Sun May 19 2013
Departments
International Issues

The photo before the storm: peace talks already failed
by Ramzy Baroud
September 10, 2010

A picture is not always worth a thousand words. The recently released photographs of Palestinian and Israeli leaders in Washington during their first direct talks in many months certainly don’t say anything new.

It was the status quo at its best, a mere procession of regional and US leaders before hungry cameramen. The leaders promised “not to spare any effort” and praised the undeniable altruism embedded in the very concept of “peace”. Israeli Prime Minister repeated the martyr-like emphasis of past Israeli leaders regarding the “painful” compromises and sacrifices required to defeat the many obstacles standing before them. Mahmoud Abbas – with his expired presidency over a corrupt Palestinian Authority - smiled, shook hands and spoke unconvincingly about his hopes and expectations.

Jordanian and Egyptian leaders also attended. Their presence was purely an endeavor to mark a difference between this event and the last failed attempt at reaching a peace agreement. When late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israel’s Ehud Barak were herded into Camp David under the auspices of then President Bill Clinton, Arafat was left to fend for himself without any Arab backing. This left Barak, fully backed by the US, with all the cards. The process was a mockery then, as it is now.

Today’s badly staged talks are actually much less promising than the ones of July 2000. Barak had a considerably serious mandate, while Netanyahu runs a discontented coalition of largely rightwing fanatics. Arafat, although his popularity had dwindled, also represented a moral authority and a unifying figure among all Palestinian factions, including Hamas. Abbas, on the other hand, sits on the helm of hugely discredited and ineffectual band of contractors and self-serving politicians. More, Abbas operates with an expired mandate, and his cabinet members are handpicked to replace the democratically elected government of Hamas, whose members are either under siege in Gaza or held in Israeli prisons.

Needless to say, this latest round of peace talks is seriously lacking in legitimacy and goodwill.

Firstly, Israel has no interest in guaranteeing any positive outcome. It is hell-bent on carrying on with its colonization of the already disconnected West Bank and East Jerusalem. Netanyahu’s government intends on speeding up such efforts once the temporary settlement construction freeze expires, only a few days after the second round of negotiations resume on September 14-15. On the very first day of talks, Israeli troops also invaded parts of northern Gaza and expanded the so-called buffer zone by around 300 meters.

As for Abbas, the problem is compounded. His power is truly feeble in comparison to Israel’s political supremacy both in Tel Aviv and Washington, and also its near total control of Abbas’ own domain in the West Bank. Knowing this, one cannot be both realistic and still hope for ‘painful’ Israeli concessions. Still Abbas continues to hang around. He might feel he has no other option, as his absence would both chip away from his miniscule political worth and risk raising the ire of Washington, his greatest sustainer.

But even if the one-year-long talks miraculously yield an agreement, Abbas will not be able to sell this agreement to his own people. The aging leader is barely capable of uniting his own party, which is no longer the main player in Palestine’s political milieu. Today’s Fatah is a different Fatah to the one under Arafat in 1993. Its corruption has grown to the extent that it now functions as a self-serving welfare organization, whose members get richer through international handouts and business monopoly orchestrated by Israel.

Equally significant is the fact that yesterday’s ‘enemies of peace’ have become the legitimate parties that should actually be involved in any substantial talks with Israel. They are dismissed because they insist on a paradigm shift in how talks with Israel are conducted. They argue that any meaningful talks – especially between vastly unequal powers - must take place with a clear frame of reference, involving an even-handed third party, and predicated on the concept of ‘justice’ - not Kissinger’s deceptive ‘peace process’. The talks must also guarantee the welfare and security of the Palestinian people in the interim, through a long-term truce guarded by the United Nations. Peace talks held at gunpoint while the population is forcibly starved and besieged hardly promises any positive outcome.

