Archive for November, 2007

Israel’s FM Livni says Israel’s position has been accepted for Annapolis

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

Israel’s Ynet news reported over the weekend that “The Israeli stance that the Annapolis conference is the beginning of a diplomatic process for the establishment of two states for two people is now accepted by the entire world, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told Ynet on Thursday, on the eve of her departure to the US-sponsored peace summit scheduled to take place in Maryland next week. ‘This was not a simple process, but as we approach the Annapolis conference, our perception that the conference is not aimed at ending the process has been absorbed and is now accepted by everyone’, Livni said. According to the foreign minister, ‘Problems dozens of years old cannot be solved within a few days. This is a developing process which is now reaching the right lines, as far as Israel is concerned. The question now is not what Israel will give the Palestinians. The question now is which Arab countries will join the train whose engine is Annapolis’ … The foreign minister believes that ‘the Annapolis conference’s success is in the international, Arab and Palestinian understanding that this is a conference jumpstarting a process rather than ending it. I see great success in the fact that Annapolis will jumpstart a move in which the security of the State of Israel is an inseparable part. Moreover, our success is in the fact that the condition of the implementation of the process is the implementation of the Road Map (peace plan)’ … Livni believes that ‘the fact that this conference is being held, with 40 countries supporting it including Arab states, is a success’. Israeli officials have said that they had a good feeling about the completion of a joint Israeli-Palestinian statement. Most of the drafts have already been completed, although the statement is no longer crucial for the conference’s execution. The officials welcomed the fact that the statement being drafted by both sides will not deal with the core issues. However, in light of past experience, Israel is aware of the fact that a joint statement will not be reached. ‘In any event’, said senior officials involved in the negotiations, ‘Everyone is headed to Annapolis and waiting for the Arab world, to see who will arrive and who won’t. Israel has proved that its intentions are serious’.” The Ynet report on its pre-Annapolis interview with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is
here.

This position contrasts strongly with remarks made to journalists in Israel’s Foreign Press Association, just over a month ago, by veteran Israeli politician and diplomat Zalman Shoval, who is chairman of the Likud Party’s Foreign Affairs Committee. Shoval expressed anxiety that Israel would be all alone at the conference, outnumbered by Arab states and participants. And he said he, and Likud, feared that the current Israeli leadership would make concessions at Annapolis that could not be undone.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

The Jerusalem mayor’s “Marshall Plan”

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

Media coverage of Jerusalem Mayor Lupolianski’s press conference last week to announce a “Marshall Plan” for Jerusalem was skimpy and perfunctory.

The Washington Post reproduced a report from the Associated Press that summed it up this way: “The mayor of Jerusalem announced a plan Wednesday to revamp long-neglected Arab neighborhoods, a step meant to counter growing signs that Israel’s leadership is willing to consider ceding parts of the city to the Palestinians. The news from Mayor Uri Lupolianski appeared timed for release before a crucial Mideast peace conference in Annapolis, Md., next week meant to relaunch talks on an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement, and any such agreement will necessarily mean sharing Jerusalem. ‘Today, unfortunately, people are busy talking about Jerusalem’, Lupolianski said at a news conference. ‘Through our actions, we will unify and strengthen Jerusalem’. Lupolianski termed the initiative the ‘Marshall Plan for east Jerusalem’, referring to the successful U.S. aid program for Europe after World War II, and said it was meant to correct years of neglect. Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967 and annexed it. Today, around one-third of the city’s 750,000 residents are Palestinians, living in east Jerusalem neighborhoods that lag far behind Jewish areas in employment, infrastructure and education. Palestinians said the new plan would do little to change that. The plan will see the city invest around $51 million in the central neighborhoods of east Jerusalem, sprucing up the area’s underdeveloped commercial center, building parks and hotels, allowing more construction of businesses and homes, and creating closer links with Jewish areas of west Jerusalem, Lupolianski said. Planners have been at work on the projects for the past year, Lupolianski said. But they are still in the early planning stages and need approval from local and regional authorities. That process could take months or years … Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has indicated he might be willing to cede some of the city’s peripheral Arab neighborhoods, but that position remains far from the Palestinian demand for control over all of east Jerusalem. Beyond Israel’s emotional attachment to the city, Israelis are concerned that any areas vacated might be taken over by militants, putting Palestinian gunmen just steps away from Jewish neighborhoods .. In 2005, 62 percent of the city’s Arab families lived under the poverty line, according to statistics compiled by the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies, an independent research center, compared to 21 percent of Jewish families” … The AP report on the Jerusalem mayor’s Marshall Plan is here.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

