Palestine Papers Revealed Nothing: A Response to Ramzy Baroud

Dr. Saeb Erekat (Photo Seeds of Peace 2007)

Dr. Saeb Erekat (Photo Seeds of Peace 2007)

Dr. Saeb Erekat (Photo Seeds of Peace 2007)

Saeb Erekat 1 March 2011

In his article entitled ‘Till September: The PA’s Meaningless Deadlines’, dated February 26, Ramzy Baroud fails to present the real picture of the Palestinian situation today.

Characterizing the Palestinian leadership as a ‘‘self designated Palestinian leadership in the West Bank’’, Mr. Baroud wittingly ignores some facts while distorts others. In fact, it was Hamas that has refused until this day to sign the Egyptian brokered reconciliation agreement.

The so called “Palestine papers” have not revealed a single official agreement or document that offers concessions. Rather the majority of the documents were internal draft summaries of meetings taken in shorthand and intended for personal use only.

 

Moreover, Baroud’s failure to differentiate between official positions and explorations or polemical rhetoric during the course of negotiations shows a lack of knowledge or a deliberate distortion.

A responsible and careful reading of the minutes and official Palestinian positions reveals that Palestinian negotiators were insistent on the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.

The issues discussed were mechanisms by which Palestinian rights would be realized, rather than forfeited as claimed. For example, the Palestinian position on territory never deviated from the 1967 borders and illegality of settlements. However, there was a willingness to discuss Israeli and U.S proposals for land swaps, only if equal in size and value, as a possible way to establish the 1967 lines as a base line for borders given the complicated reality on the ground created by Israel’s illegal colonial policies.

Similarly, with regards to the right of return: The Palestinian position emphasized Israel’s responsibility for the creation and perpetuation of Palestinian refugehood and demanded Israeli recognition of responsibility and the right of return, the latter being an individual right that cannot be negotiated away.

That was the point of departure for the Palestinian position which sought to negotiate a mechanism for the implementation of the right of return as well as the empowerment and respect for the decision of each Palestinian refugee.

As for my resignation, it was not a cynical attempt to shift attention or retain credibility as claimed by Baroud. No one in the leadership ever shied from a serious open discussion on any of the issues. Rather, the resignation was the natural course of action for any official who holds dear the values of accountability and personal responsibility.

If I did not resign, Mr. Baroud would vehemently attack the lack of accountability in the Palestinian system.

Lastly, the author wrongly characterizes the call for elections as a tactical move on the part of the Palestinian Authority (PA). The call came after numerous failures of reconciliation attempts as a way to move past the deadlock and overcome the crippling political divide by returning to the source of authority, the Palestinian people.

The PA elections, however, are not a substitute for self-determination or for the end of the occupation. Currently, the dismantlement of the PA is under consideration because the PA is not and has never been an end in and of itself, but rather a milestone on the road to independence.

- Dr. Saeb Erekat is a member of PLO Executive Committee. Article originally posted on Palestine Chronicle.

The “Palestine Papers”: Grave Palestinian concessions met with utter Israeli rejectionism

BDS-Stickers

17 February 2011 | BDS National Committee

With revolutionary change across the Arab World eroding Israel’s power in the region, BDS has become a key strategy of the Palestinian people for a global struggle to hold Israel accountable and assert our inalienable rights under international law

Occupied Palestine, 17 February 2011 – The recent public exposure of a large number of documents related to the U.S.-sponsored “peace process” between Israel and Palestinian officials provides hard evidence, if any was needed, not only of readiness on the part of unrepresentative Palestinian “negotiators” to concede basic Palestinian rights, but also of Israel’s rejectionism and unwillingness to negotiate even an unjust and unsustainable peace. The leaked documents also reveal the arm-twisting employed by international “peace brokers” to compel – unelected — Palestinian officials to serve Israel’s expansionist and colonial agenda through the surrender of UN-sanctioned rights of the Palestinian people. It is now clearer than ever that the so-called negotiations were never based on principles of international law and human rights and never promoted just peace.

With popular revolutions scoring immense successes in the region, particularly in Egypt, against despotic regimes that were deeply implicated in protecting Israel and complicit in its war crimes and crimes against humanity, Israel’s impunity, intimidation and “deterrence” power, and its ability to maintain occupation, colonialism and apartheid over the Palestinian people have been substantially weakened. The lightening speed at which democratization and freedom are taking hold in Tunisia, Egypt and other Arab states ruled by authoritarian regimes will undoubtedly boost Palestinian popular resistance, including the boycott movement, in an unprecedented way.

In light of these radical developments in the region, the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) calls upon people of conscience worldwide to view these documents (“Palestine Papers”) as the final nail in the coffin of the so-called “peace process.” We urge international civil society and concerned citizens of the world to redouble support for the more ethically consistent and effective alternative: a dignified and rights-based strategy for just peace, in particular the Palestinian civil society-led, global Campaign for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it complies with international law and respects the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.

The recently published documents include protocols, maps and correspondence from almost 10 years of political negotiations, including direct meetings between Palestinian and Israeli delegations and preparatory talks with U.S. officials, as well as summaries of numerous meetings in which U.S. and European official and non-official parties exert pressure on what seemed to be pliant Palestinian counterparts. A series of papers from the preparatory meetings of the latest round of failed peace summits (2007 Annapolis Conference) document Israel’s rejection of a joint platform based on the traditional two-state model for peace, i.e., a Palestinian state alongside Israel, and the persistent efforts of then Israeli Prime Minister Tzipi Livni to extract recognition of the racist concept of the “Jewish state” from the Palestinian negotiators, who refused to accede to this dictate. Livni’s words, “I am a lawyer… But I am against law – international law in particular. Law in general,”[1] uttered during a negotiating session are telling of Israeli contempt for international law and disregard of Palestinian rights.

While the “Palestine Papers” have not revealed any major news that was unknown to keen Palestinian and international observers, they have painted a detailed picture of a negotiation process characterized by disrespect of ethical and legal standards, lacking any accountability (especially on the Palestinian side), and fraught with blatant unwillingness of Israel and international actors to address the real obstacles to just peace, i.e., Israel’s ongoing practice of apartheid, colonialism and occupation.

