The Dead End of the
Post-Oslo Diplomacy: What Next?
By Richard Falk
December 30, 2014 "ICH"
- There are reports that the
Palestinian Authority will seek a vote in
the Security Council on a resolution
mandating Israel’s military withdrawal from
Occupied Palestine no later than November
2016. Such a resolution has been condemned
by the Israeli Prime Minister as bringing
‘terrorism’ to the outskirts of Tel Aviv,
and this will never be allowed to happen.
The United States is, as
usual, maneuvering in such a way as to avoid
seeming an outlier by vetoing such a
resolution, even if it has less stringent
language, and asks the PA to postpone the
vote until after the Israeli elections
scheduled for 2015.
Embedded in this
initiative are various diversionary moves to
put the dying Oslo Approach (direct
negotiations between Israel and the PA, with
the U.S. as the intermediary) on track.
The French want a
resolution that includes a revival of these
currently defunct resolutions, with a
mandated goal of achieving a permanent peace
within a period of two years based on the
establishment of a Palestinian state,
immediate full membership of Palestine in
the UN, and language objecting to settlement
activity as an obstruction to peace.
Overall, European
governments are exerting pressure to resume
direct negotiations, exhibiting their
concern about a deteriorating situation on
the ground along with a growing hostility to
Israeli behavior that has reached new
heights since the merciless 51-day onslaught
mounted by Israel against Gaza last summer.
A Post-Oslo
Meditation
The horrendous events of the last several
months in Jerusalem and Gaza have exhibited
both the depths of enmity and tension
between Jews and Palestinians and the utter
irrelevance of American-led diplomacy as the
path to a sustainable peace.
This is not a time for
people of good will, the UN, and governments
to turn their backs on what seems on its
surface either irreconcilable or on the
verge of an Israeli victory. The challenge
for all is to consider anew how these two
peoples can manage to live together within
the space of historic Palestine.
We need fresh thinking
that gets away from the sterile binary of
one state/two states, and dares to ponder
the future with fresh eyes that accept the
guidance of a rights based approach shaped
by international law.
Israel will resist such an
approach as long as it can, understanding
that it has gained the upper hand by relying
on its military prowess and realizing that
if international law was allowed to play a
role in demarcating the contours of a fair
solution it would lose out on such crucial
issues as borders, refugees, Jerusalem,
settlements, and water.
A necessary step toward a
sustainable peace is to overcome
Washington’s blinkered conception of the
conflict.
There is no better sign
that the Israel-Palestine peace process over
which the United States has long presided is
unraveling than the absurd brouhaha that
followed the magazine article written by
Jeffrey Goldberg in The Atlantic [“The
Crisis in U.S.-Israel Relations is
Officially Here,” Oct. 28, 2014] that
referenced an unnamed senior White House
official who called the Israeli Prime
Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, ‘chickenshit’
because of his obstinate refusal to take
risks for ‘peace.’
Supposedly, this refusal
put Washington’s dogged adherence to the
Oslo Approach of direct negotiations under
American diplomatic supervision beneath a
darkening sky, but since there is no
alternative way to maintain the U.S. central
role in the interaction between the
governing elites of the two parties, there
is an eyes closed resolve to keep the worse
than futile process on ‘life support.’
It is worse than futile
because Israeli land grabbing on the West
Bank in relation to the settlements, the
settler only roads, and the separation wall
continuously deteriorate Palestinian
territorial prospects.
The collapse of the Kerry
talks between Israel and the Palestinian
Authority in April were unquestionably a
negative watershed for the Obama presidency
so far as its insistence that the Oslo
Approach was the only viable roadmap that
could resolve the conflict.
Ever since the Oslo
Declaration of Principles was sanctified by
the infamous Rabin-Arafat handshake on the
White House lawn in 1993, the U.S.
Government has contended that only this
diplomatic framework can end the conflict,
and to this day it objects to any moves by
governments to take steps on their own.
