Al-Jazeerah History  
	 
	
	
	Archives  
	 
	
	
	
	
	Mission & Name   
	 
	
	
	
	
	Conflict Terminology   
	 
	
	Editorials  
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	Gaza Holocaust   
	 
	
	
	Gulf War   
	 
	
	Isdood  
	 
	
	
	Islam   
	 
	
	
	News   
	 
	
	
	News Photos 
	  
	 
	
	
	Opinion  
	
	
	Editorials 
	  
	 
	
	
	
	
	US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)   
	 
	
	
	www.aljazeerah.info
	  
      
       
      
        
        
     | 
     | 
    
     
      The Shameful Chapter:  How Kerry and Obama 
	Capitulated to Netanyahu and his AIPAC Operatives 
  By Uri 
	Avnery
  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 5, 2014 
	
  
	A Shameful Chapter 
	HOW WOULD the US react to a declaration that the Palestinians would not 
	conduct negotiations with an Israeli government that includes semi-fascist 
	parties?   With outrage, of course.   How does the US react to 
	an Israeli statement that Israel will not negotiate with a Palestinian 
	government that includes Hamas?   With full approval, of course.    
	FOR ANYONE interested in Israeli-Palestinian peace, the prospect of domestic 
	Palestinian reconciliation is good news.    For years now we have 
	heard Israeli spokespersons announcing that it’s no use making peace with 
	half the Palestinian people and continuing the war with the other half. 
	Mahmoud Abbas is a plucked chicken, as Ariel Sharon tactfully put it. It’s 
	Hamas which counts. And Hamas is planning a Second Holocaust.   Under 
	the recent Palestinian reconciliation agreement, Hamas is now committed to 
	supporting an all-Palestinian government of experts agreed on by both 
	parties. The Israeli extreme right-wing government is burning with rage. It 
	will never, never, never negotiate with a Palestinian government that is 
	supported by Hamas.     Hamas must first recognize Israel, stop 
	all terrorist activities and undertake to respect all previous agreements 
	signed by the PLO.   That’s OK, Abbas declares. The next government 
	will be appointed by me, and it will fulfill all three conditions.   
	That’s not enough, Netanyahu’s spokespersons declare. Hamas itself must 
	accept the three conditions, before we deal with a government supported by 
	Hamas.   Abbas could respond in kind. Before dealing with the 
	Netanyahu government, he could say, all factions in the Israeli government 
	must declare their support for the Two-State Solution, as Netanyahu has done 
	(once, in his so-called Bar-Ilan speech.) At least two parties, Naftali 
	Bennett’s “Jewish Home” and Avigdor Lieberman’s “Israel our Home”, as well 
	as a great part of the Likud, would refuse to do so.   One can 
	envision a ceremony in the Knesset, in which every cabinet minister would 
	stand up and declare: “I hereby solemnly swear that I fully and sincerely 
	support the creation of the State of Palestine next to the State of Israel!” 
	The Messiah will arrive first.   Of course, that is immaterial. The 
	stand of individual parties or ministers is unimportant. It is the policy of 
	the government which counts. If the next Palestinian government recognizes 
	Israel, renounces violence and respects all previous agreements that should 
	be enough.      WHY IS the Palestinian reconciliation agreement 
	good news for peace?   First of all, because one makes peace with a 
	whole nation, not with half of it.  A peace with the PLO, without 
	Hamas, would be ineffective  from the beginning. Hamas could sabotage it 
	at any moment by acts of violence (a.k.a. terrorism).   Second, 
	because by joining the PLO and eventually the Palestinian government, Hamas 
	accepts in practice the policy of the PLO, which has long ago recognized the 
	State of Israel and the partition of historic Palestine.   One should 
	remember that prior to the Oslo agreement, the PLO itself was officially 
	described by Israel (and the USA) as a terrorist organization. At the time 
	of the signing on the White House lawn, the PLO charter was still in force. 
	It called for the destruction of the illegal State of Israel and the return 
	of practically all its citizens to their counties of origin.    For 
	many years, this charter was denounced by Israeli politicians and academics 
	as an insurmountable obstacle to peace.   Only after the Oslo 
	agreement came into force, did the PLO National Council abolish these 
	clauses of their charter in a festive ceremony, attended by President Bill 
	Clinton.   Hamas has a similar charter. It, too, will be modified once 
	Hamas joins the government.   It is one of the ironies of history that 
	in the past, Israel covertly supported Hamas against the PLO. While all 
	Palestinian political activity in the occupied territories was suppressed, 
	Hamas activities in the mosques were allowed.   I once asked a former 