In summary, the “Palestine Papers” offer a glimpse of the reality of 20 years of “peace” making which has failed because the U.S. and the Quartet as sponsors have ignored what the United Nations has recognized at least since 1974, i.e., that exercise of the inalienable rights of self-determination, independence and sovereignty by the Palestinian people, and return of the Palestinian refugees to their homes and properties from which their were uprooted, constitute the key preconditions for achieving just peace (UN General Assembly Resolution 3236). In other words, Israel’s three-tiered system of oppression must be brought to an end before any real peace negotiations can succeed. Peace talks should be conditioned upon recognition by all parties of the applicability of relevant precepts of international law, human rights principles, and the inalienable rights of the indigenous Palestinian people, paramount among which is the right to self determination. Negotiations can then focus on the modalities and timelines of implementing international law, not on whether or not to recognize its reference.

The BDS Campaign against Israel presents a strategic alternative on this basis. Guided by the 2005 BDS call, the Palestinian civil society-led global BDS Campaign focuses on the comprehensive rights of the Palestinian people and strives to realize them through dismantling Israel’s discriminatory and oppressive regime over the Palestinian people in its entirety. Specifically, the BDS Call highlights the three basic rights that constitute the minimal requirements for the Palestinian people to exercise its right to self determination: ending the 1967 occupation and colonization; ending the institutionalized and legalized system of racial discrimination against Palestinian citizens of Israel; and recognizing and enabling the right of the Palestinian refugees to return to their homes of origin and receive reparations. Only thus can comprehensive and lasting peace be built.

Palestinian citizens of Israel have for more than six decades faced a system of discrimination enshrined in law. This system is now being further entrenched by a raft of new legislation that aims to undermine Palestinian rights in all areas of life.[2] At this crucial time, the demand that these1.3m Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up one-fifth of the population of Israel, enjoy full equality is more important than ever. Any proposal for a just peace must enshrine this basic demand for equality.

As for the refugees, at the end of 2008, there were at least 7.1 million displaced Palestinians, representing 67 percent of the entire Palestinian population (10.6 million) worldwide. Among them were at least 6.6 million refugees and 427,000 internally displaced persons.[3] The denial of these refugees’ right of return has been described by Prof. John Dugard, former UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, as “perhaps the greatest injustice of the post-World War II period, and certainly the most long-standing.” The right of return is at the heart of the question of Palestine.

Rooted in a century of popular, non-violent Palestinian struggle against settler-colonialism and – later – dispossession and apartheid, and largely inspired by the heroic struggle against apartheid in South Africa, the BDS Campaign for Palestinian rights has scored major successes since its launch less than six years ago, confirming the effectiveness of its rights-based approach. Two recent developments attest to the spectacular growth of the Campaign’s influence. A few weeks ago, 155 Israeli scholars, including Israel Prize laureates, have called for a boycott of the colonial Ariel College due to its existence on occupied Palestinian land in contravention of international law.[4] Around the same time, the Jewish Federations of North America announced a $6m fund to counter BDS and other efforts accused of promoting the “deligitmization” of Israel.[5] The two examples, coupled with the characterization of BDS as a “strategic threat” by top Israeli officials, show that the BDS movement, which has a vibrant and growing Israeli chapter, is creating significant fear in the Israeli establishment of becoming the world pariah in the way that South Africa once was. Visible and effective BDS action is striking real victories against Israeli apartheid and its complicit institutions and is in turn creating a challenge to the colonial consensus within Israeli society.

In response to the publication of the “Palestine Papers,” the Palestinian BDS National Committee reiterates the centrality of recognizing and implementing the full set of rights of all Palestinians and the need for credible alternatives, in particular of Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it abides by its obligations under international law and respects Palestinian rights. As Archbishop Desmond Tutu once wrote, “I am not interested in picking up crumbs of compassion thrown from the table of someone who considers himself my master. I want the full menu of rights.”[6]

[1] http://transparency.aljazeera.net/document/2003
[2] http://www.old-adalah.org/newsletter/eng/nov10/docs/ndl.doc and http://www.old-adalah.org/eng/
[3]http://www.badil.org/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=garden_flypage.tpl&product_id=119&category_id=2&vmcchk=1&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=4
[4] http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israel-prize-laureates-join-academic-boycott-of-settlement-university-1.335954
[5] http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/10/24/2741418/jfna-and-jcpa-create-6-million-network-to-fight-delegitimization-of-israel
[6] http://www.tutufoundation-usa.org/exhibitions.html

Global intifada weekly report

Mazin Qumsiyeh

Mazin Qumsiyeh, 5 Feb 2011

6 reporters and 36 Palestinians were injured in the demonstration in Jerusalem Friday. In Bil’in and Wad Rahhal and other localities, Palestinian demonstrators and international supporters voiced strong support for the people’s revolution in Egypt and vowed to attend planned demonstrations Saturday which are happening in hundreds of cities around the world (including Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Ramallah; see below).

Here is a short (<3 minute) video of what happened to us in Wad Rahhal today:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-t9vgPlD_c

Thugs AKA security services paid for by US taxpayers run over peaceful demonstrators

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3wi3K8T3pPQ

Egypt: how to negotiate the transition. Lessons from Poland and China

http://www.opendemocracy.net/maciej-bartkowski-lester-r-kurtz/egypt-how-to-negotiate-transition-lessons-from-poland-and-china

Unrest Rises in Jordan, but Few Expect Revolt

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/05/world/middleeast/05jordan.htm

(few expected revolts in Tunisia and Egypt and in Eastern Europe under communism or South Africa under apartheid etc)

A Jewish Group Makes Waves, Locally and Abroad

“The group’s views differ markedly from statements about the Egyptian protests coming from the Israeli government and many other Jewish-American organizations, which caution that the demonstrations in Cairo could ultimately threaten Israel.” http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/04/us/04bcactivists.html?_r=1&ref=global-home

As usual, politicians and mainstream media are behind the wave.  Now even CNN is upset over the methodical attack on journalists by the Mubarak thugs (paid for by the US administration)

http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/meast/02/04/egypt.journalist.attacks/index.html?hpt=C1

Palestinian Popular Committees Against the Israeli Occupation stand with the Egyptian people in their revolt http://www.bilin-ffj.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=345&Itemid=1

Meanwhile Palestinian authority figures violated Palestinian law by disrupting a demonstration in Ramallah (and in turn organized paid people to show support for Mubarak) but more demonstrations in support of the Egyptian people are planned Saturday (5 February) at 2 PM in Ramallah (Al-Manara area), Bethlehem (Nativity Square), Jerusalem (Damascus Gate) and other locations. Facebook event page:

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=143731855688303

Website, Arabic: http://www.anothervoice-palestine.org

English: http://www.anothervoice-palestine.org/index-en.php?lang=en

These are part of a global campaign and you should find and join events in your city

Reminder of other events.