Uri Avnery: more on “the one state solution is dead”

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

In his latest weekly article, veteran Israeli journalist and peace activist Uri Avnery (83 years old, yet still on the front line) writes again that he believes the “one state solution” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is dead:

“When the first bullet was fired, the possibility of creating the joint, united single country was shattered … I am proud of my ability to adapt rapidly to extreme changes. The first time I had to do this was when Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany and my life changed abruptly and completely. I was then nine years old, and everything that had happened before was dead for me. I started a new life in Palestine. On November 29, 1947, it was happening again – to me and to all of us. As the well-known saying has it, one can make an omelette from eggs, but not eggs from an omelette. Banal, perhaps, but how very true. The moment the Hebrew-Arab war started, the possibility that the two nations would live together in one state expired. Wars change reality. I joined the ‘Haganah Battalions’, the forerunner of the IDF. As a soldier in the special commando unit that was later called ‘Samson’s Foxes’, I saw the war as it was – bitter, cruel, inhuman. First we faced the Palestinian fighters, later the fighters of the wider Arab world. I passed through dozens of Arab villages, many abandoned in the storm of battle, many others whose inhabitants were driven out after being occupied. It was an ethnic war. In the first months, no Arabs were left behind our lines, no Jews were left behind the Arab lines. Both sides committed many atrocities. In the beginning of the war, we saw the pictures of the heads of our comrades paraded on stakes through the Old City of Jerusalem. We saw the massacre committed by the Irgun and the Stern Group in Deir Yassin. We knew that if we were captured, we would be slaughtered, and the Arab fighters knew they could expect the same. The longer the war dragged on, the more I became convinced of the reality of the Palestinian nation, with which we must make peace at the end of the war, a peace based on partnership between the two peoples. While the war was still going on, I expressed this view in a number of articles that were published at the time in Haaretz. Immediately after the fighting was over, when I was still in uniform convalescing from my wounds, I started meeting with two young Arabs (both of whom were later elected to the Knesset) in order to plan a common path. I could not have imagined that 60 years later this effort would still not be over. NOWADAYS, THE IDEA appears here and there of turning the omelette back into the egg, of dismantling the State of Israel and the State-of-Palestine-to-be, and establishing a single state, as we sang at that time: ‘from the sea to the desert’. This is presented as a fresh new idea, but it is actually an attempt to turn the wheel back and to bring back to life an idea that is irrevocably obsolete. In human history, that just does not happen. What has been forged in blood and fire in wars and intifadas – the State of Israel and the Palestinian national movement – will not just disappear. After a war, states can achieve peace and partnership, like Germany and France, but they do not merge into one state [n.b., this is not, however, true of civil wars, such as the one in the U.S.A., or the one in Nigeria, for example] … By the middle of the 40s, the situation of the two peoples had changed decisively. There was no escaping from the partition of the country … Even after 60 years, in which they have suffered catastrophes which few other peoples have ever experienced, the Palestinian people clings to its country with unparalleled fortitude. True, the dream of living together in one state is dead, and will not come to life again. But I have no doubt that after the Palestinian state comes into being, the two states will find ways to live together in close partnership. The walls will be thrown down, the fences will be dismantled, the border will be opened, and the reality of the common country will overcome all obstacles. The flags of the country – the two flags of the two states – will indeed wave side by side. The UN resolution of November 29, 1947, was one of the most intelligent in the annals of that organization. As one who strenuously opposed it, I recognize its wisdom”.

Avnery’s weekly article, which will be published in a number of places, was received by subscription to an email list.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

