in ICG's report). Expect other components of wording in a resolution to be discussed right until the last moment, including possible parameters for a two-state deal that would include acknowledgement of Israel and language making it easier for Europe to clarify that the resolution does not prejudge bilateral recognition of Palestine at this time.
Given all of the above, perhaps the most piercing questions that need to be answered in the coming days are for the Palestinians themselves. It is fairly clear that a resolution passed by the General Assembly will create certain new Palestinian leverage with Israel and some enhanced deterrent effect when it comes to possible Israeli operations, such as a repeat of Cast Lead (the flip side also holds true -- a defeat at the Security Council further weakens deterrence and enhances Israel's sense of impunity).
With these uncertainties in mind there is still room for speculation as to what the scorecard might look like when this U.N. season is behind us.
Neither Israel nor the PLO will have seized the opportunity to significantly advance their respective interests. For Israel the option existed to engage with a U.N. initiative and to start re-setting its relations in a changing region. Israel could have assuaged suspicions regarding its permanent designs on the Occupied Territories and co-operated in promoting a resolution recognizing two states based on the 1967 lines (allowing also for land swaps) and supporting resumed negotiations. By recognizing Palestine, Israel could have deep-sixed the growing traction for a future one-state political dispensation and achieved something close to global, including Arab, recognition for Israel's own existence.
The Palestinians might have used the U.N. move to emphatically break with two decades of "peace-processing" based on the flawed premise that U.S. and Israeli goodwill, rather than accumulated leverage, would overcome asymmetries of power. The PLO could have announced a diplomatic and non-violent campaign both locally and internationally to generate costs to Israel for continued occupation -- utilizing the tools of international law, consequences, and popular unarmed struggle.
Instead, the Palestinian leadership remains captive to the Israeli and donor-dependent system of occupation management entrenched over time by the Oslo process. Their U.N. move is intended to vent frustration, not to be game-changing. The Netanyahu government appears to possess neither the political dexterity nor ideological propensity for de-occupation -- which are prerequisites for pursuing its own winning path. A Palestinian or Israeli U.N. victory will therefore be on points rather than by KO. That still matters and will produce a result with implications for the political futures of the individuals concerned and the currents they represent. Netanyahu may bounce back from his dreadful summer of social protests or fall further in his public's standing. Abbas may buy some time at home with a relative show of diplomatic strength or sink deeper into oblivion -- this in advance of the next moves in the internal Palestinian reconciliation process.
Most of the points waiting to be notched up reside in Europe. If there is to be a U.N. vote, then the EU member states are the sought after prize. Europe could score something of a win itself if the EU can present a sufficiently unified front and hold true to its values, interests, and policies by supporting Palestinian statehood and negotiating a text with the Palestinians that also delivers certain strategic Israeli needs -- even if these are neither acknowledged as such nor appreciated by the Netanyahu government. Alternatively, Europe will split and sulk back to its off-off-Broadway role as payer, not player.
Europe's salience is a bi-product of America's self-marginalization. Whatever the outcome, the United States is guaranteed to be the real loser in all of this. For domestic political reasons the Obama administration is committed to oppose any U.N. initiative not authorized by Israel and to cajole and convince other countries to do likewise. The United States will find itself isolated, blamed for its own vote and the "no's" of others, weakening its Palestinian friends while frittering away further diplomatic capital, and all at such a delicate time in the Middle East. Having previously been aligned with Arab autocracies, the U.S. could have opened a new chapter post-Arab awakening. Instead, with Arab public opinion now a driving force, the United States will further alienate itself from popular sentiment by (again) trampling Palestinian rights. Making matters worse for President Obama, the relationship with Netanyahu is wholly unidirectional. According to ex- Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Netanyahu is "ungrateful" and U.S. interests (let alone Obama's own needs) do not figure in his calculations.
Those interests, and America's regional alliances, are being stretched to snapping point by the excesses of Israeli belligerence toward the neighborhood and dismissiveness toward the Palestinians under its current coalition. Democratic Turkey and democratizing Egypt are increasingly unable or unwilling to feign indifference. Israeli hegemony faces new and serious challenges. The unraveling of Israel's regional relations could make New York a sideshow, and a tame one at that. If Israel chooses to take punitive counter-measures against the Palestinians -- withholding tax revenues belonging to the PA, annexing settlements, or responding violently to unarmed marches (and if the Uunited States joins suit by cutting its own PA funding) -- then events could spiral in dangerous and unpredictable ways. The PLO move at the United Nations is not an incitement to violence by any reasonable measure -- but the Netanyahu government's response might become just that.