Thursday 10 February 2011 at 6 PM at the Bethlehem Peace Center.  Book Launch “Popular Resistance in Palestine: A History of Hope and Empowerment” with author Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh (I will also be traveling in March and Early April to France, England, and the US for a book tour).

July 8-18, 2011: Book your tickets NOW to get good deals.  Palestinian civil society organizations and peace and human rights defenders and activists on the ground call on civil society organizations and people of conscience around the world to come to Palestine for a week of fellowship and peace-building. You will be accommodated locally and enjoy Palestinian hospitality and a program of networking, fellowship, and peace work in Palestinian towns and villages including land reclamation. More details at http://www.palestinejn.org (or email me)

Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh teaches and does research at Bethlehem and Birzeit Universities in occupied Palestine. He serves as chairman of the board of the Palestinian Center for Rapprochement Between People and coordinator of the Popular Committee Against the Wall and Settlements in Beit Sahour He is author of “Sharing the Land of Canaan: Human rights and the Israeli/Palestinian Struggle” and the forthcoming book Popular Resistance in Palestine: A history of Hope and Empowerment.

A Bedouin in Cyberspace, a villager at home
http://www.qumsiyeh.org
http://www.pcr.ps

Articles by Dr. Qumsiyeh on RamallahOnline.com.

Palestine Papers: The Palestinians’ ‘Generous Offer’

President Barack Obama talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the conclusion of a statement to the press in the East Room of the White House, Sept. 1, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

President Barack Obama talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the conclusion of a statement to the press in the East Room of the White House, Sept. 1, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

President Barack Obama talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the conclusion of a statement to the press in the East Room of the White House, Sept. 1, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

Ramzy Baroud, 4 Feb 2011

As Palestinians are becoming increasingly confident about the authenticity of the Palestine Papers – 1,600 leaked documents that Al Jazeera began publishing on January 23 – they can also find little to be proud of in their contents.

According to Palestinian political commentator Mazin Qumsiyeh, the PA’s chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat “comes out basically pleading and begging sometimes and other times using the presence of Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran to try and convince (American and Israeli) officials.” If the conduct of PA officials is not outright betrayal of the rights of their people, then it is, at best, degrading political groveling in exchange for factional gains.

Others have convincingly argued that such demeaning behavior is also indicative of the true nature of the negotiations. Palestinians are, in fact, the party desperate for a peace agreement, while the Israelis insist on arrogantly refusing all Palestinian initiatives – which often even surpass Israel’s and the US’s declared expectations. “The documents put to death the idea that Israel has no Palestinian ‘partner for peace,” argues US author and professor, Stephen M. Walt. They also “expose the bipartisan and binational strategy that Israel and the United States have followed under both Bush and Obama: to keep putting pressure on the Palestinians to cut a one-sided deal.”

The leaked documents – comprising mostly of Palestinian accounts of numerous meetings between Israel, US and Palestinian Authority officials – truly represent a convincing, and, in my view, a final argument against the sham dubbed the ‘peace process’. The so-called process, which commenced with the original declaration of principles in Oslo in 1993, has turned into a secretive barter between a rejectionist, but unified Israeli-American front and Palestinian officials who are largely focused on ensuring American aid and defeating their political rivals.

What is particularly odd is the fact that while Palestinian negotiators were conceding most of the Palestinian rights in occupied East Jerusalem, brazenly giving away the right of return for refugees, and offering territorial concessions to accommodate most of the illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank, many in the American media were still talking of Palestinian failure to respond to Israel’s historic concessions. The Israeli generosity ruse had begun many years ago – back in the Henry Kissinger years when Arabs were constantly paraded for failing to live up to Israeli and American overtures. But the ruse was greatly cemented following the July 2000 collapse of peace talks between then Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Barak and late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Barak’s “generous offer” – since proven untrue – continued to haunt Palestinians, who were derided for their supposed political inflexibility and “Arafat’s recalcitrance” (L.A. Times editorial, April 08, 2002).

Now Al Jazeera has revealed and verified hundreds of documents, spanning from 1999 to 2010, which show that the Palestinians’ generosity was truly extraordinary and far-reaching, if not a cause of utter shame for many of those involved.

The Palestine Papers revealed much about the skewed nature of the relationship between two parties who are purportedly in a state of conflict. As it turned out, the Palestinian leadership seemed to negotiate and offer the very opposite of what the Palestinian public truly desire.

According to one leaked document, Saeb Erekat gave away most of Occupied East Jerusalem, even as Israelis insisted on not yet discussing Jerusalem. On June 30, 2008, in a meeting that included Tzipi Livni, then Israel’s Foreign Minister and Ahmed Qurei, top Fatah official and former PA Prime Minister, Erekat declared: “It is no secret that on our map we proposed we are offering you the biggest Yerushalayim (the Hebrew word for Jerusalem) in history.”

Erekat’s personal offer was an extension of one proposed by Qurei himself, in a meeting two weeks earlier. Qurei “proposed that Israel annexes all settlements in Jerusalem except Jabal Abu Ghneim (Har Homa). This is the first time in history that we make such a proposition; we refused to do so in Camp David.” To further convince Israeli officials, Erekat “went on to enumerate some of the settlements that the PA was willing to concede,” according to Gregg Carlstrom in Al Jazeera. They include “French Hill, Ramat Alon, Ramat Shlomo, Gilo, Talpiot, and the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem’s old city. Those areas contain some 120,000 Jewish settlers.”

As for Haram al-Sharif, or the Noble Sanctuary – the third holiest of Muslim sites – Erekat offered ‘creative’ solutions, such as placing the Palestinian Muslim shrine under international supervision – thus ceding almost complete control over the occupied city.

This is barely the tip of the iceberg. The compromises are plentiful and they blatantly contradict international law, Palestinian national aspirations, Arab consensus, and even the declared official position of the Palestinian Authority itself.

The Palestine Papers also confirm that both sides are on more or less on the same page regarding the Palestinian people’s right to return, agreeing that such a right will not be carried out in any meaningful way. In an October 21, 2009 meeting with US diplomat and Special Envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell, Erekat stated: “Palestinians will need to know that five million refugees will not go back. The number will be agreed as one of the options. Also the number returning to their own state will depend on annual absorption capacity.”

The documents reveal much more, including, for example, that the PA’s strategy in crushing political opposition was the handy work of Britain’s intelligence service, MI6. This, of course, hardly compares to the American role, which has held Israeli interests and priorities as the backbone of American involvement in the talks.

