Duh,
Jared! So Who Built the PA as a ‘Police
State’?
By
Jonathan Cook
February 07, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -Maybe
something good will come out of the Trump
plan, after all. By pushing the Middle East
peace process to its logical conclusion,
Donald Trump has made crystal clear
something that was supposed to have been
obscured: that no US administration has ever
really seen peace as the objective of its
“peacemaking”.
The current White
House is no exception – it has just been far more
incompetent at concealing its joint strategy with
the Israelis. But that is what happens when a
glorified used-car salesman, Donald Trump, and his
sidekick son-in-law, the schoolboy-cum-businessman
Jared Kushner, try selling us the “deal of the
century”. Neither, it seems, has the political or
diplomatic guile normally associated with those who
rise to high office in Washington.
During an interview with
CNN’s Fareed Zakaria this week, Kushner dismally
failed to cloak the fact that his “peace” plan was
designed with one goal only: to screw the
Palestinians over.
The real aim is so
transparent that even Zakaria couldn’t stop himself
from pointing it out. In CNN’s words, he noted that
“no Arab country currently satisfies the
requirements Palestinians are being expected to meet
in the next four years – including ensuring freedom
of press, free and fair elections, respect for human
rights for its citizens, and an independent
judiciary.”
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
Trump’s senior
adviser suddenly found himself confronted with the
kind of deadly, unassailable logic usually
overlooked in CNN coverage. Zakaria observed:
“Isn’t this just
a way of telling the Palestinians you’re never
actually going to get a state because … if no
Arab countries today [are] in a position that
you are demanding of the Palestinians before
they can be made a state, effectively, it’s a
killer amendment?”
Indeed it is.
In fact, the “Peace
to Prosperity” document unveiled last
week by the White House is no more than a list of
impossible preconditions the Palestinians must meet
to be allowed to sit down with the Israelis at the
negotiating table. If they don’t do so within four
years, and quickly reach a deal, the very last
slivers of their historic homeland – the parts not
already seized by Israel – can be grabbed too, with
US blessing.
Preposterous
Conditions
Admittedly, all
Middle East peace plans in living memory have
foisted these kinds of prejudicial conditions on the
Palestinians. But this time many of the
preconditions are so patently preposterous –
contradictory even – that the usually pliable
corporate press corps are embarrassed to be seen
ignoring the glaring inconsistencies.
The CNN exchange was
so revealing in part because Kushner was triggered
by Zakaria’s observation that the Palestinians had
to become a model democracy – a kind of idealized
Switzerland, while still under belligerent Israeli
occupation – before they could be considered
responsible enough for statehood.
How was that
plausible, Zakaria hinted, when Saudi Arabia,
despite its appalling human rights abuses,
nonetheless remains a close strategic US ally, and
Saudi leaders continue to be intimates of the Trump
business empire? No one in Washington is seriously
contemplating removing US recognition of Saudi
Arabia because it is a head-chopping, women-hating,
journalist-killing religious fundamentalist state.
But Zakaria could
have made an even more telling point – was he not
answerable to CNN executives. There are also hardly
any western states that would pass the democratic,
human rights-respecting threshold set by the Trump
plan for the Palestinians. Nor, of course, would
Israel.
Think of Britain’s flouting
last year of a ruling by the International Court of
Justice in The Hague that the Chagos Islanders must
be allowed to return home decades after the UK
expelled them so the US could build a military base
on their land. Or the Windrush scandal, when it was
revealed that a UK government “hostile environment”
policy was used to illegally deport British citizens
to the Caribbean because of the color of their skin.
Or what about the US
evading due process by holding prisoners offshore at
Guantanamo? Or its use of torture against
Iraqi prisoners, or its reliance on extraordinary
rendition, or its extrajudicial
assassinations using drones overseas,
including against its own citizens?
Or for that matter,
its jailing and extortionate fining of
whistleblower Chelsea Manning, despite the Obama
administration granting her clemency. US officials
want to force her to testify against Wikileaks
founder Julian Assange for his role in publishing
leaks of US war crimes committed in Iraq, including
the shocking Collateral
Murder video.
And while we’re
talking about Assange and about Iraq…
Would the records of
either the US or UK stand up to scrutiny if they
were subjected to the same standards now required of
the Palestinian leadership.
Impertinent
Questions
But let’s fast
forward to the heart of the matter. Angered by
Zakaria’s impertinence at mildly questioning the
logic of the Trump plan, Kushner let rip.
He called the
Palestinian Authority a “police state” and one that
is “not exactly a thriving democracy”. It would be
impossible, he added, for Israel to make peace with
the Palestinians until the Palestinians, not
Israel’s occupying army, changed its ways. It was
time for the Palestinians to prioritize human rights
and democracy, while at the same time submitting
completely to Israel’s belligerent, half-century
occupation that violates their rights and undermines
any claims Israel might have to being a democracy.
Kushner said:
“If they [the
Palestinians] don’t think that they can uphold
these standards, then I don’t think we can get
Israel to take the risk to recognize them as a
state, to allow them to take control of
themselves, because the only thing more
dangerous than what we have now is a failed
state.”
Let’s take a moment
to unpack that short statement to examine its many
conceptual confusions.
First, there’s the
very obvious point that “police states” and
dictatorships are not “failed states”. Not by a long
shot. In fact, police states and dictatorships are
usually the very opposite of failed states. Iraq was
an extremely able state under Saddam Hussein, in
terms both of its ability to provide welfare and
educational services and of its ruthless, brutal
efficiency in crushing dissent.
Iraq only became a
failed state when the US illegally invaded and
executed Saddam, leaving a local leadership vacuum
that sucked in an array of competing actors who
quickly made Iraq ungovernable.
Oppressive by
Design
Second, as should
hardly need pointing out, the PA can’t be a police
state when it isn’t even a state. After all, that’s
where the Palestinians are trying to get to, and
Israel and the US are blocking the way. It is
obviously something else. What that “something else”
is brings us to the third point.
Kushner is right that
the PA is increasingly authoritarian and uses its
security forces in oppressive ways – because that’s
exactly what it was set up to do by Israel and the
US.
Palestinians had
assumed that the Oslo accords of the mid-1990s would
lead to the creation of a sovereign state at the
completion of that five-year peace process. But that
never happened. Denied statehood ever since, the PA
now amounts to nothing more than a security
contractor for the Israelis. Its unspoken job is to
make the Palestinian people submit to their
permanent occupation by Israel.
The self-defeating
deal contained in Oslo’s “land for peace” formula
was this: the PA would build Israeli trust by
crushing all resistance to the occupation, and in
return Israel would agree to hand over more
territory and security powers to the PA.
Bound by its legal
obligations, the PA had two possible paths ahead of
it: either it would become a state under Israeli
license, or it would serve as a Vichy-like regime
suppressing Palestinian aspirations for national
liberation. Once the US and Israel made clear they
would deny the Palestinians statehood at every turn,
the PA’s fate was sealed.
Put another way, the
point of Oslo from the point of view of the US and
Israel was to make the PA an efficient, permanent
police state-in-waiting, and one that lacked the
tools to threaten Israel.
And that’s exactly
what was engineered. Israel refused to let the
Palestinians have a proper army in case, bidding to
gain statehood, that army turned its firepower on
Israel. Instead a US army general, Keith Dayton, was
appointed to oversee the training of
the Palestinian police forces to help the PA better
repress internal dissent – those Palestinians who
might try to exercise their right in international
law to resist Israel’s belligerent occupation.
Presumably, it is a
sign of that US program’s success that Kushner can
now describe the PA as a police state.
Freudian Slip
In his CNN interview,
Kushner inadvertently highlighted the Catch-22
created for the Palestinians. The Trump “peace”
process penalizes the Palestinian leadership for
their very success in achieving the targets laid out
for them in the Oslo “peace” process.
Resist Israel’s
efforts to deprive the Palestinians of statehood and
the PA is classified as a terrorist entity and
denied statehood. Submit to Israel’s dictates and
oppress the Palestinian people to prevent them from
demanding statehood and the PA is classified as
a police state and denied statehood. Either way,
statehood is unattainable. Heads I win, tails you
lose.
Kushner’s use of the
term “failed state” is revealing too, in a Freudian
slip kind of way. Israel doesn’t just want to steal
some Palestinian land before it creates a small,
impotent Palestinian state. Ultimately, what Israel
envisions for the Palestinians is no statehood at
all, not even of the compromised, collaborationist
kind currently embodied by the PA.
An Unabashed
Partisan
Kushner, however, has
done us a favor inadvertently. He has given away the
nature of the US bait-and-switch game towards the
Palestinians. Unlike Dennis Ross, Martin Indyk and
Aaron David Miller – previous American Jewish
diplomats overseeing US “peace efforts” – Kushner is
not pretending to be an “honest broker”. He is
transparently, unabashedly partisan.
In an earlier CNN
interview, one last week with Christiane Amanpour,
Kushner showed just how personal is his antipathy
towards the Palestinians and their efforts to
achieve even the most minimal kind of statehood in a
tiny fraction of their historic homeland.
He sounded more like
a jilted lover, or an irate spouse forced into
couples therapy than a diplomat in charge of a
complex and incendiary peace process. He struggled
to contain his bitterness as he extemporized a
well-worn but demonstrably false Israeli
talking-point that the Palestinians “never miss an
opportunity to miss an opportunity”.
He told Amanpour:
“They’re going to
screw up another opportunity, like they’ve
screwed up every other opportunity that they’ve
ever had in their existence.”
The reality is that
Kushner, like the real author of the Trump plan,
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, would
prefer that the Palestinians had never existed. He
would rather this endless peace charade could be
discarded, freeing him to get on with enriching
himself with his Saudi pals.
And if the Trump plan
can be made to work, he and Netanyahu might finally
get their way.
– Jonathan
Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for
Journalism. His books include “Israel and the Clash
of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake
the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing
Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair”
(Zed Books). He contributed this article to The
Palestine Chronicle. Visit his website
www.jonathan-cook.net.
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)