Negotiating the inevitable with the irreversible
12/03/2012 22:52
We need something new and fresh, a means to negotiate between the seeming incompatibility of the Palestinian inevitability and the Israeli irreversibility.
Netanyahu's speaks about Palestinian UN bid Photo: Screenshot
It was inevitable that, sooner or later, the Palestinian Authority would present
its case before the United Nations and would, by large majority, be accepted as
an observer state in the international organization.
In the past, Israel
has pulled out all the diplomatic stops to prevent this from happening, but this
time they didn’t make a big effort. It was clear from the outset that there
would be a large majority and that even some of the important friendly European
states would, for the first time, either vote in favor or abstain.
The
failure, if that is what it is from an Israeli perspective, had little to do
with diplomacy and everything to do with politics. Israel’s policies in the past
four years have shown no progression toward peace, have strengthened the
settlement network and infrastructure, and there was absolutely no reason for
the international community to listen to, or believe, the Israeli diplomats who
argued that if the vote on Palestine’s observer status was withdrawn, they would
immediately get back to the negotiation table. They have heard it all before. It
has never materialized in the past, even with more moderate governments in
Israel. So why should it materialize now? And if we needed any further proof,
the childish decision to immediately announce the authorization of new
settlement construction, in a “tit for tat” reaction, only served to harm
Israel’s standing even more, even among those who abstained (the UK) or voted
against the Palestinian resolution (the US).
The symbolism of the vote
taking place on November 29, the same day Israel commemorated 65 years since the
passing of the UN partition resolution which effectively legitimized the
establishment of a Jewish state, was not lost on any of the participants. Not
simply the date, but the fact that in terms of contemporary international law,
Israel’s sovereignty as an independent state within the international system of
states is based on the United Nations vote of 1947, no more or no less than the
eventual establishment of a Palestinian state will be.
If we, Israel,
justify our sovereignty on the 1947 resolution, we cannot deny the sovereignty
aspirations of the “other” which were ratified by the same forum, even if, as we
argue, the context (post World War II) and the nature of the organization have
radically changed during the past 60 years.
But 65 long years of conflict
have passed since then, and last week’s resolution was necessary if only to
restate the UN position on the principle which has become known during the past
two decades as “two states for two peoples.”
It would appear that this,
too, is inevitable. If conflict resolution is ever to be achieved in this part
of the world, it will be around some form of “two state” formula, in which each
exercises sovereignty within its own clearly defined territory, with demarcated
borders separating the two, and neither constituting a threat or infringement on
the exclusive control of the other. Even in this post-modern world of
globalization and movement beyond boundaries, this remains the essential
principle underlying sovereignty within the international system.
But as
much as the passing of last week’s vote was inevitable, the conditions on the
ground point to a situation which is irreversible. Just 24 hours prior to the UN
vote, a seminar organized by the Haim Herzog Center for Middle Eastern Studies
at Ben-Gurion University hosted Dr. Meron Benvenisti for a seminar and
discussion about his latest book, The Dream of the White Tzabar. It was
Benvenisti who, as a left-wing commentator and analyst of the situation in the
West Bank, initially aroused the wrath of his colleagues on the Left when, as
far back as the 1990s, he argued that the situation on the ground in the West
Bank, especially the unrelenting growth of the settlement network and
infrastructure, had reached the point of no return.
He spoke with
knowledge. In the late 1970s and 1980s, Benvenisti had established the West Bank
Data Project, the first independent research institute analyzing the changes
taking place in the West Bank. Along with professor Edy Kaufman at the Truman
Institute of the Hebrew University, who created the first forum for
Israeli-Palestinian academic dialogue, Benvenisti was a pioneer of the type of
research analysis and collaboration which, following the Madrid and the Oslo
meetings 10 years later, became part of the growing “peace industry,” whereby
anybody who was anybody within the academic and the diplomatic communities
became engaged with Israeli-Palestinian dialogue, Track II meetings and the
establishment of a host of think tanks and NGOs devoted to Israeli-Palestinian
peace.
For a short period following the unilateral withdrawal from Gaza
and the establishment of the Sharon government, it appeared as though
Benvenisti’s irreversibility thesis would prove false. Sharon and Olmert won the
elections around a manifesto which was intended to implement a two-state
solution, necessitating further Israeli territorial withdrawals and settlement
evacuations. But this never materialized – on both sides new obstacles were
placed in the way – the growth of Hamas power and the return to violence and
terrorism on the one hand, the continued construction of new settlements which
made the demarcation of borders even more difficult and irreversible than it
already was on the other.
The existence of a network encompassing towns,
villages, industrial zones, commercial complexes, schools, a university in the
making, with well over 300,000 residents, some of them third-generation within
the West Bank has, indeed, created a situation of irreversibility.
The
impossibility of demarcating borders, even allowing for land swaps in exchange
for the retention of the major settlement blocs, is also becoming an outdated
idea, even before it has been properly tested on the ground and on the
maps.
No Israeli government, even a left-of-center, propeace government –
which is not about to materialize in the forthcoming elections – would be able
or prepared to undertake the sort of territorial withdrawal and evacuation of
settlements which would be necessary for the classic two-state solution to be
implemented.
So while the vote in favor of the observer status for an
independent Palestinian state was inevitable, the situation on the ground is
irreversible. For those of us who remain convinced that we can only ever achieve
some form of normality and regional stability through a Israeli-Palestinian
agreement, this situation requires originality of thinking to a degree which has
never previously been on the table.
We all, on the Left and Right,
continue to think and negotiate within the constraints of a limited set of
traditional solutions to the conflict, ideas which have not changed
substantially ever since Benvenisti started working back in the late 1970s and
early 1980s. What we need is something new and fresh, a means to negotiate
between the seeming incompatibility of the Palestinian inevitability and the
Israeli irreversibility.
David Newman is professor of Geopolitics at Ben
Gurion University. Joel Peters is Professor of International relations at Virginia Tech University in Washington. The views expressed are their own. Their
new book, The Routledge Handbook on the Israeli Palestinian Conflict was
published on November 29th.