|
The
Palestine Papers: Offering Palestine, Selling Out Its
Refugees
25 January 2011 By Ramzy Baroud
The Palestine Papers had damaged
whatever little credibility the Ramallah-based
authority still enjoyed among Palestinians The
Palestine Papers, the 1,300 leaked documents that
Aljazeera began publishing starting January 23, are
the Palestinian response to the Israeli ‘generous
offer’, an Israeli diplomatic ruse that was aimed at
discrediting Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
following the collapse of the Camp David talks of July
25, 2000.
But unlike the fictitious Israeli
‘generous offer’, the Palestinian offer, as revealed
by Aljazeera, was barely a testament to the spirit of
the famed Arab generosity, but a series of decided and
embarrassing concessions that, at times, took even the
Israelis by surprise.
Over a decade has passed since
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak reportedly made his
‘generous offer”, only to be met by “Arafat's
recalcitrance” (L.A. Times editorial, April 08, 2002)
and “Palestinian rejectionism” (Mortimer Zuckerman,
U.S. News & World Report, March, 22, 2002, as
referenced by Seth Ackerman in Fair.org).
The invented offer, which turned
out to be a term coined by Israeli officials merely to
discredit Arafat and absolve Israel from any
commitment under previously signed agreements, was
described as “extraordinary and “far-reaching” by
leading American newspapers. Every attempt at
dispelling that myth largely failed before immovable
US-Israeli official discourses, which often, if not
always, define mainstream narratives.
But now Aljazeera had
courageously followed in the footsteps of Wikileaks,
verifying and revealing hundreds of documents,
spanning from 1999-2010, which expose the extent of
the Palestinians’ ‘generosity’, that is truly
extraordinary and far-reaching, if not a cause of
utter shame to many of those involved, along with
their die-hard supporters.
What The Documents
Reveal…
The Palestine Papers are too many
and represent a final indictment of the PA, and its
willingness to meet, and at times, exceed the
expectations of the Israeli government, at the expense
of the Palestinian people
The Palestine Papers revealed
much about the skewed nature of the relationship
between two parties – Israel and the Palestinian
Authority - who are purportedly in a state of
conflict, if not war. But as it turned out, the
Palestinian leadership seemed to negotiate and offer
the very opposite of what the Palestinian public truly
wants, including the right of return for Palestinian
refugees, as enshrined in international law,
contiguous borders for the proposed Palestinian state,
dismantling of all illegal Jewish settlements and
more. The extent of the Palestinian compromises has in
fact exceeded the most cynical of estimations.
According to one leaked document,
Saeb Erekat for example who holds the weighty title of
the ‘Chief Negotiator’, gave away most of Occupied
East Jerusalem with little hesitance. On June 30,
2008, in a meeting that included Tzipi Livni, the then
Israel foreign minister, 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 al-Quds or Jerusalem) in history.”
Erekat’s personal offer was an
extension of one proposed by Qurei himself, in a
meeting two weeks earlier, on June 15. 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 leave no doubt in Israeli
officials minds that the Palestinians truly mean ‘all
settlements’, Erekat “went on to enumerate some of the
settlements that the PA was willing to concede,”
reported Gregg Carlstrom in Aljazeera. They are
“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. (Erekat
did not mention the fate of other major East Jerusalem
settlements, like Pisgat Ze’ev and Neve Ya’akov, but
Qurei’s language indicates that they would also remain
a part of Israel.)”
As for Haram al-Sharif, or the
Noble Sanctuary (the third holiest of Muslim shrines
anywhere and a sight that saw much violence as a
result of desperate Palestinian attempts at defending
the holy site in the face of Israel fundamentalists
backed by Israeli army and police), 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 brazenly
contradict international law, Palestinian national
aspirations, Arab consensus, and even the declared
official position of the Palestinian Authority itself.
Selling Out the Refugees
The Palestine Papers also confirm
that both sides are in agreement regarding the
Palestinian people’s right to return, that, more or
less, such a right will not be carried out. A summary
of an August 2008 meeting indicated an Israeli offer
of a land swap that would guarantee that the majority
of illegal Jewish settlers remain in the occupied West
Bank. It included a proposal by then Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert to allow a total of 5,000
Palestinian refugees (out of nearly six million) to
return to their homes over the course of five years.
In an October 21, 2009 meeting
with US diplomat and Special Envoy to the Middle East
George Mitchell, the Chief Palestinian Negotiator,
Erekat seemed to have no qualms with the proposal.
“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.” In another leaked document dated January
15, 2010, Erekat told US diplomat David Hale that the
PA offered Israel the return of ‘a symbolic number’ of
refugees. Until then, the refugees, according to
Erekat will have no voting rights on any peace deal
with Israel. Aljazeera also quoted Ziyad Clot, a legal
adviser to Palestinian negotiators on refugee issues,
saying: “President Abbas offered an extremely low
proposal for the number of returnees to Israel a few
weeks only after the start of the process.”
The Palestine Papers are too many
and represent a final indictment of the PA, and its
willingness to meet, and at times, exceed the
expectations of the Israeli government, at the expense
of the Palestinian people.
Out of Context?
Following Aljazeera’s release of
some of the documents, PA officials went on the
offensive, attacking the news network, instead of
contending with the damning message. Some of their
accusations contradicted each other, the same
contradictions that are marring the Palestinian
official narrative altogether.
“Fabrication... lies,” screamed
Erekat; “out of context,” said Abbas. As for senior
PLO leader Yasser Abd Rabbo, he spent nearly half an
hour in a Ramallah press conference on Monday, January
24, heaping insults and accusations on Aljazeera.
Considering all of this, it was only expected that
some 200 Fatah supporters (who reportedly included
many plain-clothed PA security personnel) attacked and
vandalized Aljazeera offices in Ramallah, ironically
shouting “Aljazeera is a Zionist channel!”
The other irony is that a few
days earlier, on Wednesday, January 20, the PA
reportedly refused to grant permission for a
Palestinian rally to celebrate the overthrow of
Tunisia’s authoritarian president and to stand in
solidarity with the Tunisian people.
It’s hard to believe that there
are many Palestinians – aside from those who directly
benefit from the current regime – who truly believe
that the Authority of Mahmoud Abbas has the interests
of the Palestinian people at heart. The Palestine
Papers had damaged whatever little credibility the
Ramallah-based authority still enjoyed among
Palestinians.
Propped by US funds, sustained by
European and American political validation and secured
by the Israeli military occupation in the West Bank,
it is unclear how long the PA will continue to serve a
purpose in the West Bank. It is certain, however, that
the purpose is not exacting Palestinian rights or
preserving the national integrity of the Palestinian
people and territorial integrity of a Palestinian
state. The Palestine Papers made this very clear, and
lashing out at Aljazeera changes nothing.
- Ramzy Baroud 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. You can visit his website
through this link:
www.ramzybaroud.net.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add
Comments |