The leaked documents have permanently damaged whatever little credibility the Ramallah-based authority still enjoyed among Palestinians. How much longer the PA can continue to serve any purpose is now unclear. What is certain, however, is that its purpose does not include exacting Palestinian rights or preserving the national integrity of the Palestinian people and the territorial integrity of a Palestinian state.

The Palestine Papers have made this very clear, and lashing out at Al Jazeera – as the PA is now doing – will change nothing.

- 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.

The Palestine Papers

ThePalestinePapers

2 February 2011

Dear Friends,

I was asked by several people for some resources about the Palestine Papers, which were released by Al Jazeera on 23 January. These 1600 documents, dated from 1999 to 2010, including minutes, reports, emails, maps and presentations, constitute the largest leak and the deepest insight into the failed “peace process” ever.

I was one of several experts and analysts invited by Al Jazeera to take an early look at the documents and I wrote at least eight articles about them which are linked below. I’ve also included some key articles by other writers and links to the document archive itself. Scholars, historians and activists should take it onwards from here because there is still much exploring to be done of these valuable documents.

Ali Abunimah

ARTICLES:

Jordan, PLO clash on refugee issue
Ali Abunimah, Al Jazeera, 24 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/2011124122125339673.html

A dangerous shift on 1967 lines
Ali Abunimah, Al Jazeera, 24 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/201112411450358613.html

PA lobbying blocked Shalit swap
Ali Abunimah, Al Jazeera, 26 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/2011126132936232554.html

Israel’s lawyer, revisited
By Mark Perry and Ali Abunimah, Al Jazeera, 24 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/201112412759856229.html

The US role as Israel’s enabler
By Mark Perry and Ali Abunimah, Al Jazeera, 26 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/201112614122782761.html

US sidelined Palestinian democracy
Ali Abunimah, Al Jazeera, 26 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/2011126145337346201.html

The Palestine Papers and the “Gaza coup”
Ali Abunimah, The Electronic Intifada, 27 January 2011
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article11756.shtml

“If US can’t be ‘honest broker’ in Middle East, get out of the way”
Ali Abunimah, Christian Science Monitor, 27 January 2010
http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2011/0127/Palestine-Papers-If-US-can-t-be-honest-broker-in-Middle-East-get-out-of-the-way

ARTICLES BY OTHERS:

PA relinquished right of return
Amira Howeidy, Al Jazeera, 24 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/2011124121923486877.html

Dayton’s mission: A reader’s guide
Mark Perry, Al Jazeera, 25 January 2011
http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/2011/01/2011125145732219555.html

‘Not worth the paper they’re printed on’
Mark Perry, Foreign Policy, 27 January 2011
http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/01/27/not_worth_the_paper_they_re_printed_on

VIDEO: The Palestine Papers panel discussion

“Shlomo Ben Ami, former Israeli Forign Minister, Daud Abdullah, director of Middle east monitor UK and Ali Abunimah, co-founder of Electronic Intifada make up the panel of analysts who discuss the Palestine Papers. This is Part three”

PART 1
http://english.aljazeera.net/video/middleeast/2011/01/2011123211019553829.html

PART 3
http://english.aljazeera.net/video/middleeast/2011/01/201112413023661845.html

Aljazeera English’s special page on The Palestine Papers with many more articles and analsyes by other authors: http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/

All the Palestine Papers documents can be viewed at:
http://www.ajtransparency.com/en/search_english

Somebody please hand Abbas the revolver on the silver tray

Stuart Littlewood

May God zap him with a thunderbolt! He rode roughshod over the Basic Law, hijacked the presidency and turned the peace pantomime into a bloody farce. On his watch disunity became the name of the game while diplomatic skills were jettisoned, or more likely never mastered.

Stuart Littlewood, 2 Feb 2011

In all our joy and excitement for Egypt let us not lose sight of the grey and sinister blob that is Mahmoud Abbas.

He must be asking himself – fearfully – why he has so far escaped the purge while his bosom-buddies Hosni and Zine are sent packing in disgrace.

Some say Abbas isn’t a bad guy, he just lost his way. Actually there’s a long crime-sheet against him, too tiresome to catalogue in detail here.

A founding member of Arafat’s Fatah faction, he won the presidency of the Palestinian National Authority in 2005 in a dodgy and deeply lopsided contest – let’s not dignify it with the word ‘election’ – in which Israel seriously interfered to obstruct other candidates. He has overstayed his term by two years and is widely regarded as having no legitimacy and no popular mandate, yet he’s still propped up by the US and Israel and their hangers-on.

In 2007 he dissolved the Hamas-led unity government and appointed Salam Fayyad prime minister, a move that was almost certainly illegal under Palestinian Basic Law and designed to ensure the disunity and weakness that Israel so badly wanted to see.

He has been further undone by the Wikileaks revelations that the Israeli government “consulted with Egypt and Fatah prior to Operation Cast Lead, asking if they were willing to assume control of Gaza once Israel defeated Hamas”.

A true Palestinian patriot surely would not have kept silent about an evil plan to commit war crimes against his fellow countrymen!

It seems he also asked Israel to tighten the blockade of his countrymen in Gaza, even inviting the racist entity to re-occupy the crossing zone between Gaza and Egypt.

It looked suspiciously like he was trying to bury the Goldstone report when he withdrew Palestinian support for a vote in the UN Human Rights Council to have it sent to the General Assembly for possible action. Such a vote would have been a first step toward war crimes tribunals, and it is reported that he was warned by US officials that this would complicate efforts to restart the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks – by then hopelessly discredited anyway.

Abbas’s security squads, funded by the US, have been rampaging around the West Bank doing the Israeli Occupation Force’s dirty work, thuggishly suppressing all signs of resistance and rounding up Hamas members. And the PA has now abolished free expression by banning Palestinians from demonstrating in support of the Egyptians and the uprising in Tunisia.

Abbas phoned Mubarak to affirm his “solidarity” with him in the face of growing popular unrest and demands for him to quit. This was despite Mubarak having collaborated with Israel to help the rogue regime maintain its cruel and suffocating blockade of Gaza. Abbas also phoned the Tunisian President Zine el-Abidine bin Ali before he was ousted.

When he took up the post of president, Abbas would have sworn the following oath…

I swear to God almighty to be faithful to the Homeland and to its sacred places, and to the people and its national heritage, and to respect the Constitutional system and the law, and to safeguard the interests of the Palestinian people completely, as God is my witness.

May God zap him with a thunderbolt! He rode roughshod over the Basic Law, hijacked the presidency and turned the peace pantomime into a bloody farce. On his watch disunity became the name of the game while diplomatic skills were jettisoned, or more likely never mastered.

