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The
U.S. Needs To Get Tough With Israel: Harbouring Zionism
07 April 2011 By Yousef Munayyer
When
diplomatic sources revealed that the United States was
abandoning efforts for an
Israeli settlement freeze, many surely
did not know whether to laugh or cry. The first two
years of U.S.-Israeli relations under the Obama
administration has been a debacle. For the next two,
what is learned from that failure, and how it's
applied, will be of utmost importance.
The failure to get a freeze is not only about the
settlements — a colonial enterprise expanding on
occupied
Palestinian territory that a new Human
Rights Watch report called a "two-tier system" that is
both "separate and unequal"— but also a test of
America's commitment to evenhanded mediation.
So-called core issues, including the return of
Palestinian refugees and the disposition
of
Jerusalem,
are every bit as difficult as the settlements, maybe
more. But obtaining the freeze was a tone-setter, one
that would have shown that the U.S. could fairly
enforce obligations by both parties.
This didn't happen. Instead, during the earlier,
temporary 10-month freeze, the Israeli settlements
were still being expanded — only new-home construction
was frozen — and settlements around Jerusalem were
accelerated.
When the Oslo peace process began — a process that was
based on the principle of a
two-state solution — there were 200,000
settlers in occupied Palestinian territory. Over the
years, as Israel has claimed it sought peace, it
increased the number of colonists to well over 500,000
today, according to the Israeli
Central Bureau of Statistics.
No legitimate Palestinian leader can negotiate with
Israel while it continues to colonize Palestinian
land.
The U.S. strategy began to fail when it expected the
Israelis to freeze settlements upon request. What the
Obama administration apparently didn't realize was
that Israel would not change its behavior without an
incentive. When that finally became clear,
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
made an offer that amounted to a bribe.
Generally, the incentive to rectify bad behavior in
the international community — behavior like expanding
settlements despite road map obligations and
international law — is delivered by sticks, not
carrots. But the deal offered to Israel, which
included billions of dollars' worth of advanced F-35s
in exchange for a 90-day freeze, was all carrot and no
stick.
And it didn't work. Despite American prostrations, the
Israelis continued with settlement expansion, and
provocative announcements about settlements around
Jerusalem were made just as the offer was reported.
All hope for a freeze disintegrated.
The message this sent to Palestinians was that the
United States was simply incapable of being an
evenhanded broker. The U.S. never misses an
opportunity to reward bad Israeli behavior, and Israel
never misses an opportunity to squeeze its principal
world ally.
Ultimately, we discovered that Israel's
near-insatiable desire for American carrots is
outweighed only by its insatiable desire to colonize
Palestinian land.
Will Washington learn from this and apply the lessons
in the next stage of mediating this conflict?
The Obama administration should not expect the
Israelis to do anything without pressure, and this
pressure — economic, diplomatic — has to be real,
tangible and biting. A brazen
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
undoubtedly emboldened by what he and his right-wing
coalition view as a victory in a standoff with
President Obama, needs to be presented with a decisive
and harsh response to Israel's bad behavior.
Some suggest that abandoning a freeze gives the United
States an opportunity to put forward its own plan. But
if Washington couldn't muster the strength or the will
to press Netanyahu on settlements, can anyone believe
it can press the Israelis to accept a deal on the rest
of the core issues? It's highly unlikely.
The biggest mistake the United States has made in the
last two years was not its focus on settlements but
its failure to use leverage to get the Israelis to
stop building them.
Has Washington learned the lesson? Perhaps the answer
came earlier this month when Clinton delivered a major
policy speech at the
Brookings Institution.
Though she expressed her frustration with the peace
process, she didn't signal any change in the U.S.
approach. Clinton's message can be summed up
succinctly: We will keep doing what we have done and
hope for a better outcome.
At a moment when the world needed to hear a change in
direction, we instead were told that the United States
is committed to repeating the same failed policies of
the past. This is precisely why Argentina, Bolivia and
Brazil recently determined they wouldn't wait for the
bankrupt American-led process and recognized the state
of Palestine.
America's political response?
Rep. Howard L. Berman
(D-Valley Village) rushed a resolution to the House
floor expressing opposition to such declarations of
Palestinian statehood. The resolution, which passed,
is a timely reminder of the increasing gap between
Washington and the international community on this
issue.
If there is no change in the U.S. approach to Israeli
violations, no one will take this administration
seriously: not the Israelis, certainly not the
Palestinians, and presumably not the international
community. Who can blame them?
Yousef Munayyer is Executive Director of the
Palestine Center. This policy brief may be used
without permission but with proper attribution to the
Center.
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