Watching from the sidelines with a mixture of amusement and bemusement will be America's emerging global competitors from the BRIC countries and beyond. After the recent Congressional debt-ceiling debacle, a U.N. display of the United States tying itself in knots and squandering reputational currency due to its inability to manage relations with a country so in its debt, will offer further evidence of Washington's unreliability as a competent world leader.
Daniel Levy directs the Middle East Task Force at the New America Foundation and is an editor of the Middle East Channel.
AFP/Getty images
EXPLORE:MIDDLE EAST, MIDDLE EAST POSTER 3, FLASH POINTS, MIDDLE EAST, INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, ISRAEL/PALESTINE, OBAMA ADMINISTRATION, U.S. CONGRESS, U.S. FOREIGN POLICY, UNITED NATIONS
The world also recognized that the solution to that problem could not be found either in "separation" (apartheid in Afrikaans) and scattered native reservations (called "independent states" by the South African regime and Bantustans by the rest of the world) or in driving the settler-colonial group in power into the sea.
Culturismo sin Tonterias
Ah there we go, another Palestinian supporter offering up the
true intention. Crack that whip, drive the Jews into the sea. Nasser himself couldn't have said it better, and he did.
Of course the last time he said that, Israel wound up in control of the West Bank.
Be careful what you wish for Jesus, it could come back and bite you.
An altogether excellent analysis
I have just one quibble, highlighted here:
"Neither Israel nor the PLO will have seized the opportunity to significantly advance their respective interests. For Israel the option existed to engage with a U.N. initiative and to start re-setting its relations in a changing region. Israel could have assuaged suspicions regarding its permanent designs on the Occupied Territories "...etc., etc., etc.
That statement rather presupposes that Israel's "interests" DON'T include the annexation of the occupied territories.
But.... what if Israel "interests" DO include exactly that i.e. Israel sees its national interest being best served by continuing to maneouvre itself so that one day it can finally - hurrah! - annex those territories?
If that is the case then any "assuaging of suspicions" is nothing but duplicity, precisely because those suspicions are actually well-founded.
Or, put another way: you appear to be assuming that Israel's "inability to seize the opportunity" derives from ineptness, or stupidity, or rigidity.
But there is an alternative explanation: Israel knows exactly what it is doing when it refuses to seize this opportunity, precisely because it wants something else entirely: it wants that land, and it hasn't given up hope that, some day, it'll come up with A Cunning Plan to keep it.
Until then it'll cling to that land like Grim Death, because once the IDF lets go of that territory Israel will never be able to get it back.
Settlements are a 20 year old issue in a 70 year old conflict
Even if Israel completely withdrew from the Occupied Territories, it wouldn't fundamentally change the conflict.
"Even if Israel completely withdrew...."
And if pigs could fly we would all have to carry umbrellas.
"Settlements are a 20 year old issue in a 70 year old conflict"
Which means that for the last 20 years (40 years, actually) they have had a TRANSFORMING effect on this conflict.
Or are you suggesting that those settlements were never intended by Israel to be transformative events?
In which case, why did Israel - alone amongst modern occupations - decide that having a "settlement enterprise" was A Good Idea Well Worth Pursuing Above All Others?
Conflicts can start for any number of reasons, but it is not at all unknown that by the time they END they were being fought for An Alltogether Different Reason.
After all, wars themselves do rather tend to be transformative, as well as being traumatic.
This is a conflict that has continued for 70 years, and during that time the world has changed many times over. Why, exactly, would you think that the world can turn up-side down but *this* particular conflict can not do likewise?
You're right that the settlement project was a huge mistake. But now, as you who must think yourself a realist must agree, the fact is that they are there today. You seem captivated with these settlements, and I can understand why. But I do think that the notion of letting Israel annex a few of them and dismantling others in a way agreed to by Palestinian negotiators is not completely impossible. You can attempt to claim superiority over this opinion but you don't really know any better than I do what the future holds and claiming to is hubris to the Nth degree. No one knows the future.
It is completely impossible, BIGOT EATER
The reason why Netanyahu so violently rejects the concept of "1967 lines with agreed swaps" is not because he doesn't like the "1967 lines" bit, but because he does not like the "agree swaps" bit.
He wants the settlements.
He rejects any notion that he can't have the settlements.
He will not accept any agreement that gives up the settlements.
But here is the rub: he **also** rejects the notion that he has to pay to keep them.
He wants them gratis.
He wants them for free.
He wants them GIFTED to him.
That's why the very idea of "negotiating" with Netanyahu is a waste of time UNLESS the fate of those settlements is *really* put on the table, precisely because the very core of Netanyahu's belief is that Those Settlements Already Belong To Him.
And if they already belong to him, well, gosh, why should he have to pay anything to keep them?
the coming war in the Holy Land
Military whistleblower tells of 'indiscriminate' Israeli attacks
Troops fired tear gas during a curfew in a West Bank village to stop peaceful demonstrations
By Donald Macintyre
Friday, 16 September 2011
Israeli troops fired tear gas indiscriminately and sometimes dangerously to enforce a daytime curfew inside a West Bank village to stop Palestinians holding a peaceful demonstration on their own land, a military whistleblower has told The Independent.
The soldier's insight into the methods of troops comes as the Israeli military prepares for demonstrations predicted when the Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas submits an application for the recognition of statehood to the UN next week.
The testimony also reinforces a report by the human rights agency B'Tselem which argues that the way Israel deals with protests in the small village of Nabi Saleh is denying the "basic right" to demonstrate in the West Bank. The right to demonstrate is enshrined in international conventions ratified by Israel.
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The soldier, a reservist NCO with extensive combat experience, was among more than 20 soldiers sent into the village more than two hours before a planned Friday demonstration in July, to try to quash protests before they began. The protests started in December 2009 after Jewish settlers appropriated a spring on privately-owned Nabi Saleh land.
The reservist, who originally testified to the veterans' organisation Breaking the Silence, told The Independent that they went into a house in the village and took a position on the roof. "The sun was very hot, but we had to keep our helmets on," he said. "Then some soldiers start getting bored and start shooting tear gas on people. Every guy who is not in his house or in the mosque is a target."
He said that 150 rounds of tear gas or stun grenades were fired during the day and one soldier boasted that he had fired a tear gas canister which passed within one centimetre of a resident's head.
Army rules prohibit firing canisters directly at people because they have caused serious injuries in the past. Another soldier travelling with the whistleblower in a military vehicle out of the village was left with an unfired tear gas canister.
"He should have fired it into an open field but we passed a grocery story with some people outside it with children. After we passed it he just turned round and fired it at them."
The reservist was given a week's preparation on the use of stun grenades, rubber bullets and tear gas. He had been impressed by a four to five -hour visit to the trainees by the Binyamin Brigade Commander Sa'ar Tzur who addressed "issues of ethics and human life, not just on our side but on the other side".
Some soldiers complained about the strictness of prohibitions – not always honoured, according to the leaders of the weekly Nabi Saleh protests – on the use of live ammunition. But Colonel Tzur "was very strict on the fact that these are the rules and that anyone who breaks them will pay for it".
But the battalion officer, a religious West Bank settler, was "exactly the opposite," he added. "At the base there was a mission statement signed by the Brigade Commander which said 'we need to maintain the fabric of life for the civilian population, Israelis and Palestinians.' The battalion officer crossed out the word 'Palestinians' and all the soldiers around started laughing."
The reservist's testimony supports B'Tselem's s main conclusions, including that the military makes "excessive use of crowd control weapons, primarily the firing of tear-gas canisters."
He said: "It was very difficult for me. I want to be in the army to defend my country. On the other hand I saw that the job I was doing did not have any connection with defending Israel."
He said that his unit was called to the village square when the battalion officer showed around 40 Palestinians and foreign activists a written order declaring the village a "closed military zone." The soldiers had earlier heard shouting elsewhere by demonstrators before they were almost immediately dispersed by border police firing tear gas. The reservist said the people in the square "were just standing there. The officer said to the soldiers: 'Everybody should get out of here. The Palestinians into their homes and the foreigners should get out. Anyone left should be arrested.' One Palestinian was arrested when a soldier decided that he had 'looked at him in a way he didn't like'."
