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      The Palestinian Authority:  
	Redundant but Dangerous Language  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 27, 2010 
	   Each time Israel fails to keep its ‘side of the bargain’, the 
	Palestinian Authority responds with the same redundant language. The cycle 
	has become so utterly predictable that one wonders why the Palestinian 
	Authority officials even bothers protesting Israeli action. They must be 
	well aware that their cries, genuine or otherwise, will only fall on deaf 
	ears. They know that their complaints could not possible contribute to a 
	paradigm shift in Israel’s behavior, or the US position on it.   Let’s 
	take a look at the context for the language of the Palestinian Authority’s 
	complaints. In a speech made in early July, Palestinian President Mahmoud 
	Abbas referred to any direct talks with Israel as ‘futile.’ Thousands of 
	newspapers and news sites beamed this ‘headline’, highlighting the word 
	‘futile’ between inverted commas - as if it constituted some kind of 
	earth-shattering revelation. But anyone following the Middle East, and the 
	Israeli-Palestinian conflict in particular already knows that such talks 
	will be ‘futile’. More, Israel has hardly made secret its lack of desire for 
	a peaceful and just settlement.    Mr. Abbas, however, has managed to 
	insert his relevance as a ‘player’ in the conflict, using one cleverly 
	coined word. This word has had as much of an impact in Arabic as has in 
	English.    Of course, none of this means that Abbas has actually 
	adopted a serious shift in course. One need not dig up old archives to 
	remember that the PA president felt the same way about the so-called 
	‘proximity talks’ with Israel last May. Before they began, he also expressed 
	his opinion that the talks would be futile. He further insisted that no 
	talks, direct or otherwise, would resume without a complete Israeli halt in 
	settlement constructions in occupied East Jerusalem. After this grand 
	declaration, Abbas went along with the proximity talks charade, while 
	Palestinian families continued to be uprooted from their homes in their 
	historic city. Only one barrier was removed before embarking on the 
	proximity talks: Abbas and his men quit complaining.    Nearly two 
	months later, when it is evident to all that the proximity talks were indeed 
	‘futile’ – especially as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has 
	triumphed over US President Barack Obama in his most recent visit to 
	Washington – Mr. Abbas finds himself in desperate need for another line of 
	defense. Thus, the new campaign attacking predictably ‘futile’ direct talks 
	with Israel.    Mr. Abbas is not the only actor in this drama. Others 
	have also been doing their job, as efficiently and as true to form as ever. 
	Yasser Abed Rabbo, who has worn several hats in the past and is now one of 
	Mr. Abbas’s aides, stated that the PA “will not enter new negotiations that 
	could take more than 10 years.” This promise - that the Palestinian 
	leadership will not be fooled into talks for the sake of talking and with no 
	timeframe – is not the first of its kind to come from Abed Rabbo, and it’s 
	unlikely to be the last. Abbas’ aide will most likely continue sharing the 
	same tired insight over and over again, because it’s the scripted part that 
	any ‘moderate’ – as in self-seeking – Palestinian official must reiterate to 
	remain relevant. How else could they give the impression that the PA still 
	serves the role of the bulwark against Israeli illegal territorial 
	encroachment and military occupation?    Ahmed Qurei, former 
	Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister and ex-Prime Minister, recently spoke 
	at a Hebrew University Conference, entitled: “The Israeli-Palestinian 
	Proximity Talks: Lessons from Past Negotiations.” The conference was 
	organized by Hebrew University’s Harry S. Truman Institute for the 
	Advancement of Peace. The place and occasion of this conference could not be 
	more significant. First, much of the Hebrew University was built on 
	‘ethnically cleansed’ Palestinian land. Second, Qurei spoke at an Israeli 
	University in an occupied city, at a time when activists and academics from 
	all over the world, including several from Israel, are leading a cultural 
	and academic boycott of Israeli universities to protest the terrible role 
	these institutions have played in Israeli violence against Palestinians.  
	  Worse, immediately before his speech, Qurei had met with former Israeli 
	Foreign Minister and acting Prime Minister, Tzipi Livni. Livni had ordered 
	and supervised the unprecedented killing and maiming of thousands of 
	Palestinians in Gaza between December 2008 and January 2009. The level of 
	inhumanity she displayed during those days was met with outrage around the 
	world, including from many in Israel itself. But all the blood was brushed 
	under the carpet, as “Livni (and) Abu Ala exchange(d) ‘niceties’”, according 
	to the Jerusalem Post.    Just try to imagine the fury that all 
	Palestinians - and especially those besieged in destroyed Gaza – must have 
	felt as Qurei and Livni shook hands and smiled for cameras. As for Qurei’s 
	academic and political contributions, the Post reported that, “at the 
	conference, Qurei said Netanyahu had not really frozen West Bank settlement 
	construction, and added that Israel’s actions were preventing direct talks.”
	   Considering the numerous compromises that Qurei afforded in his 
	very attendance of the conference, and his handshaking with Livni, one fails 
	to understand the point of such statements.    These empty 
	declarations will have no bearing on the outcome of events, nor will they 
	force Netanyahu and his right-wing government to think twice as they carry 
	on demolishing homes and uprooting trees. But they are more important than 
	ever for the PA, as voices are rising in Washington, in London and 
	elsewhere, demanding that the US and its partners acknowledge, if not 
	‘engage’ Hamas. Such a prospect is bad news for the West Bank Palestinian 
	leadership, which understands that its relevance to the ‘peace process’ 
	hinges on the constant dismissal of Hamas. Therefore, the Palestinian 
	Authority in Ramallah will continue to adhere to its methodology: don’t 
	criticize Israel too harshly, so as not to lose favor; follow the US 
	dictates, so as to maintain a ‘moderate’ status and many privileges; and 
	always give an impression to Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims that the PA is 
	the one and only defender of Jerusalem.    One wonders how much longer 
	the Palestinian leadership can sustain this act, which is in fact the real 
	exercise of futility.    - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
	  
	  
	  
       
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