Robert Fisk: Everyone is frightened

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

Robert Fisk, unrivaled correspondent in Beirut for The Independent newspaper, wrote on Saturday: “I am talking into blackness because there is no electricity in Beirut. And everyone, of course, is frightened. A president was supposed to be elected today. He [n.b., and why not she? The Lebanese constitution says the president must be a Maronite, but not that the president must be a man!] was not elected. The corniche outside my home is empty. No one wants to walk beside the sea … We are all afraid … It’s difficult to describe what it’s like to be in a country that sits on plate glass. It is impossible to be certain if the glass will break. When a constitution breaks – as it is beginning to break in Lebanon – you never know when the glass will give way. People are moving out of their homes, just as they have moved out of their homes in Baghdad … So what can a Middle East correspondent write on a Saturday morning except that the world in the Middle East is growing darker and darker by the hour. Pakistan. Afghanistan. Iraq. ‘Palestine’. Lebanon. From the borders of Hindu Kush to the Mediterranean, we – we Westerners that is – are creating (as I have said before) a hell disaster. Next week, we are supposed to believe in peace in Annapolis, between the colourless American apparatchik and Ehud Olmert, the Israeli Prime Minister who has no more interest in a Palestinian state than his predecessor Ariel Sharon. [n.b., Fisk may not be right on this. Remember Azmi Bishara wrote in 1999 that a two-state solution is becoming an Israeli demand -- basically, to preserve a Jewish majority in Israel.] …
Robert Fisk’s latest essay reporting from Lebanon is here.

A month ago, Fisk reported that arms were pouring into Lebanon — a sure sign of an impending fight: “Lebanon is peopled with ghosts. But the phantoms now returning to haunt this damaged country –the militias which tore it apart more than 30 years ago – are real. Guns are flooding back into the country – $800 for an AK-47, $3,700 for a brand-new French Famas – as Lebanon security apparatus hunt desperately for the leadership of the new and secret armies … What now worries the Lebanese authorities, however, is the sheer scale of weaponry arriving in Lebanon. It appears to include new Glock pistols (asking price $1,000). There are growing fears, moreover, that many of these guns are from the vast stock of 190,000 rifles and pistols which the US military ‘lost’ when they handed them out to Iraqi police officers without registering their numbers or destination. The American weapons included 125,000 Glock pistols. The Lebanese-Iraqi connection is anyway well established. A growing number of suicide bombers in Iraq come from the Lebanese cities of Tripoli and Sidon. Fouad Siniora’s Lebanese government – supplied by the US with recent shipments of new weapons for the official Lebanese army – has now admitted that militias are also being created among Muslim pro-government groups. Widespread reports that Saad Hariri – son of the assassinated ex-Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri – has himself created an embryo militia have been officially denied. But a number of armed Hariri supporters initially opened fire into the Nahr el-Bared Palestinian camp after its takeover by pro-Al-Qaida gunmen last April. Hariri’s men also have forces in Beirut (supposedly unarmed) and again this is denied. The Fatah Al-Islam rebels who took over Nahr el-Bared last April – 400 died in the 206-day siege by the army, 168 of them soldiers – also used new weapons, including sniper rifles. In a gloomy ceremony last week, the military buried 98 of the 222 Muslim fighters who died, in a mass grave in Tripoli. They included Palestinians but also men from Syria, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Yemen, Tunis and Algeria … Siniora’s government is well aware of the dangers that these new developments represent – ‘such a situation could lead to a new civil war’, one minister said of the military training taking place in Lebanon – in a country in which only the Hezbollah militia, classed as a ‘resistance’ movement, hitherto had permission to bear arms. [n.b., the UN Security Council Resolution 1701 tried to put a stop to that.] But Hezbollah too has been re-arming; not only with rockets but with small arms that could only be used in street fighting … Military outposts manned by Palestinian gunmen loyal to Syria have reappeared in the Bekaa, closely watched by a Lebanese army which was severely blooded in the Nahr El-Bared fighting. Sayed Mohamed Hussein Fadlallah, one of the most senior – and wisest – Shi’ite clerics in Lebanon, warned last Friday: ‘Rearming as well as the tense and sectarianism-loaded political rhetoric, all threaten Lebanon’s diversity and expose Lebanon to divisions’. Fadlallah stated that the US – which supports Hariri – wished to divide the country. The American plan to chop up Iraq, it seems, is another ghost that has crept silently into Lebanon. Robert Fisk’s report in The Independent on 19 October is here.

All this reinforces suspicions, again, that the situation in Lebanon, and with Syria, may overshadow the (faltering) Israeli-Palestinian talks that are supposed to start in a day or two in Annapolis.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

Is Syria going to Annapolis? cont’d (1)

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

Haaretz newspaper is reporting today that Israel’s air strike on Syria in September has made it possible for the U.S. to invite Syria to Annapolis (!)