As well as 35 Palestinian injuries in Nabi Saleh this year, there have been 80 detentions since the protests began, including of 18 minors, and protest leader Bassem Tamimi, currently awaiting military trial based largely on the interrogation of a 14-year-old boy arrested at home at gunpoint at 2am.
The military said it has "clear, detailed, and professional guidelines" for the use of tear gas to disperse "riots", and that after two years of "dangerous and violent riots" it declared the village a "closed military area" on Fridays to "prevent these riots before they turn into violent ones".
The military's tactics have varied. A 13-year-old Palestinian boy was seriously injured by a rubber-coated bullet fired at close range during protracted clashes between armed troops and stone-throwing youths observed last year by The Independent. Those clashes started when troops fired tear gas and rubber bullets on the hitherto peaceful march towards the spring.
The reservist said he had seen no stones thrown on the day he was there. adding: "If they want to stop people throwing stones at the spring, why don't [the troops] wait at the spring? Why are they coming into the village?" He added: "The headline of the whole Friday, as I see
Next time post a link, not the entire wall of text!!!
What's the matter Cometlinear, don't like to read the about what is happening in the West Bank?
I'm sure your one of those who say that Isreal is hated because of Palistinian teachings, but as you can see, Isreal is the best teacher of hate.
Settlements are built less because of hate for palestinians and more because of simple disregard for them and their national history, which is just as legitimate as its Hebrew counterpart. The driving force behind the settlement movement is not a bunch of people going out and thinking, "how can we fuck up people's nationalistic dignity today?" and more like, "Ooh, I'm so religious that I'm going to go build my house in the land where our ancestors lived".
With the right wing party, much like in the US, panders to the religious, who have seen suicide bombings and were blinded by the inherent evil in such acts. They reflexively disregard Palestinians and their counterparts, for them it is and has always been "Israel." The fact that they don't have to do army service just seals the deal in pissing me off too.
But as I was saying, with a green light from many government administrations more interested in votes and power than the people, these religious nuts from Israel seized on their opportunity to do their little religious thing.
In my opinion, these people are idiots that endanger their own people. I am a fervent atheist too, so believe me, I hate all extremism in religions equally, both Jew and Muslim. Oh and Irish I guess.
Suffice to say, Israel is not evil. It's run by schmucks and successful criminals however. If we want to improve the disourse we have to start learning to distinguish between government and its people.
IN THE MATTER OF THE PALESTINIAN BID FOR MEMBERSHIP IN THE UN...
...THE U.S. MIGHT JUST BE HOIST BY ITS OWN RESOLUTION 377 PETARD, SO TO SPEAK.
"For tis the sport to have the enginer Hoist with his owne petar" ~ Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act III, Scene iv
PETARD - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petard
IN 1950, THE U.S. MUSCLED RESOLUTION 377 A THROUGH THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY IN ORDER TO BYPASS THE SOVIET VETO IN THE SECURITY COUNCIL, AND GET UN TROOPS INVOLVED IN THE KOREAN CONFLICT.
FROM WIKIPEDIA:
(excerpts)United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) resolution 377 A,[1] the "Uniting for Peace" resolution, states that in any cases where the Security Council, because of a lack of unanimity amongst its five permanent members, fails to act as required to maintain international peace and security, the General Assembly shall consider the matter immediately and may issue any recommendations it deems necessary in order to restore international peace and security. If not in session at the time the General Assembly may meet using the mechanism of the emergency special session...
...The Uniting for Peace resolution was initiated by the United States,[7] and submitted by the "Joint Seven-Powers"[8] in October 1950, as a means of circumventing further Soviet vetoes during the course of the Korean War (25 June 1950 – 27 July 1953). It was adopted by 52 votes to 5,[9] with 2 abstentions.[10]...
SOURCE - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_General_Assembly_Resolution_377
ALSO SEE - http://www.pcusa.org/blogs/swords-plowshares/2011/8/24/united-nations-israel-and-palestine-palestine-unit/

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