During the presidency of
George W. Bush there was an interval during
which ‘the roadmap’ was adopted as an
elaboration of the Oslo approach in which a
commitment to the idea of an independent
Palestinian state was explicitly confirmed
by Bush in a speech on June 24, 2002, and
then formalized in a proposal made public on
April 30, 2003; in this same period ‘the
quartet’ was created at a Madrid Conference
in 2002 that seemed to broaden diplomatic
participation by adding the Russia, the EU,
and the UN to the U.S., but in fact the
quartet has been completely marginalized for
the past decade.
The Oslo Approach consists
of direct negotiations between the parties
and designated the United States, despite
its undisguised partisan role, as the
exclusive and permanent intermediary and go
between. Without the slightest deference to
Palestinian sensitivities, U.S. presidents
have appointed as special envoys to these
negotiations only officials with AIPAC
credentials such as Dennis Ross and Martin
Indyk, and have proceeded as if their
blatant partisanship was not a problem.
Evidently Israel would
have it no other way, and the Palestinian
Authority has meekly gone along either out
of weakness or naiveté.
Not only was the Oslo
framework itself flawed because it leaned so
far to one side, but it was an unseemly
tacit assumption of the process that the
Palestinians would be willing to carry on
negotiations without reserving a right to
complain about the relevance of ongoing
Israeli violations of international law,
most conspicuously the continued unlawful
settlement activity.
When on several occasions
the Palestinians complained that this
settlement activity was incompatible with
good faith negotiations, they were
immediately slapped down, informed that such
objections interfered with the peace
process, and that issues pertaining to the
settlements would be deferred until the
‘final status’ stage of the negotiations.
The Palestinians were
assured that these issues would be addressed
at the very end of the peace process after
the main elements of a solution had been
agreed upon.
This was very detrimental
to Palestine’s bargaining position as their
only advantage in relation to Israel was to
have international law in their favor in
relation to most of the outstanding issues.
Besides to allow Israel to
continue with settlement expansion, rather
than freezing the status quo, was obviously
disadvantageous to Palestine. If legal
objections were excluded it is not
surprising that diplomatic bargaining would
tend to reflect ‘facts on the ground,’ which
were completely in Israel’s favor, and would
continue to accumulate month by month.
Despite this, Israel at no
point seemed responsive to proposals for
accommodation in accordance with the stated
objective of establishing an independent
sovereign Palestinian state.
After more than 20 years
of futility Washington’s continuing public
stand that only by way of the Oslo Approach
will a solution be found is beginning to
fall on deaf ears, and new directions of
approach are beginning to be articulated.
Israel itself is moving
ineluctably toward a unilaterally imposed
one-state solution that incorporates the
West Bank in whole or in large part. It has
recently seized 1000 acres of strategically
placed land to facilitate the largest
spatial enlargement of a settlement since
the early 1990s and it has given approval
for 2,600 additional housing units to be
built in various West Bank and East
Jerusalem settlements that already have more
650,000 settlers.
In addition, the current
Israeli president, Reuven Rivlin, elected by
the Knesset a few months ago is an avowed
advocate of the maximalist version of the
Zionist project involving the extension of
Israel’s borders to encompass the whole of
Palestine as delimited in the British
mandate.
Rivlin couples this
rejection of any Palestinian right of
self-determination with proposals for
equality of treatment for both peoples
within this enlarged Israel, offering the
Palestinians human rights, the rule of law,
and unrestricted economic and political
opportunity within Israel in exchange for
renouncing their political ambitions for
either a state of their own or a
power-sharing arrangement on the basis of
equality with Israel.
There is no prospect that
the Palestinian people, or even their
compromised leaders, would accept such a
Faustian Bargain.
The Palestinians have
their own version of a unilateral solution,
although it is far more modest, and seems
more fantasy than political project.
It is essentially
establishing a state of their own within
1967 borders, taking an ambiguous posture
toward the settlement blocs and even East
Jerusalem, and relying on political
pressures to coerce an Israeli withdrawal.
Such a state claims 22% or less of historic
Palestine, and includes the somewhat
confusing contention that Palestine is
already a state in the eyes of the
international community, having been
recognized as such by 134 states and in a
resolution of the General Assembly on 29
November 2012.
It is currently
reinforcing this position with this draft
resolution that Jordan will submit on its
behalf at some point to the Security Council
proposing a resumed period of direct
negotiations for a further nine months
(accompanied by a freeze on settlement
construction), followed by Israel’s
mandatory withdrawal from the West Bank.
On balance, this
Palestinian approach seems ill-considered
for a number of reasons. It appears to
reduce the parameters of the conflict to the
occupation of the West Bank, and leaves to
one side the fate of Gaza and East
Jerusalem, as well as what is to happen to
the several million Palestinians living in
refugee camps in neighboring countries or in
exile.
It also overlooks the
structure of discrimination embedded in
Israeli nationality laws that reduces the
20% Palestinian minority in Israel to a
second class status in the self-proclaimed
Jewish state.
Among the problems with
these reactions to the breakdown of Oslo are
the contradictory expectations.
What the Netanyahu
unilateralism is seeking is utterly
inconsistent with any kind of viable
Palestinian state constructed within the
1967 borders, and those opposition forces to
his right are seeking an even more defiant
unilateralism.
Equally, what the
Palestinian Authority is proposing would
seem to require the elimination of most
Israeli settlements, the dismantling of the
security wall, and the abandonment of the
Israeli-only network of roads, while
ignoring those Palestinian grievances not
directly associated with territorial issues.
Each of these versions of
a post-Oslo solution is doomed to failure as
it proceeds as if the behavior of others
need not be taken into account.
The Israeli failure to do
this is far more unacceptable as its claims
are far more excessive than those of the
Palestinians, which is really just a matter
of wishing away the pattern of Israel’s
unlawful encroachment on what is a
minimalist Palestinian vision of a solution
that it and the UN had long ago accepted in
Security Council Resolution 242.
There is an evident
unfortunate reluctance on the part of all
sides to let go of the two-state conception
of a solution. It is what Washington and
even Tel Aviv and Ramallah continue to say
they seek, although Netanyahu has been
telling Israeli audiences that after its
experience with Hamas rockets last July and
August, it will never agree to allow the
emergence of a neighboring Palestinian state
in the West Bank that would bring
Palestinian threats much closer to the
Israeli heartland.
Ever since the 1988
decision of the Palestinian National
Council, the PLO has agreed to a solution
framed in relation to a state within of its
own within the 1967 borders, and even Hamas
has signed on since 2006 to the extent of
accepting a 50 year plan for peaceful
coexistence with Israel providing it ends
the occupation of Palestinian territories,
and lifts the Gaza blockade.
These are big concessions
from the Palestinian side considering that
the UN Partition Plan of 1947 awarded 45% of
historic Palestine to the Palestinians and
proposed the internationalization of the
entire city of Jerusalem.
The 2002 Arab Peace
Initiative is built along the same lines as
the PLO proposal, and includes a commitment
to establish full diplomatic and economic
relations with Israel on the part of the
entire Islamic world. This proposal of the
Arab League by a 56-0 vote of the Islamic
Conference, with only Iran abstaining, and a
year ago as a result of American pressure
was modified to make it even more appealing
to Israel by its acknowledgement of Israeli
security concerns.
Most recently, a letter to
Netanyahu by 106 high ranking retired
Israeli military and security officials
strongly urged this same two-state solution,
implicitly condemning Israeli unilateralism
and Zionist maximalism as leading to a
future for Israel of periodic warfare of the
sort that occurred this past summer in Gaza.
These members of the
Israeli security establishment argue that
these expansionist policies are weakening
security for the entire Israeli population.
The letter emphasized Israel’s moral decline
associated with keeping millions of
Palestinians under prolonged occupation,
which they argue is unnecessary from the
perspective of security.
Again there is a lack of
clarity about whether such encouragement
assumes that the settlements can be
retained, the rights of Palestinian refugees
can be ignored, and Jerusalem can be kept
under unified Israel control.
But what the initiative
does express is this emergent consensus that
Oslo style negotiations have consistently
failed and something else must be tried. The
letter appears to propose a unilateral
partial withdrawal described as “an
alternative option for resolving the
conflict not based solely on bilateral
negotiations with the Palestinians, which
have failed time and again.”
Europe has also, at last,
exhibited a limited unwillingness to accept
any longer the Oslo Approach that keeps the
United States alone in the driver’s seat.
I interpret the recent
Swedish recognition of Palestinian
statehood, the House of Commons vote urging
that the British government take a similar
move, as well as similar moves by several
other European countries as expressing both
a loss of confidence in the Oslo Approach
and a criticism of the manner in which
Israel and the United States have dealt with
the conflict.
This is a desirable
development in these respects, but it is
coupled with some regressive features. Such
initiatives are coupled with renewed faith
in the two-state approach as the only
solution, and call with a sense of urgency
for a renewal of negotiations without giving
the slightest indication as to why a further
round of talks would yield any different
results than past attempts.
Such a prognosis seems
more true at present than in the past given
Israel’s moves toward a unilateral solution,
which Netanyahu somewhat disguises so as not
to affront the United States and Europe. It
should be obvious to all who wish to look
that Israel has created irreversible
conditions that have all but ruled out the
establishment of a viable Palestinian
sovereign state.
The Way Forward
The expected controversy surrounding the PA
initiative in the Security Council is a
sideshow without any serious consequences
however it is resolved.
There needs to be a clear
recognition by the PA that direct
negotiations are pointless under present
conditions, and a general understanding that
unless Israel changes behavior and outlook
there is no hope to resolve the conflict by
a reliance on diplomacy. This will make
recourse to nonviolent militancy via BDS,
and such other tactics as blocking the
unloading of Israeli cargo vessels, the best
option for those seeking a just peace.
[“Protesters Block Israel-Owned Ship from
Unloading Cargo at Port of Oakland,” CBS St
Bay Area, Aug. 18, 2014]
I believe the Oslo
Approach is discredited, and of no present
interest to the political leadership in
Israel, which plays along with Washington by
not openly repudiating direct negotiations.
The European governments that have shown
some initiative by advocating recognition of
Palestine should be encouraged to take the
further step of rejecting calls for resumed
negotiations unless Israel demonstrates its
sincerity by freezing settlement activity
and affirming its readiness to withdraw to
1967 borders.
The best, and in my view,
only realistic hope is to forget traditional
interstate diplomacy for the present, and
understand that the Palestinian future
depends on a robust mobilization of global
civil society in solidarity with the
Palestinian national movement.
The current BDS campaign
is gaining momentum by the day, and is
coupled with a sense that its political
program is more in keeping with the wishes
of the Palestinian people than are the
proposals put forth by the formal
representations of either the Palestinian
Authority or Hamas.
When neither governmental
diplomacy nor the UN can produce a
satisfactory solution to a conflict that has
caused decades of suffering and
dispossession, it is past time to endorse a
people-oriented approach. This is the kind
of populist politics that helped end
apartheid in South Africa and win many
anti-colonial struggles.
We have reached a stage in
global history in which it is people, not
weapons nor international institutions, that
have the resilience and patience to win the
legitimacy struggle involving law and
morality, and on such a basis eventually
prevail in the political struggle despite
being inferior militarily.
The challenge of living
together on the basis of equality seems to
be the only template that offers the parties
a vision of sustainable peace.
Concretely, this would
seem to require Israel to renounce all
ethnocratic claims that Israel is a Jewish
state as distinct from being a Jewish
homeland. Israel’s leaders would also have
to renounce the present unrestricted right
of return for Jews throughout the world or
create some equivalent right of return for
the Palestinians, and possibly for the Druse
minority.
How such a conception of a
sustainable peace is given concrete form is
necessarily a subject for diplomacy by
suitable representative of both sides and
carried on under neutral auspices and by
authentic representatives of the two
peoples.
We cannot foretell how
much further suffering and bloodshed will
occur before this kind of vision, seemingly
a remote prospect at present, can be
converted into a practical project, but do
know that nothing that falls short of this
deserves to be considered ‘a solution’ given
the realities of the situation.
Richard Anderson Falk is
an American professor emeritus of
international law at Princeton University.
He is the author or co-author of 20 books
and the editor or co-editor of another 20
volumes, In 2008, the United Nations Human
Rights Council (UNHRC) appointed Falk to a
six-year term as a United Nations Special
Rapporteur on "the situation of human rights
in the Palestinian territories occupied
since 1967.