Haaretz says that “The Bush administration decided to invite Syria to the Annapolis conference due to Israel’s September air strike on what foreign media have termed a Syrian nuclear facility, American officials said. ‘Syria lost an important card in the air force strike, and that moved even members of the administration’s conservative camp to reconsider the position on Damascus‘, one said. The officials added that inviting Syria would reduce the likelihood of its encouraging Hezbollah and Hamas to undermine the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks that Annapolis is supposed to launch.  Israeli and American officials held talks over the weekend on a formula for referring to the Syrian track that would suffice to bring Syria to the conference without undermining Israel’s interests. In the end, Washington decided to change the topic of the third session from ‘the Arab states’ involvement in the process’ to ‘the effort to achieve a comprehensive regional peace’ – language that implies peace deals with Syria and Lebanon as well as the Palestinians“. The Haaretz report on Syria’s presence being encouraged in Annapolis is here.

The Haaretz article also reported that “Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak all left for Annapolis Saturday night. Speaking on board his plane as he was about to leave for Washington, Olmert said Israel would ‘view positively’ Syria’s participation in the conference. ‘We have said constantly that we are interested in Syria participating’, Olmert said.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

Is Syria going to Annapolis?

Saturday, November 24th, 2007

Yes/No. Yes/No.

Well, after the Arab League Ministerial Meeting in Cairo on Friday, maybe.

Our guess: Yes/But.

Whatever happens, Syria will not want to be left out.

Here is a fascinating analysis of the possibility that was just published in the Wall Street Journal: “…[T]here are growing signs the White House may be moving to do something it’s uniformly dismissed in the past: facilitate direct negotiations between Israel and Syria over the disputed Golan Heights. In recent days, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other senior officials have said the U.S. wouldn’t object to Syria’s raising Golan at Annapolis. Meanwhile, Israel has pursued a peace dialogue with Damascus, eager to calm tensions on its northeastern border and quash strong Syrian support for Palestinian extremist groups. Mr. Olmert has used Turkish intermediaries to explore options with the Syrians, according to Israeli officials. Retired Israeli diplomats also have held unofficial talks with a confidante of Mr. Assad’s over the past few years in an effort to find a formula to solve the Golan dispute. Many Israeli officials say Washington and Jerusalem should seek to wean Syria away from its growing alliance with Iran. They see the U.S.’s punitive actions against Damascus as driving President Assad further into the Iranian camp. ‘Maybe it’s time to employ the carrot to remove [Syria] from the axis of evil’, the deputy chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, Maj. Gen. Moshe Kaplinsky, said in Washington last month. This will ‘prevent the Iranian influence’, he said. [n.b. there was a golden opportunity at the end of the Cold War, when Syria's former main benefactor, the Soviet Union, collapsed. But no -- the U.S. want to continue to indicate its displeasure with Syria. So, enter Iran ...]

The Wall Street Journal continues: “A number of U.S. officials, particularly in the White House, have voiced reservations about engaging the Syrians. They particularly worry that any talks with Damascus could hurt Lebanon, which Syria occupied for more then 30 years before withdrawing in 2005 after the Hariri murder. The belief is that Syria will demand renewed political influence inside Lebanon in return for peace with Israel. U.S. officials particularly believe Damascus is playing a central role in the current political standoff in Beirut, where governing and opposition groups have been unable to elect a new president for weeks. Lebanon’s president Friday declared a state of emergency , arguing the additional security was needed to ward off a civil war. ‘We wouldn’t have the problems we see today in Lebanon if Syria were deciding to take a different role. Plain and simple’, Assistant Secretary of State David Welch told a Senate hearing earlier this month. at the same time, U.S. officials, including Iraq commander Gen. David Petraeus, have been praising Damascus for what they say has been its ‘robust’ effort recently to cut off the flow of foreign fighters crossing into Iraq. Some Syria analysts say there are indications that President Assad has taken steps to limit the movements of militant leaders based in Damascus, such as Hamas’s political head, Khaled Mashal. A Syrian diplomat said his government has significantly increased the policing of its borders into Iraq, including developing more watchtowers and border patrols. The Syrian government also allowed foreign diplomats, including a U.S. representative, to monitor its border operations during a tour earlier this month”. The WSJ piece can be read here.

The AP reported from Cairo on Friday that “The Arab League decision [to attend the Annapolis event], made after intense discussions late Thursday and Friday, meant that the members of a league committee tasked earlier this year with dealing with the peace process will attend Annapolis. Those countries include Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen.

