Misguided UN bid
By JPOST EDITORIAL
11/27/2012 21:27
The PLO’s UN bid is misguided and wrongheaded and will do nothing but add to the long list of historic mistakes made by Palestinian leadership which date back at least to November 29, 1947 when Palestinians failed to grab their chance for nationhood and self-determination.
The Jerusalem Post Photo: Scott Eells/Bloomberg
Tomorrow, November 29, the PLO will attempt to erase a colossal historic
mistake.
Sixty-five years to the day after foolishly squandering their
opportunity for national self-determination by rejecting the 1947 UN Partition
Plan for Palestine and instead launching a war to snuff out the Jewish State at
its very inception, the Palestinian people – under the PLO’s leadership – hope
to go back in time.
On Thursday, the UN General Assembly will be asked to
vote on a measure that will upgrade the PLO-controlled Palestinian Authority’s
status to a non-member observer state. PA Foreign Minister Riad Malki said that
vote, which the PLO will undoubtedly win since the vast majority of UN
member-states are antagonistic to Israel, would be “a historic turning point in
the march of our people toward and independence.”
Would it really? Malki,
PA President Mahmoud Abbas and the rest of the PLO’s leaders should know better
than to believe that it is possible to go back in time. After failing to wipe
out Israel in 1948 and again in 1967 and after decades of senseless bloodshed
and terrorism, the Palestinian people should admit the failures of their past
leaders, recognize that the State of Israel is here to stay and accept the idea
of reconciliation and negotiation with the Jewish State.
Instead, the
Palestinian leadership is once again making a grave mistake that is liable to
further delay the realization of Palestinians’ national
aspirations.
Firstly, the bid for UN recognition of quasi-statehood
status for Palestinians seems motivated more by the PLO’s narrow political
interests vis-à-vis Hamas than by a true desire to better the lot of the
Palestinian people.
The PLO is presently losing out to Hamas in the
Palestinian popularity contest. The PLO hopes the UN initiative will shift local
and international attention back to the West Bank leadership.
Even before
the clashes in Gaza, the PLO and Abbas were suffering from a crisis of
leadership. And during the recent conflict in Gaza, Hamas basked in the
limelight with Qatar, Turkey and Egypt sending high-ranking officials to help
negotiate a cease-fire. Meanwhile, Abbas and his cronies in Ramallah barely made
the headlines, despite US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit
there.
Secondly, by emphasizing unilateral declarations – empty of any
but symbolic meaning – over dialogue and compromise, the UN bid further delays
the day when both sides – Israelis and Palestinians – sit down at the
negotiating table and hammer out their differences.
Abbas can
conveniently ignore the fact that he rejected former prime minister Ehud
Olmert’s generous 2008 offer – as described by Olmert himself – to give the PLO
93.6 percent of the West Bank plus land swaps inside the Green Line to ensure
that the PLO received 100 percent of the total land area it
claims.
Thirdly, the UN bid creates the false impression that the
Palestinian people – like the Jewish people living in Palestine in 1947 – are
prepared for statehood and that the only obstacle to achieving this statehood is
a formal UN declaration. In reality, Palestinian political leadership is
irreparably split between the Hamas terrorist regime that runs Gaza Strip and
the PLO, which controls the West Bank. It is a sad irony that Palestinians may
very well achieve UN recognition of “a unified and sovereign” Palestinian state
at almost exactly the moment when internal conflicts between Hamas and the PLO
make the realization of such a state more impossible than ever.
Sadly,
due to the steady radicalization of the Palestinian people, the most likely
scenario for Palestinian unity is a Hamas takeover of the West
Bank.
Finally, the UN bid to recognize a State of Palestine in the
territory that came under Israeli control after the 1967 Six Day War, is a
shameless campaign to garner official UN delegitimization of Israeli control not
only in places such as Ma’aleh Adumim, with a population of 40,000, but also at
sites resonant with religious, cultural and historical meaning for the Jewish
people such as the Western Wall.
The PLO’s UN bid is misguided and
wrongheaded and will do nothing but add to the long list of historic mistakes
made by Palestinian leadership which date back at least to November 29, 1947
when Palestinians failed to grab their chance for nationhood and
self-determination.