As for the national heritage and sacred places the loon’s negotiators were ready to hand them to the enemy on a platter.

In times gone by, a high ranking loser would recognize when the game was up and do the decent thing. He would retire to his study and close the door. The butler would bring a glass of best brandy and a loaded revolver on a silver tray, and discreetly withdraw. After a few moments’ reflection and penning a farewell note, the gentleman would blow his brains out and save everyone an awful lot of trouble.

The Palestinians had better have a credible Plan B in place when they hear the bang.

Stuart Littlewood

Stuart Littlewood

Stuart Littlewood is an industrial marketing specialist turned writer-photographer. In 2005 he was invited to write and shoot pictures for a book about the plight of the Palestinians under occupation. ‘Radio Free Palestine’ was published in 2007. For details please see www.radiofreepalestine.co.uk.

  • The Author is a regular contributor to RamallahOnline.com. Find more Articles by Stuart Littlewood on RamallahOnline.

Palestine Papers; Chutzpa out of Ramallah

Saeb Erekat, Without Borders (RO, Photo Crop)

Sami Jamil Jadallah, 31 Jan 2011

Any one watching Saeb Erekat interview with Ahmed Mansour on Aljazeera program” Without Borders” saw a different Saeb, not the pompous arrogant know it all condescending Saeb but a very scared, agitated on defensive verging on mental breakdown for the lies and reckless incompetency are coming out. It is true of Yaser Abed-Rabboo the rabid guard dog of the Ramallah leadership. Instead of directing their responses to the issues at hand they resorted to character assassinations of Qatar, its leadership and Aljazeera. The entire Palestinian leadership has lots of “Chutzpa” to even dare to make excuses after others, committing lies after lies even face the people.

In the interview, Saeb tells us the leadership is building a nation with “one gun”. But his “one gun” is directed toward the people in protections of the Jewish Occupation and its marauding thugs. The one “gun state” Saeb is talking about is nothing but a racketeering mafia in service of the Jewish Occupation and the Palestinian leadership.

Saeb tells us the leadership has nothing to hide, it kept Arab leaders the likes of Bin Ali, Hosni Mubarak and Amr Musa informed. Frankly who gives a damn if Mubarak or Bin Ali or Amr Musa are kept informed when the people are lied to, kept uniformed and in the dark.

Do not know why Abbas chose to travel the world wasting hundreds of millions on private jets, royal suites, VIP service, expensive shopping for his entourage seeking advice when the best advice he can get is from his own people, those who are in the refugee camps like Jalzoun, Alama’ari, Jabalia. No need to spend nights in Royal Suites when he needs to spend the nights on dirt floors like millions of his people. No need for private jets that takes him far away when a short walk can put him in touch with the millions who had to endure humiliating checkpoints for years. No need to spend days with Hosni Mubarak when he can meet with those who are expelled from their homes in East Jerusalem or those whose homes were demolished. Do not understand why Abbas prefers to travel to Paris, London and New York and Sharm El-Sheik when he can travel few miles from his fortress and meet with his people who lost their homes and farms to the Apartheid Wall or the “Jewish Roads Only” and those whose farms and trees where burned and destroyed by his Israeli partners marauding thugs.

Saeb tells us the leadership is working hard building “state institutions” when the only institution (Palestine Legislative Council) elected by the people for the people is shut down, ignored and marginalized on the order of Israel, Egypt, and the US, in favor of “fist full of dollars” that keeps the Palestinian Authority going and in service of the Occupation.

Arafat spent years and tens of billions telling the people he is building institutions for the future Palestinian state, the only thing the people saw is nothing more than a bunch of thugs “zo’ran” leading his security forces and bunch of thieves leading his government.

While Saeb and his boss were meeting (unofficially for 18 years) over dinners, cocktail and wine “informally” discussing “Palestinian Thawabit” Israel was making its own “thawbit” creating “facts on the ground” expanding settlements, building the Apartheid Wall, stealing Palestinian natural resources, expanding its grip on the lives, movements and freedoms of the people through an expanding security checkpoints, targeted assassinations, demolitions of houses and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from East Jerusalem. And confiscations of land and properties for “Jewish Only Roads” and giving full support to the army of Jewish terrorists in the Occupied Territories.

see also The Palestine Papers; time to bury the PLO and PA

In the many years of “negotiations” Saeb and his bosses failed to deliver one tangible benefit for the people, but working hard and diligently giving the land away, East Jerusalem, Sheik Jarrah, and the refugees as if Palestine and its people are a “Waqf” for Abbas, Saeb, Qurai and Abed Rabou.

The Palestinian leadership failed to stop one exile from East Jerusalem, failed to stop one house demolition, failed to remove one single security checkpoint, failed to stop one attack on Palestinians, their farms and livestock by Jewish settlers and thugs. We know what the leadership achieved for itself but we do not know what it achieved for the people. Oslo not only cancelled and rendered “qaduk” the applicability of international laws to Palestine, it gave Israel a “veto” over every thing, yet Ramallah leadership have the audacity, mendacity and chutzpa to talk and defend itself. The PLO and PA and the entire leadership have no legitimacy whatsoever, not that they had any before, and it is time for the leadership to pack it bags and go before it is too late.

Sami Jamil Jadallah

Sami Jamil Jadallah

Born in the Palestinian city of El-Bireh ( presently under Israeli Military Occupation, Armed Jewish thugs and settlers). Immigrated to the US in 62. After graduating from high school in Gary, Indiana was drafted into the US Army ( 66-68) received the Leadership Award from the US 6th Army NCO Academy in Ft. Lewis, Washington. Five of us brothers where in US military service about the same time. Graduated from Indiana University with BA-72, Master of Public Affairs-74 and Juris Doctor-77, and in senior year at IU,was elected Chairman of the Indiana Student Association. Sami Jamil Jadallah is an international legal and business consultant and is the founder and director of Palestine Agency and Palestine Documentation Center www.palestineagency.com and founder and owner of several business in technology and services. Sami also runs an online website (Jefferson Corner)

Can the Palestinian Authority survive?

Barack_Obama_meets_with_Mahmoud_Abbas_in_the_Oval_Office_2009-05-28_1

‘Our leaders are negotiating the terms of our imprisonment’

By Jonathan Cook in Nazareth, 31 Jan 2011

With the 18-year-long Middle East peace process finally pronounced dead, is the Palestinian Authority finished too?

That is the question being asked by Palestinians in the wake of a week of damaging revelations that Palestinian negotiators secretly made major concessions to Israel in talks on Jerusalem, refugees and borders.

The PA — the Palestinians’ government-in-the-making, led by Mahmoud Abbas — was already in crisis before the disclosure of official Palestinian documents by Al Jazeera television last week.

Now, said George Giacaman, the head of the Ramallah-based research centre Muwatin, which advocates greater Palestinian democracy, the PA’s “back is to the wall”.

The question of the PA’s survival, and the future direction of Palestinian politics, has gained added urgency as the wider Middle East is rocked by unrest, from Tunisia to Yemen.

Mahdi Abdul Hadi, the director of the Jerusalem think-tank Passia, said the Palestinians were “at a crossroads”. Although the streets had remained largely quiet until now, he said it was only a matter of time before Palestinians started to make clear their revulsion at their leadership.

“It is now much clearer to Palestinians that they are living in a prison and that the PA leaders are there only to negotiate the terms of our imprisonment,” he said.

He, like many other Palestinian analysts, declared the negotiations for a two-state solution over.

That sentiment appears to be shared by a majority of Palestinians. A survey in December, before the leak of 1,600 official documents, by the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research showed that 71 per cent of Palestinians believed they would not have a state within five years. The percentage is likely to have risen sharply.

In a sign of the mounting panic in Ramallah, Palestinian leaders frantically launched a rearguard action last week. Initially, they claimed the documents were fabricated, and suggested that Al Jazeera was siding with Mr Abbas’s political rivals, the Islamic party Hamas, to bring down the PA.

But several officials have confirmed the papers’ authenticity, and the PA has redirected its main attention to discovering who was behind the leak.

Mr Abdul Hadi said Palestinians would increasingly draw the conclusion that their intended future was living in “one binational state under an apartheid regime” administered by Israel.

“At the moment Abbas has his followers out on the streets but the Palestinian people are awakening to the reality of their situation,” he said.

Samir Awad, a politics professor at Birzeit University, near Ramallah, agreed that Israel was imposing a de facto one-state solution. “The fight for national independence is over and, if it is to survive, the PA must quickly reinvent its role. Palestinians are now in for the long haul: a struggle for their civil and political rights in a single state,” he said.

Asad Ghanem, a politics professor at Haifa University in Israel and an expert on Palestinian politics, warned, however, that, as the PA faltered, Israel and the US would intensify their efforts to strengthen the authority’s security forces and its repressive role.

With politics stifled inside the occupied territories, said Mr Ghanem, it was crucial that outside Palestinian leaders step in to redefine the Palestinian national movement, including Palestinians such as himself who live inside Israel and groups in the diaspora.

Mr Giacaman said the PA had long ago outlived its official purpose.

It was created by the Oslo accords as a temporary administration in the transition to Palestinian statehood, proposed as a five-year period during which Israel was supposed to withdraw from the West Bank and Gaza in stages.

Since the Camp David negotiations ended in deadlock in 2000, the PA has clung to power, with limited control over less than 40 per cent of the West Bank as Israel has continued to build settlements in the area under its rule.

Mr Abbas has threatened on several occasions to dissolve the PA, most recently in December, when he warned: “I cannot accept to remain the president of an authority that doesn’t exist.”

But Mr Giacaman said such threats were hollow, designed to put pressure on Israel to return to negotiations out of fear that it would otherwise have to take on the heavy financial burden of direct military reoccupation.

The PA, however, was in much deeper trouble after the leaking of the documents, Mr Giacaman said. “Without a peace process, it needs to justify its continuing existence.”

The most likely immediate focus, he said, was intensifying international action through the United Nations, by pushing for a resolution at the Security Council against the settlements.

He also thought the PA would consider changing its position and actively championing the Goldstone Report, the findings of a UN commission that suggest Israel committed war crimes during its attack on Gaza in late 2008 and early 2009.

One of the leaked papers revealed that Mr Abbas had agreed under US pressure to shelve the report rather than take it to the UN General Assembly.

“The problem for the PA is that it needs to generate diplomatic crises to get the international community to intervene. But this will put it in confrontation with Israel and the United States. Israel can always threaten to cut the $60 million taxes it transfers every month to the PA,” Mr Giacaman said.

The PA’s threat to unilaterally declare statehood and then seek recognition at the UN, he added, would not change the reality on the ground. “Even if most countries recognise the state, it will still be a state under occupation,” Mr Giacaman said.

In the meantime, the diplomatic vacuum was likely to be filled by Israel. It could promote a plan similar to the one being advanced by Avigdor Lieberman, the far-right foreign minister, to recognise a Palestinian state in temporary borders. Or it could continue its separation policies, withdrawing from more of the West Bank and encouraging the Palestinians to take over what was left behind.

Mr Awad said the collapse of the PA held out many dangers for the Palestinians. One was the possibility of a convulsive civil war between the Fatah party of Mr Abbas and Hamas. Another, he said, was the “Aghanistanisation” of the occupied territories, as tribal warlords took limited control of the territorial enclaves Israel was not interested in.

Jonathan Cook

Jonathan Cook

Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His latest books are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is www.jkcook.net.

A version of this article originally appeared in The National (www.thenational.ae), published in Abu Dhabi.

The Palestine Papers – An Analysis

ThePalestinePapers


Part I – A Tradition of Strength

The Palestinians have always been a strong and determined people. You have to be so in order to defy a powerful and ruthless adversary, backed by the most of the world’s great powers, for close to one hundred years. The Palestinian leaders, both secular and religious, have likewise been strong and determined. A list of such people would run into the hundreds and so I shall just name a few: Sheikh Izz ad-Din al-Qassam, who organized Palestinian resistance against both the Zionists and the British only to be gunned down by the latter in 1935; George Habash who founded and led the secular Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine; Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the founder and leader of Hamas until his assassination by the Israelis in 2004 and, of course, Yasir Arafat who led the Palestinian struggle for independence and statehood for half a century. None of these men were terrorists. They were freedom fighters. And the inevitable violence that they carried out was minuscule compared to that violence leveled upon the Palestinians by their adversaries. Finally, none of them ever gave up.

In order to not give up when facing far stronger foes one needs to: 1. Have a sense of what is possible over the long run. That is not to be overwhelmed by the immediate past and/or the immediate future. To understand that there is an essential difference between losing a battle, even a number of battles, and losing a war. 2. To have a sense of multiple strategic and tactical possibilities. That is what can be achieved through violent resistance, non-violent resistance, alliances and united fronts near and far, etc. 3. And to have a proper sense of certain bottom line principles that one simply cannot compromise, for without their tangible existence the struggle loses its meaning.

Part II – The Presence of Weakness

These leadership qualities existed within the secular organizations of Palestinian resistance for decades and did not start to ebb until the latter part of Yasir Arafat’s period of authority. At that time intimations of weakness such as corrupt practices, opportunism and questionable compromises were already evident. In addition, Arafat ended up running the Palestinian territories like a sheikhdom and the effect was to stifle the ambitions and enthusiasm of younger potential leaders. After the great man’s death the his older, less innovative companions remained entrenched in their positions. It is difficult to know why this happened when it did, and not earlier. However, it might be that this branch of the Palestinian resistance movement simply fell victim to statistical odds. To produce strong and talented leaders over a hundred years of struggle is already extraordinary. It means that over a century you have continuously produced those special leaders who are capable of strategic and tactical genius, capable of inspiring generation after generation of oppressed people and refugees, and to do all this while being castigated as terrorists by half the governments on the globe and hunted by many of the major security services of advanced nations. As time goes on the odds of reproducing such leadership becomes increasingly poor. That the production of such an exceptional leadership cannot go on forever is one of the major assumptions of the Palestinians’ Zionist foes. And, at least in the case of the PNA leadership, their assumption has now proven correct.

That this is so has been known to the Israelis and indeed to most Palestinians since 2004. And now it is known to everyone else thanks to the leaked Palestine Papers (PP) recently released by Al-Jazeera and independently authenticated by The Guardian in England. Though the PP does not tell us anything remarkably novel they do lay out the truth for the world and thereby render preposterous the charade of a peace process behind which this now revealed reality was hidden. Here are aspects of the picture the PP paints:

1. It reveals the present PNA leadership of Mahmoud Abbas and his fellows as naive, groveling and collaborationist. Apparently, Abbas and his people were and are so overwhelmed by a sense of Realpolitik that they could think of nothing else to do by capitulate in stages. And in doing so they ended up giving away those things that made the struggle worthwhile in the first place. They were willing to accept the Bantustans, to give up almost all of Jerusalem, to turn their backs on 99% of the Palestinian refugees, to look the other way as the people of Gaza were slaughtered and to even serve as an ally of the Israeli occupation forces on the West Bank. By the time they were done there was nothing left that was worth fighting for. As the PNA’s chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat told U.S. Middle East envoy George Mitchell, they had done everything but “convert to Zionism.” And yet, the Israelis scorned the Palestinian compromises.

2.That is why, in these leaked papers, notes and memoranda the Israelis are revealed as every bit as disgusting as Abbas and his people. The Zionists are seen to be duplicitous in the extreme. Clearly all the talk about their being no negotiating partner on the Palestinian side was a lie. It is true that it takes at least two to negotiate. But the missing negotiating partner was always, from beginning to end, the Israelis. The ideologically driven orientation of the Israeli leadership precluded any compromises with the Palestinians and effectively stifled those few younger Israeli diplomats and representatives, such as those at Taba in 2001, who might have been willing to make a reasonable settlement. Thus, there is something deeply disturbing to vicariously witness the Israeli leaders directing negotiations with the Palestinians for decades while knowing that they never intend to close an honest and just deal. That their diplomacy would always be gunboat diplomacy and the rest was just playing for time, maneuvering so that in the end you get it all. Ironically, the only other modern nation that I know of whose leaders played this game was Nazi Germany.

3. The Palestine Papers also reveal the leaders and diplomats of the United States as utterly pathetic. Their behavior transforms their claim of being an “honest broker” into a classic Big Lie. There is one passage in the PP where Abbas turns to Mitchell and says “Nineteen years of promises and you haven’t made up your minds what you want to do with us.” If Abbas is revealed here as incapable of independent action, so is the U.S. As the recent behavior of Barack Obama has demonstrated, Israel, through its allied Zionist lobbies, controls U.S. foreign policy when it comes to the Palestine-Israel conflict. The tail is wagging the dog. That is just a fact and the PP revelations substantiate it.

Thus it is that the men who inherited the mantle of Yasir Arafat are failures. Not because they have failed to win an independent Palestinian state, but because they have been willing to toss to the winds the underlying goals that make any such state worth having. Because their lack of insight and courage made them blind to the truth that was right there before them for years–that they were bargaining with people (be they of the Israeli left or right) who were in the game only to humiliate them, only to satisfy some perverse need to see these Palestinians waste time while they, the Zionists, boldly stole everything they had. The Israelis never intended to fulfill the peace process. They want only the land–all of it.

Part III – Back to the Tradition of Strength

So, is the game up? No it is not. There are two additional sources of strong Palestinian leadership still on the field. There are still strong and determined Palestinian leaders at the head of Hamas. And, it should be kept in mind that the leaders of Hamas are the democratically elected leaders of Palestine. Whatever Washington might say, Abbas and his cronies (on top of everything else) are politically illegitimate. And, as far as most of the Palestinians are concerned, the important thing at this juncture is that Hamas still has the stamina and talent to preserve the goals for which the Palestinians have always fought. As Tariq Ali has correctly noted, “Now we know why the Israel/US/EU nexus was so keen to disregard the outcome of the Palestinian elections and try to destroy Hamas militarily.” It was because they could not castrate them as they had the Abbas crowd.

But it is not just Hamas where you find determined and principled leadership. There are a number of West Bank Palestinians who are strong leaders in the worldwide Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel. These people, such as Omar Barghouti and Lisa Taraki, are just as tough minded as anyone in Hamas. And, as Hamas has its allies in the outside world, so do these leaders of the BDS movement. And these allies collectively number in the millions.

What this all means is that the Palestinians are in good shape to absorb the public destruction of the PNA as a representative of the Palestinian People. Given that the PNA is an authoritarian and repressive organization, armed and funded by the United States, its corrupt and self-serving remnant will be with us for awhile. But it represents no one and no one but con men and the ignorant will take it seriously. Its demise in all but form represents a healthy event for it paves the way for ever greater numbers of men and women in civil society to throw their weight behind those who still have the will to fight. So, with the air cleared, what we have here is not so much a bad end, as a fresh beginning.

Dr. Lawrence Davidson

Dr. Lawrence Davidson

Dr. Lawrence Davidson is professor of history at West Chester University. He is the author of numerous books, including Islamic Fundamentalism and America’s Palestine: Popular and Official Perceptions from Balfour to Israeli Statehood.

The author is a regular contributor to RamallahOnline.com.More articles can be found on RamallahOnline.com, Logos Journal, and Dr. Davidson also maintains an online blog, you can find it at http://www.tothepointanalyses.com

The ‘Palestine Papers’ Signals a Time for Change.

Palestine Monitor

Palestine Monitor, 29 January 2011
Last Sunday, Al-Jazeera, pairing up with The Guardian, created a buzz by releasing purportedly confidential documents unveiling years of secret negotiations between the Israeli government, the PLO negotiators and the PA. The documents are a huge blow to the already considerably weakened Palestinian leadership, whose credibility – as well as, some argue, legitimacy – lie in shambles. In such circumstances, how can it recover? Should it even? No, Palestinian-American political analyst Mohammad Oweis told the Palestine Monitor, it is time for a long overdue change. Cecile Gault reports.

The ‘Palestine Papers’, as they have been called, reveal unprecedented and extensive concessions on the Palestinian side, under the cold and unyielding eye of the Israelis, backed by the U.S. and European governments. Acceptance of Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem, use of the refugee issue as a ‟bargaining chip”, compromise on the status of the Haram As-Sharif, collaboration with Israel in political assassinations a few examples of the damning ‘Papers.’

Palestinian/Arab reactions to the ‘leak’ have been fierce, both in condemnation and in defense of the PLO and the PA. Fatah supporters claim foul play and forgery while other member of the Palestinian society denounce the treachery and illegitimacy of Palestinian leaders, demanding for them to step down. PLO Saeb Ereka and PA representatives have multiplied declarations rejecting the documents as falsifications, before revising their statements to suggest that the press extrapolated on elements taken out of context and stressing that negotiations are neither final nor binding. Allegations that the ‘Papers’ are a ploy by the Qatari government – who funds Al Jazeera – to destabilize and ultimately destroy Mahmoud Abbas and his partisans have also been generated by varying defenders of Fatah and the PA.

Upon closer look though, are the Al Jazeera ‘revelations’ such a bombshell? Apart from the fact that—should the documents prove to be genuine—long contended suspicions now affirmed in writing, surprise among disenchanted Palestinians is lacking.

For example, one of the latest revelations to make headlines deals with the widely decried PA move to postpone the UNCHR vote on the Goldstone report, in the fall of 2009. According to the ‘Papers,’ the reason behind the PA’s request was not, as officially explained by Abu Mazen, to have more time to gather international support, but rather to placate the US and get back to the negotiating table with Israel faster. For many this is not new, but merely confirms what many had been saying all along.

Indeed, to analyst Mohammad Oweis, longtime friend of the late Yasser Arafat, the Al Jazeera leaks are ‟a non-fact and any claim by Abbas and the people around him that this is an attempt to bring him down is non-sense. They are becoming very nervous because they have no foot to stand on.”

“In fact, the very legitimacy of Abbas as PLO chairman is in question”, Mr. Oweis further adds, ‟as the people who voted for the [PLO] Executive Committee that in turn elected him had themselves been appointed by Arafat and members of the Fatah group. The whole system is illegitimate. Moreover, negotiating away fundamental rights of Palestinians is a violation of the Palestinian National Charter”.

Mr. Oweis stresses the importance of distinguishing between the PLO and the PA: ‟The Palestinian Authority was established as an authority under occupation following the Oslo Accords. It is not representative of the whole Palestinian people and should therefore not be negotiating on behalf of all Palestinians. Only the PLO is qualified to do so. However, in spite of there being over a dozen sitting members on the Executive Committee, the only ones we see and hear are Erekat, Abbas, and maybe Nabil Shaath. Where is the rest of the Committee? Mr. Abbas is practicing dictatorship before he even gets a Palestinian State”.

What then, should happen now? If the present leaders are illegitimate and violating the Palestinian National Charter (or Covenant), what is the next step? To Mohammad Oweis, the answer is very straightforward: ‟It is time for the Palestinian people – inside Palestine as well as the Diaspora – to elect a new Palestinian National Council which will elect a new Central Committee of the PLO. That Central Committee would in turn elect the Executive Committee that would designate a new PLO chairman.”

Of course, as obvious and appealing as the idea might be, implementing it would mean overcoming a number of difficulties. The election would have to take place in a neutral place, out of reach from Israeli military and police interference. Hamas and the Islamic Jihad would need to be included in the process, and agree to be included in the higher interest of Palestinians as a united people. ‟We have been able to do it before,” Mr. Oweis argues, ‟we have been able to vote under the most difficult circumstances in the past, so why shouldn’t we be now?”

When asked about how Israel and the United States would react to such a move and how it could affect the result, Mr. Oweis is adamant. ‟Israel and the US have not delivered on the international rule of law, on the Oslo Agreements or on the Fourth Geneva Convention. They should stay out of Palestinian business. Oslo was signed on 13 September 2003 and since then, nothing has been implemented or done to improve the lives of Palestinians. On the contrary, the number of settlements in the West Bank has doubled, while the number of settlers has quadrupled. What the Palestinian people needs is the demise of a corrupt authority and the establishment of an honest democracy.”

In other words, it is time for Palestinians to stop looking at the US who has proven to be nothing close to an honest broker in the negotiations, even before the ‘Palestine Papers’ were revealed, and certainly to stop waiting on the Israelis to realize how a fair and honest peace agreement would be in their own interest. Consequently, according to Mr. Oweis, the new and legitimately elected PLO bodies should first establish what Palestinians want from the Middle East process as well as from the International Community. With that knowledge they can draft a set of demands and deliver them to the UN Security Council and ‟let it deal with it.”

“Negotiations don’t work with Israel. It is time now to go to the Security Council who has a responsibility under the UN Charter and its own Resolutions 181 [partition] and 194 [refugees rights] to uphold the rights of the Palestinian people.”

It seems like Mr. Oweis is not the only one to be calling for new elections. Just this past Thursday for instance the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS) organized a sit-in in the PLO’s London embassy as part as their Campaign for direct elections to Palestine National Council. A group has been created on Facebook and supporters can follow the GUPS’ action on Twitter.

Time will tell whether the initiative shall fail or succeed. After all, the ‘Jasmin Revolution’ in Tunisia seems to have sparked a renewed hope that everything is possible all across the Arab world and we are now at a crossroads. There is no telling the geopolitical repercussions should these demonstrations for change gain momentum. True, the obstacles remain many to the election itself, but also – and maybe even more so – to Security Council action in favor of Palestine, especially as long as the US will remain Israel’s closest ally. However, when confronted on the difficulty of the task in light of realpolitik, Mr. Oweis asked: ‟What’s the other option?”

To read more analysis on the Palestine Papers, visit: http://english.aljazeera.net/palestinepapers/