Much of the day’s talks were focused on trying to persuade Syria that the conference would at least in some way address the Golan issue. The league gathering sent a joint letter to Washington demanding that the conference deal with relaunching negotiations between Israel and Syria, which wants the full return of the Golan in return for peace.

At Friday’s Arab League meeting, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas called for the inclusion of the Syrian track at Annapolis.

According to Arab diplomats, while Washington’s invitation did not specifically call for resumption of negotiations on the Golan, it referred to UN resolutions concerning the Arab-Israeli conflict as well as the 2002 Arab peace initiative, which calls for a return for Arab lands seized in 1967 in return for full peace with Israel. [n.b. Israel is adamant that any talks must be based on this UN Resolution 242.]

Earlier this week, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said there would be room at Annapolis to talk about the Golan.” [n.b., this would apparently be in the context of discussion of "national interests".] The AP report from Cairo is here.

A U.S. State Department Spokesman, Karl Duckworth, reportedly told journalists Friday that “All attendees are entitled to express their views and national interests as they see them,” Duckworth said, reading a statement…” This AFP report can be seen here.

The dispute between Israel and Syria apparently comes down to a strip of Golan territory that comes down from the heights to the shore of the Sea of Galilee — or, as Israelis call it, Lake Kinneret. The Kinneret is the source of some one-third of Israel’s water, apparently. On a recent trip there with a group of journalists, our Israeli accompaniers and guides — several with a military background — said that Israel’s position is that Syria never had “its foot on the Kinneret” — and never will.

Well, it turns out that during the time of the Syria Mandate, run by France under the vague authority of the League of Nations, “Syria” (the state we know now did not exist then, this was a Mandatory province) did not have have its toes dipping into the Sea of Galilee. But, in the 1948 war that broke out after Israel’s Declaration of Independence, the modern state of Syria did indeed get itself to the water. Note to myself: check out the borders mentioned in the UN-negotiated armistice agreement between Israel and Syria.

There was also — very significantly — a swap in 1923 between Britain, which administered (by then, separately) “Palestine” and “Transjordan”, and France, which administered “Lebanon” and “Syria” (both formerly part of Greater Syria, as was part of “Palestine”). Britain gave up the Golan to the French. Keep your eyes on the mandate — Israel’s claims and ambitions seem to be to get everything that was included in the British Mandate of Palestine, possibly as later modified by UN Security Council Resolution 242 … Forget UN General Assembly Resolution 181 in this context, which partitioned British-ruled Palestine into two states — one Jewish and one Arab. Resolution 242 calls for a return to the lines of June 1967 — not to the lines drawn by UNGA Resolution 181. Resolution 181 was adopted in November 1947, but in May 1948 Israel acquired a lot of additional territory in the area of the Palestine Mandate — and Jordan and Egypt occupied the rest. The Green Line — the 1967 cease-fire lines — delineated the Palestinian land since occupied by Israel, and from which the UN asked Israel to withdraw.

When the Palestinians declared their own state in November 1988, they claimed the West Bank and Gaza Strip areas occupied in June 1967. At that moment, international law experts say, the Palestinians relinquished any claim on land that was assigned to the “Arab” state that was to be created on the basis of UNGA Resolution 181.

But, that still leaves the question of the Golan. And the Syrians want it addressed in Annapolis. And, they want it back, every inch — apparently according to the 1949 Armistice Lines [note to myself: check this delineation].

A small part of the area where Israel, Syria, and Lebanon intersect is the Shebaa Farms — which Syria and Lebanon have said is Lebanese, but which the UN has said, until now, is part of the Golan — and thus is occupied by Israel. The UN says that Syria must resolve this problem with Israel. But Syria cannot resolve anything with Israel — including the more important question of a slice of territory along the Sea of Galilee (Lake Kinneret).

Oh, and did I mention that Israel may also want to keep some of the “heights” in the Golan? The military men who accompanied us said that this would be only fair — they now occupy three of the heights, and Syria still has the other three. They pointed them out in the distance. Sometimes, however, Israeli officials say that they are ready to give back “all” of the Golan for a peace deal with Syria. “All” but the strip of land along the water. “All” but the heights…? Stay tuned.

Meanwhile, the AP is also reporting from Lebanon that “President Emile Lahoud said Friday that Lebanon is in a ‘state of emergency’ and ordered the army to take over security powers, hours before he was stepping down without a successor and leaving a political vacuum in the divided country. The pro-Western government of Prime Minister Fuad Saniora rejected the move …
The president cannot declare a state of emergency without approval from the government, but Lahoud’s spokesman said Saniora’s government is considered unconstitutional … The army command refused to comment on the developments. The military had already been on alert for several days, deploying hundreds of troops in tanks, armored personnel carriers and jeeps along intersections leading to Beirut and around the downtown area where the parliament building is located. The city was normal throughout the day, but traffic was lighter than usual, and most schools were closed. Lahoud was still expected to step down when his term ends at midnight Friday. Both sides had been counting on the military to ensure calm in the political chaos, and it was unclear if Lahoud’s announcement would give the military any powers beyond security measures. But his talk of a ‘state of emergency’ raised already high tempers as both sides enter a new phase of trying to find a new president for the country. Parliament made a final attempt Friday afternoon to convene to vote on a president before Lahoud leaves office. But the opposition, led by the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, boycotted the session, preventing it from reaching the necessary two-thirds quorum. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who is aligned with the opposition, scheduled another session for Nov. 30 to give the factions more time to try to find a compromise candidate — which they have failed to do in weeks of talks mediated by France’s foreign minister and other international officials … Much of what happens next in Lebanon … may depend in part on Tuesday’s U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace conference. Syria has not formally decided whether to go to Annapolis, Md., but it likely will. Government supporters have accused Syria of using its allies in Lebanon to block a deal on the presidency until it sees what it gets in the conference. Damascus wants Annapolis to address its demands for the return of the Israeli-held Golan Heights“. The AP report on the tense situation in Lebanon is
here.

So, the Annapolis meeting may actually have a bigger immediate impact on the crisis in Lebanon than on the situation of the Palestinian people…

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

UN Security Council Resolution 242 – adopted 40 years ago today

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

Today is the 40th anniversary of the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 242, known as the land-for-peace resolution. It took more than five months of tough bargaining to negotiate this short and seemingly simple resolution after the June 1967 Mid-East war — in which Israel captured East Jerusalem, the West Bank, the Golan Heights, and the Gaza Strip.

A key feature of this resolution is the difference between the English and French texts — the English version says Israel should withdraw from territories occupied in the fighting, while the French version says that Israel should withdraw from the territories occupied.

The lack of the definite article, in English, is interpreted by some Israelis as a clear indication that it was never intended for Israel to withdraw from all the territories occuped in 1967.

On November 22, 1967, following the Six Day War, United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 was adopted. Since then, for the past 40 years, it has constituted the legal framework for the peaceful resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict. It is the only UN Security Council resolution accepted by both sides of the dispute as a basis for peace.

An article published in the Jerusalem Post today says that “Originally submitted by the British delegation to the UN as a compromise solution, 242 has been incorporated as a legal basis of every agreement signed between Israel and an Arab partner: the peace agreements with Egypt and Jordan respectively, and the Oslo Interim Accords with the Palestinian Liberation Organization, were all based on Resolution 242. Although accepted by both sides to the conflict, the interpretation of the resolution advanced by each side has been quite different. Indeed, seldom in the history of international relations has a legal resolution been endorsed by two conflicting parties while being so differently interpreted.

“FOR INSTANCE, the resolution calls for the ‘Withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories occupied in the recent conflict’. The article ‘the’, the word ‘all’ preceding the word ‘territories’ are omitted. This was certainly not due to any printing error.