	Shin Bet chief if he had created Hamas. His answer was: “We did not create 
	them, we tolerated them.”    The reason was that at the time Arafat’s 
	PLO was considered the enemy. Arafat himself was relentlessly demonized as 
	the “Second Hitler”. Everybody fighting against Arafat was considered an 
	ally. This attitude continued to prevail for a year after the outbreak of 
	the first intifada, when the Shin Bet realized that Hamas was much more 
	dangerous than the PLO, and started imprisoning (and later assassinating) 
	its leaders.   At present, an undeclared state of ceasefire (tahdiya 
	or “stillness”) prevails between Israel and Hamas. Clearly, Hamas has 
	decided that its ambitions as one of the two major Palestinian political 
	parties are more important than the “violent struggle” against Israel. Its 
	main aim is to attain power in the future Palestinian state in the West Bank 
	and the Gaza Strip. Like so many former liberation organizations around the 
	world, including Begin’s Likud, it is transforming itself from a terrorist 
	organization into a political party.     AS COULD have been foreseen, 
	the US has followed suit and fully accepted the Israeli line. It has 
	threatened the Palestinian Authority with what amounts to a declaration of 
	war if the reconciliation agreement is carried out.   The American 
	peace initiative has ground to a halt. The full truth about it can and must 
	now be told.   It was doomed to failure before it even started. There 
	was not the slightest chance of its bearing fruit.   Before the facts 
	become buried under an avalanche of propaganda, let’s state clearly how it 
	ended: not by Abbas joining international bodies, not by Palestinian 
	reconciliation, but by the refusal of Netanyahu to fulfill a solemn and 
	unequivocal undertaking: to release certain Palestinian prisoners on a 
	certain date.    The release of prisoners is an extremely sensitive 
	point for the Palestinians. It concerns human beings and their families. 
	These particular prisoners, some of whom are Israeli citizens, have been in 
	prison for at least 21 years. Netanyahu just did not have the strength of 
	character to fulfill his promise and confront a wild campaign of incitement 
	unleashed by the extreme Right.   He preferred to end the 
	“negotiations”.    THE PERFORMANCE of John 
	Kerry can only be described as pitiful.    It started with the
	appointment of Martin Indyk as the manager 
	of the negotiations. Indyk had worked as an 
	employee of AIPAC, the main lobby of the Israeli Right.
	AIPAC’S main task is to terrorize the American 
	Congress, whose members – senators and representatives – quake at the very 
	sight of its agents.    To install such a person as an 
	impartial mediator between Israel and the Palestinians was just plain 
	chutzpah. It told the Palestinians right from the beginning what was in 
	store.   The second act of chutzpah was to start the talks without 
	first obtaining from Netanyahu a list of the concessions he was ready to 
	make. Throughout, the Israeli side refused to 
	present a map of its proposed borders, even after the Palestinian side 
	produced their own map.   This charade went on for nine months, 
	in which not an inch of progress was made. The parties met and talked, 
	talked and met. Apart from Netanyahu’s ridiculous demand that the 
	Palestinians recognize Israel as “the nation-state of the Jewish people”, 
	there was nothing on the table.   Tzipi Livni, a very minor 
	politician, basked in the limelight on the glamorous international stage, 
	and would have loved to go on forever without achieving anything at all.  
	  The Palestinian representatives were also interested in continuing, 
	even without purpose, in order to pass the time without an internal 
	explosion.     The whole exercise revolved around one simple 
	question: was President Obama ready to confront 
	the onslaught of the united forces of AIPAC (and its agents - 
	Editor): the Senate, the House of Representatives, the Republicans, the 
	Evangelicals, the right-wing Jewish establishment and the Israeli propaganda 
	machine?    If not, Kerry should not have even started.    THIS 
	WEEK, in a private meeting, Kerry stated the obvious: that if Israel 
	continues with its present policy, it will become an apartheid state.    
	There is nothing revolutionary in this. Former president Jimmy Carter used 
	the term in the title of his book. In Israel, independent and left-wing 
	commentators do so every day. But in Washington DC all hell broke loose. 
	  The hapless Kerry rushed to apologize. He did not mean it, God forbid! 
	The Secretary of State of the mighty USA asked for little Israel’s 
	forgiveness.   And so the piece reached its shameful finale on a 
	dismal fading chord. 
       
       
       | 
     | 
     
      
      
      
      
     |