By Craig Murray
February 03, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - I have
read through the
entire 181 pages of Trump’s “peace deal” for
Israel, and it is breathtaking. It is not just that
the “solution” it proposes is ludicrously one-sided,
it is the entire analysis of the problem to be
solved which reads as pure, unadulterated zionist
propaganda.
For example, the word “violence” is used
repeatedly. But it only ever refers to violence by
Arabs. There is not one single mention of violence
by Israel against the Palestinians, even though the
ratio of killing between Israelis and Palestinians
over the last ten years is approximately 80:1 . The
only mention of violence against Palestinians at all
relates to Kuwaiti expulsion of Palestinian refugees
after the first Gulf war.
The analysis of the refugee issue is the same.
Nowhere can the paper bring itself to note the key
historic fact, that the Palestinian refugees were
expelled from Israel. The paper treats Palestinian
refugees as if they had simply materialised as an
inconvenient phenomenon, like a plague of locusts.
This “othering” of Palestinian refugees permeates
the entire paper:
It must be stressed that many Palestinian
refugees in the Middle East come from war torn
countries, such as Syria and Lebanon that are
extremely hostile toward the State of Israel
No. Palestinian refugees were driven by violence
from the land that is now Israel. Families who lived
there two generations ago have been displaced in
favour of families who claim the land because their
ancestors lived there eighty generations ago. That
is a matter of indisputable fact.
You can claim that displacement of the
Palestinians from Israel was justifiable because of
the urgent need for a state for Jewish people after
the Holocaust. You can claim that the displacement
of Palestinians from Israel is justifiable because
it is divinely ordained. You can claim the
displacement of Palestinians from Israel is
regrettable but irreversible. Make what argument you
wish, but to refuse to acknowledge the basic fact
that the Palestinian refugees were driven from
Israel is a pathetic act of cowardice that
underlines the sheer intellectual shoddiness of the
paper.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
The “deal” makes a direct equivalence between
Palestinian refugees and “the Jewish refugees who
were forced to flee from Arab and Muslim countries”.
The language here is extremely revealing. The Jewish
refugees “were forced to flee”. There is no
hesitation about this claim of victimhood. Whereas
there is no acknowledgement at all that the
Palestinian refugees “were forced to flee” by the
Israelis.
It is undoubtedly a valid point that many Jews
were disgracefully and involuntarily driven out by
Arab nations, and their suffering is too often
overlooked. However to claim the numbers are
equivalent is to ignore the fact that a significant
portion of the Jewish population of Arab states
moved voluntarily to the new homeland, whereas none
of the Palestinians expelled from Israel left
voluntarily. But the more glaring fact ignored in
the paper is that the majority of the Jewish
refugees from Arab lands were given the property of
Palestinian refugees in Israel. The claim that both
sides are in equal need of compensation is therefore
a nonsense.
The failure to admit the Palestinian refugees
were driven out of Israel panders disgracefully to
the most extreme zionist propaganda, which claims
that the land was empty before the Israelis settled
it in 1948. This is a classic colonist origin myth,
used repeatedly by the British Empire, by white
settlers in the USA, and of course by apartheid
South Africa. When the Trump deal was first
published, I was genuinely astonished to find
twitter awash with thousands of tweets claiming the
Palestinians do not exist as a people. This is an
extraordinarily prevalent racist trope among
zionists and appears to be not policed on the
internet at all. I have read hundreds of articles
about the hateful phenomenon of anti-semitism in the
mainstream media. I don’t think I have ever seen
this extreme zionist racism of “there is no such
thing as Palestinians” ever mentioned in the MSM as
a problem. But zionist racism is a huge problem, and
it underlies the fundamental analysis of the Trump
paper.
If you cannot bring yourself to
acknowledge, even once in 181 pages, that the
Palestinian inhabitants were driven out of Israel,
there is no chance the proposals built on these
fundamentally dishonest foundations will be solid.
The Trump paper has three fundamental “solutions”
to the Palestinian refugee issue.
1) Only those originally displaced to be deemed
refugees, not their families.