“The aim of the drafters of this resolution was to call on Israel to withdraw without indicating precisely the extent of such a withdrawal; it was left for the parties concerned to negotiate it. That is the argument advanced by Israel. And, to be sure, the diplomats responsible for drafting the resolution subsequently made it clear that this was precisely their intention. However, the Arab side has contended throughout that the resolution does call on Israel to withdraw completely from the territories it captured during the Six Day War. One of the proofs they put forward is the French-language version of the resolution, in which the article ‘the’ has been included preceding the word ‘territories’. The resolution makes no mention whatsoever of the Palestinian Arabs except in an implied manner as it refers to the ‘refugee problem’. [n.b., in the 1967 war, a second Palestinian refugee problem was created in the fighting, over and above to the massive Palestinian refugee exodus of 1948]. This has led in the past to a debate involving the PLO and the United States and Israel on whether the resolution should be amended so as to include a specific reference to the Palestinian problem. The resolution was never amended and the Arab side, including the PLO, nevertheless accepted it as a basis for peace. To be sure, other UN resolutions (mostly in the General Assembly) have been adopted meeting the demands of the Palestinian Arabs and the Arab states. However, none has been endorsed by Israel as well. It has become fashionable in some circles to claim that Israel does not implement UN resolutions. Particular reference, explicit or implicit, is made to UN Security Council Resolution 242, the argument being that Israel has not implemented this resolution as it has failed to withdraw from the territories it captured in June 1967. The resolution, of course, does not call on Israel to withdraw unilaterally and unconditionally. It has two components: The countries to the conflict have to negotiate peace and recognize each other, while Israel should withdraw. Israel is not required to withdraw prior to such a negotiated settlement, but as part of it … Certainly, Israel could claim that it has implemented at least part of the resolution. For instance, as part of its peace agreement with Egypt, it withdrew completely from Sinai. Indeed, following the Oslo Accords, Israeli armed forces largely withdrew from territories in the West Bank and Gaza. Only two years ago, notwithstanding the fact that legally it was not obliged to, Israel withdrew completely, unilaterally and unconditionally from the Gaza Strip. Plainly, the history of the past 40 years of UN Security Council Resolution 242 is characterized by the different interpretations advanced by the Israelis and the Arabs. A thorough study of it has yet to be undertaken. What is beyond doubt is that no other legal framework endorsed by all sides has been delineated to settle the Arab-Israeli conflict”. The JPost article on UNSC Resolution 242 can be found here.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

AP reports more details about expected Annapolis event

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

The AP is reporting a few more details about the just-announced Annapolis event — where the U.S. will host an event that is to re-launch Mid-East peace talks.

“Organizers said the meeting will take place Monday through Wednesday in Washington and at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., but revealed few other details, saying it was too soon to know which of the 49 invited nations and organizations would attend. The event is meant to commit Israel and the Palestinians to formal peace talks that carry international backing. President Bush will deliver a speech at the Naval Academy Tuesday to open a one-day session there with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Bush’s role is larger than U.S. officials had earlier indicated, including meetings at the White House with the Israeli and Palestinian leaders. He also will address conference participants at a dinner Monday night at the State Department. After the session in Annapolis, talks return to Washington on Wednesday. ..

 

(more…)

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

Text of Annapolis “Conference” official announcement

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

Yes, in this message, the U.S. State Department, announces the “Annapolis Conference”. Is this just the famous American lack of verbal precision? Conference, meeting, what difference does it make?

The Palestinians preferred the term “conference”, while the Israelis preferred the term “meeting”. That’s all.

Anyway, here’s the full text of the announcement:

“On November 27, the United States will host Israeli Prime Minister Olmert, Palestinian Authority President Abbas, along with the Members of the Quartet, the Members of the Arab League Follow-on Committee, the G-8, the permanent members of the UN Security Council, and other key international actors for a
conference at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

“Secretary Rice will host a dinner the preceding evening here in Washington, where President Bush will deliver remarks. President Bush and the Israeli and Palestinian leaders will deliver speeches to open the formal conference in Annapolis.

“The Annapolis Conference will signal broad international support for the Israeli and Palestinian leaders’ courageous efforts, and will be a launching point for negotiations leading to the establishment of a Palestinian state and the realization of Israeli-Palestinian peace.

“Those invited to attend the conference are:

United States, Israel, Palestinian Authority, and –
(more…)

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

Annapolis invitations extended to Israel and Palestinians – and over 100 others

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

Reuters is reporting that “The United States on Tuesday invited Israel and the Palestinians to attend a meeting in Annapolis, Maryland, next week that it hopes will launch formal peace talks, U.S., Israeli and Palestinian officials said … In addition to the one-day meeting at the waterfront U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, there are expected to be talks in Washington the day before and the day after, said State Department spokesman Sean McCormack …More than 100 officials are expected to attend the meeting, including representatives from the Group of Eight industrial countries, the United Nations, the European Union as well as smaller players such as Norway, Turkey and Senegal. The United States has said it will invite all the members of an Arab League committee that includes Syria and Saudi Arabia but no decision on whether they will attend is expected before Arab foreign ministers begin meeting in Cairo on Thursday. Syria has said it will not come unless there is discussion of the Golan Heights, which Israel seized from it in the 1967 Middle East war …” The Reuters report on invitations having been issued for Annapolis event is here.

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati