Where Is the Palestinian Ben-Gurion? By Efraim Karsh.
Where is the Palestinian Ben-Gurion? By Efraim Karsh. Jerusalem Post, September 15, 2011.
Karsh:
Sixty-four
years after partitioning Palestine into two independent states – one Jewish,
the other Arab – the UN General Assembly is set again to vote on the same
issue. While this time around Palestinian leaders appear to be preaching
compromise, closer scrutiny reveals this to be a tactical rather than a
strategic change of heart, stemming from the different circumstances of the two
votes and aimed at disguising their lingering unwillingness (or perhaps
inability) to live with a two-state solution.
In
1947, prior to the first UN General Assembly vote, Palestinian leaders rejected
any form of Jewish self-determination in Palestine. Hajj Amin Husseini, their
most prominent leader from the early 1920s to the late 1940s, upheld that
“there is no place in Palestine for two races.” All areas conquered by the
Arabs during the 1948 war were cleansed of Jews.
These
days the Palestinians can hardly ask the UN to dismantle one of its longest
standing member states and to expel its citizens.
Yet by
seeking international recognition of their statehood and pressure for a
complete Israeli withdrawal without a peace agreement, or, indeed, any quid pro
quo, they are continuing their predecessors’ rejection of a negotiated
settlement and laying the diplomatic groundwork for the renewal of the assault
on the Jewish state.
The
PLO’s hallowed National Covenant envisages the permanent departure of most Jews
from Israel. PLO chairman Yasser Arafat’s phased strategy of June 1974, which
was never disowned, stipulates that any territory gained through diplomacy
would merely be a springboard for the “complete liberation of Palestine.” At
the negotiating table during the Oslo years, the PLO’s most adamant demand was
for the subversion of Israel’s demographic composition by forcing it to accept
the so-called “right of return” and allow refugees of the 1948 war, and their
descendants, to return to territory that is now part of the state of Israel. At
the moment Jews presently constitute about 80 percent of Israel’s seven million-
strong population; by 2020, nearly one in four Israelis will be Arab, owing to
this sector’s far higher birth rate. Were millions of Palestinians to be
resettled within Israel, it would soon cease to be a majority Jewish state and
everybody knows it.
To present
the “right of return” as a nonnegotiable demand is not to negotiate at all,
particularly when Palestinian leaders themselves refuse to accept alien
minorities as part of a peace settlement: In June, Palestinian Authority (PA)
President Mahmoud Abbas told the Arab League that the future Palestinian state
should be free of Israelis (that is Jews, since virtually no other Israelis
live in the West Bank). He reiterated this vision of a Judenrein Palestine last month, telling a delegation of visiting
members of Congress that “I am seeking a Palestinian state in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, with Jerusalem as its capital, empty of settlements.”
Like
Husseini, Arafat was far more interested in destroying the Jewish national
cause than in leading his own people to statehood. As far back as 1978, he told
his close friend and collaborator, Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, that
the Palestinians lacked the traditions, unity and discipline to have a
successful state. He was right. It was the Palestinians’ lack of communal
solidarity – the willingness to subordinate personal interest to the collective
good – that accounted for their collapse and dispersion during the 1948 war.
The subsequent physical separation of the various parts of the Palestinian
Diaspora and longstanding cleavages between West Bankers and Gazans prevented
the crystallization of a cohesive national identity.
Sadly,
Arafat had no intention of redressing this predicament. Given control of the
Palestinian population in the West Bank and Gaza as part of the Oslo process,
he made his bleak prognosis a self-fulfilling prophecy, establishing an
oppressive and corrupt regime in the worst tradition of Arab dictatorships,
while launching the most destructive confrontation between Israelis and
Palestinians since the 1948 war.
In the
process, he destroyed the fragile civil society and relatively productive
economy that had developed in the interim.
Two
years ago, in a bold departure from this destructive path, PA Prime Minister
Salam Fayyad embarked on the first state building effort in Palestinian
history, one that has had some successes. However, while he recently pronounced
his initiative a mission accomplished amid the diplomatic buildup to the UN
vote, he knows better. Abbas’s presidency, and by extension Fayyad’s own
premiership, remain unconstitutional. Not only because Abbas defied Hamas’s
landslide victory in the January 2006 parliamentary elections by establishing
an alternative government headed by Fayyad, but also because his own presidency
expired in January 2009.
Fayyad
barely challenged the corrupt and dysfunctional system established by Arafat.
The two
groups dominating Palestinian life, the PLO and Hamas, remain armed groups (and
active practitioners of terrorism) rather than political parties – an assured
recipe for a failed state. (The Oslo Accords charged the PA with dismantling
all armed groups in the West Bank and Gaza, but Arafat never bothered to
comply.) Even if Abbas were to genuinely commit himself to reform after the
attainment of statehood, his tenuous authority would continue to be defied by
Hamas, which has not only transformed the Gaza Strip into a an Islamist
micro-state but also wields considerable power and influence in the West Bank.
Whatever
the UN vote may achieve, it will not be a step toward Palestinian statehood.
Contrary
to the received wisdom, Israel was established not by a UN General Assembly
resolution but through the unwavering determination of the Zionist leadership,
or rather David Ben-Gurion, shortly to become Israel’s first prime minister, in
the face of mounting international skepticism regarding partition (in March
1948 the US administration effectively backed down from the idea) and doubts
about the new state’s ability to fend off both Palestinian violence and a
pan-Arab attempt to abort it at birth.
In
doing so, Ben-Gurion could rely on an extraordinarily resilient and vibrant
national community, armed with an unwavering sense of purpose and an extensive
network of political, social and economic institutions built over decades of
pre-state national development.
In this
respect, eighteen years after being given the chance to establish their own
state free of Israel’s occupation, and despite the billions of dollars in
international aid poured into this effort, the Palestinians have barely made it
out of the gate. One can only hope that the international community will at
long last pressure Palestinian leaders to own up to their obligations and opt
for a true build-up of civil society that will ensure their constituents a
decent and peaceful existence, rather than seek illusionary shortcuts and
intensified conflict with Israel.