2) Not one single refugee to be allowed to return to
Israel (yes, it does actually say that)
3) No compensation to be paid to refugees by Israel
I have often pointed out that the proposed “two
state solution” for Palestine has always been no
more and no less than the
old apartheid policy of “Bantustans” in South
Africa, where the indigenous population were herded
into six self-governing and four supposedly
“independent states”.
It is worth pointing out that the apotheosis of
the apartheid system, the Bantu Self-Governing Act
of 1959, was given Royal Assent by Queen Elizabeth
II, a point now rather skated over by a false
narrative that apartheid was a solely Afrikaaner
project post-Independence.
The major similarity that I had been pointing out
with Bantustans was revealed by the map: fractured
lands, not forming any kind of economically viable
unit. Trump proposes Israeli annexation of the whole
of the Jordan Valley, of North Jerusalem and large
areas of the West Bank, the remnant of which is to
be shattered by 15 Israeli sovereign settlements
connected by Israeli only roads. Trump’s “Palestine”
is very plainly not viable.
But the Trump proposals for how “Palestine” will
run, make the Bantustan comparison still more stark.
Indeed, the restrictions on the so-called “state” of
Palestine under the Trump plan from having its own
military or security forces are even greater than
those imposed on the Bantustans by apartheid South
Africa. Trump also proposes that Israel should have
the right to stop Palestinian refugees from the
wider diaspora entering the new “state” of
Palestine.
A “state” not permitted to define its own
citizens is not a state.
It does not stop there. The “state” is to have no
right to a territorial sea or exclusive economic
zone, with its sea to be given to Israel in
contravention of the UN Convention on the Law of the
Sea. It is not to be allowed to conclude treaties
without Israeli consent. It is not even to be
allowed to open a port but to be forced to import
and export goods through Israeli ports – in other
words, the Israeli economic blockade is to continue
on the new “state”. Plainly, even apart from the
unviable fracturing and the shrunk territory, the
administrative arrangements proposed make no attempt
to reach the level of statehood.
Surely, then, the proponents of the “two state
solution” must have reacted strongly to this
betrayal of their proposal?
Well, no.
In many ways the most incredible thing about the
Trump proposals is how welcoming the western powers
were. The general reaction from all European
governments was that these are serious proposals
with which the Palestinians must engage. While the
ridiculous assessment from Dominic Raab that “this
is clearly a serious proposal” is perhaps what you
would expect from a state looking to the US for
economic crumbs, the Palestinians might legitimately
have expected better from the EU than the official
response, which welcomed Trump’s “commitment to a
two state solution”, of France which “welcomes
Donald Trump’s efforts”, and
of Germany which “appreciates that the president
is sticking to the two state solution”.
The Palestinians were probably less disappointed
by the support of the traitorous dictatorships of
the Saudi and other Gulf States for their close
Israeli ally, which is par for the course. But the
fact that the international community recognises as
a proposed “two state solution” a paper which in no
sense whatsoever establishes a Palestinian state
within any normal definition of the word, should
tell us something important.
As I have repeatedly stated, those who trumpeted
the “two state solution” have always been
con-artists who do not believe in a viable
Palestinian state at all. The fact that Blair and
Bush, two dedicated ultra-zionists, stood in the
Rose Garden
and promised a “two state solution” as part of
their propaganda for the Iraq War and other Middle
East invasions, really should have shown people of
goodwill this was a blind alley. The Trump proposals
are a betrayal of the Palestinians, of course. But
they are not unique to Trump and they are exactly
what Blair, Bush and all the zionist apologists
intended all along.
The “two state solution” was always a con.
There is no viable two state solution. To create
a viable Palestinian state alongside a viable
Israeli state would now involve highly undesirable
further forced movements of population. The only
long term solution for Palestine/Israel is, as with
South Africa, a single state in which everybody has
a vote and everybody is treated equally,
irrespective of ethnicity, creed or gender.
Trump may, peculiarly, have done one good thing
with these ludicrously unfair proposals. He has
exposed the hollowness of the “two state solution”,
and the pretence that it offers any justice to the
Palestinians of way forward towards peace.
Craig Murray is an author, broadcaster and
human rights activist. He was British Ambassador to
Uzbekistan from August 2002 to October 2004 and
Rector of the University of Dundee from 2007 to
2010.
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk
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