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COMMENTARY
The Sharon Tail Continues to Wag the American Dog

by Carlton Cobb
Council for the National Interest


September 7th, 2005: In the span of less than three weeks, U.S. policy on Israeli peace steps for "the day after disengagement" has shifted from a position of speaking truth to a government used to getting its way and letting the Americans follow along, to one of the Americans just following along. Once again, the U.S. is throwing its hat in with Sharon at a time when it should be encouraging both sides to sit down at the negotiating table.


“It cannot be Gaza only.”

-- Condoleezza Rice in an
interview with the New York Times on August 18, 2005.
 


It is a familiar Israeli/American game. Israel threatens to elect the even-more-hawkish Benjamin Netanyahu, and American officials cower. Yet Sharon is unlikely to be less hawkish when it comes to what counts -- the West Bank and Jerusalem. Will American Jews who support former prime minister Netanyahu in the expected contest for Likud party leader this fall be put off by this U.S. interference in Israeli politics in favor of Sharon?


"In our view, the message to Prime Minister Sharon from people in New York should be one of congratulations, not one of new pressures."

-- A senior administration official quoted by the New York Times on September 4, 2005, in anticipation of Sharon's speech before the UN this month.
 

Sharon may be congratulated for withdrawing from Gaza, but he should also move forward on a positive program of recognizing and dealing with a Palestinian state, as his Ministry of Foreign Affairs claims in a recent publication. Issued under the title "Paying the Price for Peace: The Human Cost of Disengagement," its opening paragraph concludes: "Israel’s ultimate goal is to establish good neighborly relations with a Palestinian state."

If this change in position is truly the Sharon government's policy, U.S. officials may have reason to be hopeful about the future of the peace process. Such a positive statement, however, is at variance with Sharon's lifelong goal of undermining Palestinian nationalism and denying its aspirations for statehood. As evidence, we can add another quote, this one from Dov Weisglass, a top adviser to Prime Minister Sharon in an interview with Ha'aretz last fall:

"The disengagement is actually formaldehyde. It supplies the amount of formaldehyde that's necessary so that there will not be a political process with the Palestinians...Effectively, this whole package that is called the Palestinian state, with all that it entails, has been removed from our agenda indefinitely. And all this with authority and permission. All with a presidential blessing and the ratification of both houses of Congress. What more could have been anticipated? What more could have been given to the settlers?"

What Weisglass means is that Palestinians will have to be satisfied for the next X number of years with a fraction of their people having freedom, narrowly defined and entirely controlled by Israel. Gaza and the northern corner of the West Bank are one-third of the Palestinian population west of the Jordan River. All of the main West Bank cities remain surrounded by the Israel Defense Forces, separated by hundreds of checkpoints that daily hassle the population. As the better of two evils, the administration apparently wants Sharon re-elected. This is a formula for more violence that will fuel anti-Americanism throughout the Muslim world and lead to more terrorism against America and our allies, at home and abroad.

U.S. support for Israel's intransigent position on settlement growth in the West Bank, targeted assassinations, continued annexation and internal separation brought by the apartheid wall, and the encirclement and isolation of Jerusalem encourages the worst elements in Israeli politics to create new "facts on the ground" with impunity. In the April meeting with Sharon in Crawford, Texas, President Bush called for "no expansion of settlements," yet when the settlement expansion continued, the administration fell silent.

It is an indication of how deeply ingrained is the Sharon view that Times reporter Steven R. Weisman notes that "the administration frequently [calls] on Israel to ease checkpoints and roadblocks in the West Bank and take other actions, but often in vain." We still ignore the fact that the United States, more than any other country, has the leverage necessary to further the peace process. All it takes is the political will to exercise it. Unfortunately, the Sharon tail continues to wag the American dog. And peace remains elusive.

Update on the Gaza Withdrawal

September 6, 2005: The Jewish settlers have left, but the siege of Palestinian towns and villages in Gaza that lie near the old settlements continues unabated, according the latest report of the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR).

The Israeli Defense Forces razed houses and leveled areas on the eastern border with Israel.  They have limited the number of Palestinians from using the international border at Rafah – the only way Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are able to gain access to the international world. 

Additional Articles offsite on this Issue


Answers to the false security claims supporting the Separation Wall
Gush-Shalom, Israel

 


Israeli violations of the road map
Gush-Shalom, Israel

 

AIPAC lowers profile on special aid request
The Globe, Israel


Purpose? First the Israeli government offered to send a fact finding mission to see if they could help.  This was seen as stingy.  Now the Israeli government has offered to send medical teams at short notice to areas hit by Hurricane Katrina
.  The main concern for the government focuses on not loosing the $2.2 billion it wants as reward for the Gaza disengagement which a Lou Dobbs poll in early August showed 93% of Americans are against. Israel is afraid Americans will spend this money on Americans rather then their settlers, occupying land in violation of International law. Meanwhile Saudi Arabia, one of the first countries in the world to offer aid (as Katrina made landfall) along with Iran, both offered to double their oil output to ease supply shortages, two countries Americans continue to vilify and threaten.  To date, 90 countries have offered aid.

The Israeli Government vs The Israeli people:

Though the Israeli government continues to be its usual "we want something if we do anything" self, the Israeli citizens, led by Ha'aretz Daily are donating whatever they can to help financially and materially.

This distinction between the actions of the government of Israel and its people needs to be made.  The people of Israel, acting apart from their government should be commended and their help is gratefully appreciated. Unlike their government's motivation, the donations and help from the Israeli people  have no strings attached.  The offers and support of the people of Israel is genuine toward the victims of Katrina.
 

All Palestinians between the ages of 16 and 35 are prohibited from leaving Gaza, for example, a prohibition that has been in effect for some time.

Unspecified attacks and sometimes unreported attacks are taking place against Palestinian civilians, for example, a 19-year-old living in Rafah, which was reported on the Rafah blog site.  The PCHR reported paralyzing roadblocks on the main road of the Gaza Strip. “Thousands of Palestinian civilians were seen waiting at the roadsides to travel between the north and south of the Gaza Strip.” 

Moreover, the occupation in the West Bank continues at full force.  During the period August 25-31, PCHR reported more than 30 military incursions into the West Bank, the raiding of private houses and arrest of civilians.  The IDF continues to raze houses that have been constructed “without permits,” and to confiscate land for checkpoints. In Hebron, where Jewish settlers have attacked Palestinians repeatedly, a new attack took place on August 25.   According to PCHR, they “threw stones and empty bottles at a house belonging to Mohammed Hamed Abu 'Eisha.  They also demolished the fence of the house.  {The IDF] were present in the area, but did not intervene to stop this attack.  The house was damaged.”

Peaceful demonstrations against the construction of the “Separation” Wall, especially in the area of Bil’in, encountered unusually hostile force from the IDF.  Many were wounded and arrested, including members of the International Solidarity Movement.  The force used against the demonstrators earned the wrath of a Haaretz editorial on September 6 which wondered why more restraint wasn’t used, especially since it had been so evident in the pro-settlement demonstrations in Gaza two weeks earlier.  The Israeli courts have also come down against the use of excessive force used by the army, but to no effect.

The Guardian is also reporting on the use of indiscriminate killings by the Israeli army and its “culture of impunity.”  Its report stems from interviews provided by a group of former Israeli soldiers called Breaking the Silence.

Conflicting reports appeared on the strengthening of Jewish colonies in the West Bank.  On the one hand, Ehud Olmert is supposed to have told the Jerusalem Post that there was no plan to expand Israel’s largest colonies, but on the other, al-Jazeera reported that up to 3,000 units would be added to Ariel (which lies deep within the West Bank), which would in effect double the size of the colony, currently numbering 18,000.  As we reported last week, the increase in the number of new Jewish colonists in the West Bank topped 12,000 for the first six months of 2005.

Currently, the international border crossing for the Gaza Strip is at Rafah, and for many years the Israelis have indicated that they would never relinquish their authority to the Palestinians at that crossing.  But in the past year, negotiations with the Egyptians have proved fruitful, and it appears that the Egyptians will be allowed to deploy troops at the border to monitor the crossing (and therefore be held accountable to goods passing through the border).  About this, the Palestinians are dubious, since it may jeopardize their contacts with the West Bank, where the heart of Palestine lies.

The demotion of the old Jewish settlement housing is supposed to be completed by the middle of September, when the IDF is also supposed to be leaving.  According to Haaretz, the IDF took the PA security commanders on a tour of the sites.  A group of Palestinian youths who threw rocks at the troops later on were fired upon by the troops, and one was killed.  Later the Palestinians launched a Qassam rocket into the Negev.  It was the first reported skirmish between the Israeli army and the Gazans since the evacuation.  Abbas is expected to post thousands of Palestinian military around the sites to protect them from people who might rush in and seize plots.

Council for the National Interest is an American non-profit organization pursuing policies seeking to influence the current US foreign policy by redirecting it to considering American needs and interests first here and abroad.  Currently the Middle East and US policies in the Middle East constitute the focus for this organization. Council for the National Interest Foundation · 1250 4th Street SW · Suite WG-1 · Washington, DC 20024 · 202-863-2591; CNIF is a 501(c)(3) organization.

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