Opinion | ||
It is now Palestine's time | ||
The US has lost their right to
lead in resolving the Israel-Palestine conflict, and it is time for the EU to
step in.
Michel
Rocard Last Modified: 31 Oct 2011 20:12
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This
September, Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority, took the bold
step of directly asking the United Nations to grant official recognition to the
state of Palestine. The UN's 193 member states look geared to vote on that
request within the next few months. The world's focus is now on
Palestine.
It is
almost two decades since the "quartet" - the UN, the United States, the European
Union, and Russia - agreed that the Palestinian Authority and the Israeli
government should establish peace by coexisting as two separate states. And yet,
while US President Barack Obama has referred to the quartet's decision as his
guiding principle for diplomatic action on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the
situation remains as dire as ever, because the devil remains in the
details.
The
Palestinians want an independent state, but on the condition that they secure
Jerusalem as its capital, and that Israel ceases to expand settlements on
territory that it has occupied since the 1967 Six-Day War. Israel, however, has
never considered ceding Jerusalem to Palestine. Many hope that, under pressure
to reform municipal boundaries, Israel will consider this solution.
But
the question of the settlements is even more difficult to resolve. Even under
pressure from the international community and, most powerfully, from the US,
Israel has consistently refused to slow expansion of its settlements in the West
Bank.
Tragically,
strong resistance from Israel and the Jewish diaspora has led Obama to
acknowledge openly his powerlessness in the conflict, and thus to abandon US
political pressure on Israel. As a result, a small group of pro-Israeli
congressmen has been free to threaten and pressure those countries likely to
vote for the recognition of the Palestinian state.
In any
event, Israel's leaders are not actually interested in a realistic peace.
Instead, they seem to want a solution reminiscent of nineteenth-century Ireland
- which led to a century of casualties on both sides. Israel is effectively
demanding the disappearance of Palestinian identity.
The
rest of the world should not tolerate that effort, even if the US does. Every
country knows that it is difficult and costly to engage in an explicit conflict
with the US. But when the US fails to act as a global leader because of its
fragile internal politics, other countries do not have to follow its
example.
Abbas
well understands the riskiness of his strategy: there will be brutal retaliation
from Israel. But his persistence in pursuing this last chance at peace has
clearly gained him increased popularity at home and greater respect
abroad.
Hamas,
the Palestinian Authority's rival in Gaza, will undoubtedly try to thwart Abbas'
effort. An organisation such as Hamas, which supports permanent war - and with
which Israel negotiated for five years for the release of one abducted Israeli
soldier, Gilad Shalit, in exchange for more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners -
is exactly the enemy that Israel needs to justify its hardline
stance.
For a
long time, Israeli leaders have lobbied supporters like me, who, since the
Holocaust, have defended the Jewish people's right to security and statehood.
But Israel's tactics regarding Palestine have been unconscionable. They have
strengthened Hamas, a hostile opponent of peace, pushed the US to vote against
the Palestinian state whose birth it defends, and refused outright to accept any
conditions that might resolve the conflict.
No
civilised country can permit this behaviour. Palestine must be granted legal
status so that, at the very least, its people will have access to the
international legal court, with the understanding that international support is
required to aid and defend this young state.
The
Americans have lost their moral right to leadership in resolving the
Israel-Palestine conflict. It is time for Europe to step into the
fray.
Michel Rocard
is a former prime minister of France and a former leader of the Socialist
Party.
A version of this article previously appeared on Project
Syndicate.
The views expressed in this
article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's
editorial policy.
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Source:
Project Syndicate
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"Pero entonces, si son los mejores guerreros, ¿por qué nunca nos han vencido?" El León de Cartago
miércoles, 2 de noviembre de 2011
It is now Palestine's time
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