What we can be sure of is that that the halfhearted peace attempt will garner nothing good. If an agreement is somehow concocted, it is doomed to fail. The Palestinian people, the absent but real party in any lasting solution, will simply not allow it. The Palestinian collective has the tendency to watch charades to their end, and then react at the opportune moment to defeat them. Almost every Palestinian revolt in the past has resulted from similar processes, the Second Palestinian Uprising of 2000 being the most pertinent example. When Arafat was being humiliated and forced into submission to US-Israeli diktats, Palestinians of all parties and from all sections of society rose in anger. Israel understood the revolt as a Palestinian attempt at extracting concessions and used unprecedented violence to quell their revolt. Many thousands were killed and wounded, and the rest is history.

If violence spirals this time around, it promises to be much worse than before. Those who cling to resistance in Palestine have been bolstered by the success of Hizbullah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. More, they are emboldened by their political legitimacy as a result of the democratic elections of 2006. Predictably, Netanyahu will not shy away from interpreting Palestinian protests as a conspiracy to intimidate Israel. The problem with violence is that once it reaches a new threshold, it rarely retreats to old parameters. What took place in Gaza at the hand of the Israeli army in 2008-09 was frighteningly genocidal in its scope. Future violence is likely to stay within this category.

To avoid this, Washington’s strategists really need to reconsider the long-term consequences of their government’s policies. Obama’s choreographers might succeed in getting a few leaders to stand in perfect order before a crowd of reporters, but they will fail to contain the political chaos that will ensue when the talks fail, as they surely will.

---
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.




Recent International Issues Articles

Support Wikileaks
  December 25, 2010
  Pete Johnson for Linda Schade

Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay recognize Palestine within 1967 green line armistice boundary
  December 23, 2010
  Jim Miles

U.S. Embassy suggests
  December 17, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Insisting on their humanity: 'The Plight of the Palestinians'
  December 17, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

What's Behind the War on WikiLeaks
  December 13, 2010
  Ray McGovern

FBI, DEA, & Homeland Security investigate Russian crime in Thailand
  December 8, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Lebanon at stake: Turkey must reveal its cards
  December 2, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

The invisible government
  December 2, 2010
  Robert C. Koehler

Wikileaks: Russian bribes "Infected" bout's extradition case to U.S.
  December 2, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Cambodia's festival stampede kills 378
  November 27, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Iran-Nuke NIE Stopped Bush on War
  November 24, 2010
  Ray McGovern

American predicts Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi will be assassinated
  November 22, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

A follow up on my fifth grade essay: education at gunpoint
  November 21, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Foreign Affairs - remaking the Middle East
  November 14, 2010
  Jim Miles

Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi gains freedom & challenges regime
  November 14, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Canada stands by Israel...
  November 9, 2010
  Jim Miles

Bush Boasts of Waterboard Order
  November 8, 2010
  Ray McGovern

Deadly bombs make Bangkok unsafe
  November 7, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Conned by Democracy: The Middle East's Stagnant "Change"
  November 4, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Rule of law is alive and well outside the United States
  October 18, 2010
  David Swanson

Deadly bombs make Bangkok unsafe
  October 11, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

What we’ve done to others
  October 2, 2010
  Saul Landau and Nelson Valdes

Confessions of Roger Noriega: Muscular diplomacy or law breaking?
  September 26, 2010
  Saul Landau and Nelson Valdes

Sex change operations in Thailand
  September 26, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Petraeus Cons Obama on Afghan War
  September 25, 2010
   By Ray McGovern

Regarding US Muslims: A misguided debate
  September 21, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

The photo before the storm: peace talks already failed
  September 10, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Behind the Israeli wall: A lesson in reality
  September 2, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Viktor Bout avoids an immediate boot to America
  September 1, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

35 years after war, America influences Vietnam
  August 31, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Viktor Bout avoids an immediate boot to America
  August 26, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Rebranding Iraq: Playing with numbers and human lives
  August 26, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

"Lord of War" Viktor Bout's extradition to New York
  August 21, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Bourj el-Barajneh: Searching for meaning in a refugee camp
  August 12, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

A Cuban adventure with Lee Lockwood
  August 12, 2010
  Saul Landau

Buddhist "Body Snatchers" collect Bangkok's dead and dying
  August 9, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Whose Hands? Whose Blood? Killing Civilians in Afghanistan and Iraq
  August 8, 2010
  Tom Engelhardt

Smoke on a bridge: Lebanon awaits a verdict
  August 7, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud – Beirut, Lebanon

Elderly Thai kickboxers' brains suffer after fights
  August 5, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Why Muslims should rethink Palestine
  July 31, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Afghan War Leaks Expose Costly, Deceitful March of Folly
  July 26, 2010
  Ray McGovern

Thailand's government faces possible collapse from trial
  July 19, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Thailand's Red Shirts struggle to survive crackdown
  July 8, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Cluster bombs and civilian lives: efficient killing, profits and human rights
  July 8, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Millennium goals revisited: noble ideas, and feel-good moments
  July 1, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Leon Panetta is lying about Iran's nuclear 'weapons'
  June 30, 2010
  Terry Lodge

Complaint against Dr. James Elmer Mitchell
  June 21, 2010
  Pete Johnson

Middle East is changing, and Ankara knows it
  June 17, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Obama was created by our failure to impeach Bush
  June 17, 2010
  David Swanson

The Old Gaza boy and the sea
  June 13, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

David's slingshot
  June 6, 2010
  Robert C. Koehler

Has Israel declared war on the international community?
  June 2, 2010
  Pablo Ouziel

Israel and Harman in Tandem: From high seas to airwaves
  June 1, 2010
  Norman Solomon

The common culture of Turkey, the United States, and Iran
  May 30, 2010
  David Swanson

Bangkok burns after the Army crushes the Reds' barricades
  May 19, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Reds' weapon of choice: Burning barricades
  May 16, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Yemen’s sorrowful options: ‘revolt, migrate or die’
  May 13, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Dark Green
  May 13, 2010
  Robert C. Koehler

"Seh Daeng" denies leading a death squad to protect the reds
  May 11, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Soul of a citizen: beyond the Impossibly perfect standard
  May 8, 2010
  Paul Rogat Loeb

Two faces appear behind Bangkok's bamboo barricades
  May 2, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Dispatch from China: Number 15 has left the building
  April 15, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Country Joe's
  April 13, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Indispensable IslamOnline must not fail
  April 10, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

State of emergency to bleach Thailand's reds
  April 8, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Is murder the new torture?
  April 7, 2010
  David Swanson

Defacto state
  April 1, 2010
  Jim Miles

The lobby vs. America: on Netanyahu’s lies and the spineless politicians
  April 1, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

A bomber jacket doesn’t cover the blood
  March 30, 2010
  Norman Solomon

Activism is change, not academic squabbles and bickering
  March 18, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Meeting our makers: face to face with sweatshop workers who make what we buy
  March 17, 2010
  Tom Over

Alternative reading of the Al-Mabhouh murder
  March 11, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

U.S. surveillance blimp fights harsh criticism
  March 11, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Flexible Afghanistan war objectives: and the agony grinds on
  March 4, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Perpetual fraud
  March 3, 2010
  Jim Miles

U.S. & Thai military targeted by anti-coup reds
  February 21, 2010
  Richard S. Ehrlich

The useless logic of round numbers: war is criminal any day
  February 17, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Ireland: The arrest of Pat O'Donnell
  February 17, 2010
  David Rovics

Haiti: the spectacle
  January 22, 2010
  Robert C. Koehler

An odyssey for justice
  January 15, 2010
  Ramzy Baroud

Urgent - Help Survivors in Haiti
  January 13, 2010
  Mary Ellen McNish, American Friends Service Committee




Read International Issues Articles by Year:
2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000



FREE PRESS EMAIL UPDATE


Donate to the Free Press Election Protection Fund to help us investigate and monitor election fraud in this year's election.


Donate to The Free Press The Free Press Store

FOLLOW US ON
twitter
facebook


SEARCH THE FREEPRESS




1021 E. Broad St. Columbus, OH 43205 | 614.253.2571 | truth@freepress.org
All content © 1970-2012 The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer