Israel's "Generous Offer" to Palestanians at Camp David Explained

Discussion in 'Politics & Religion' started by gauharjk, Jan 10, 2008.

  1. #1
    This is an interesting article. Please read it with an open mind. It should clear many misconceptions.
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    Ungenerous occupier: Israel's Camp David exposed

    By Jonathan Cook
    2 January 2008

    http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9181.shtml

    After seven years of rumors and self-serving memoirs, the
    Israeli media has finally published extracts from an
    official source
    about the Camp David negotiations in
    summer 2000. For the first time it is possible to gauge
    with some certainty the extent of former Israeli Prime
    Minister Ehud Barak's "generous offer" to the Palestinians
    and Yasser Arafat's reasons for rejecting it.

    In addition, the document provides valuable insights into
    what larger goals Israel hoped to achieve at Camp David
    and how similar ambitions are driving its policies to this
    day.

    The 26-page paper, leaked to the Haaretz daily, was
    drafted by the country's political and security
    establishments in the wake of Camp David as a guide to
    what separated the parties. Entitled "The Status of the
    Diplomatic Process with the Palestinians: Points to Update
    the Incoming Prime Minister
    ," it was prepared in time for
    the February 2001 general election.

    Although this is far from the only account of the Camp
    David negotiations, it is the first official document
    explaining what took place -- and one that certainly
    cannot be accused of being unsympathetic to Israel's
    positions.

    The document came to light last month after it was
    presented to current Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to
    prepare him for his meeting with the Palestinians at
    Annapolis. Olmert had agreed, under American pressure, to
    revive negotiations for the first time since the collapse
    of Camp David, and the follow-up Taba talks a few months
    later. It is clear that, far from reviewing his stance in
    light of the Camp David impasse, Olmert chose to adopt
    some of Barak's most hardline positions.

    The earlier negotiations, in July 2000, were Barak's
    attempt to wrap up all the outstanding points of conflict
    between Israel and the Palestinians that had not been
    addressed during a series of Israeli withdrawals from the
    occupied territories specified in the Oslo agreements.

    Barak, backed by the US president of the time, Bill
    Clinton, pushed Palestinian Authority President Arafat
    into the hurried final-status negotiations, even though
    the Palestinian leader believed more time was needed to
    build confidence between the two sides. Contrary to the
    spirit of the Oslo agreements, Israel had doubled the
    number of illegal settlers in the occupied territories
    through the 1990s and failed to carry out the promised
    withdrawals in full.

    Perhaps not surprisingly, the Israeli document does not
    acknowledge the most generous offer of all during the six
    decades of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: the PLO's
    decision in the late 1980s to renounce its claim to most
    of the Palestinian homeland, and settle instead for a
    state in the two separate territories of the West Bank and
    Gaza -- on only 22 percent of historic Palestine.

    So given the massive territorial concession made by the
    Palestinian leadership 20 years ago, how do Barak's terms
    compare? The document tells us that Barak insisted on
    three main principles in agreeing to end the occupation
    and establish a Palestinian state:

    1. Israel's illegal settlement blocs would be kept, with
    80 percent of the settlers remaining in the West Bank on
    land annexed to Israel.


    The West Bank constitutes the bulk of any future
    Palestinian state. According to the document, some eight
    percent of the territory would have been annexed to Israel
    to maintain the settlements. In return the Palestinians
    would have been compensated with a much smaller wedge of
    Israeli land of much less value, probably in the Negev
    desert.

    Israel's proposal required leaving nearly 400,000 Jews
    living inside the West Bank and East Jerusalem in
    fortified communities connected by settler roads, some
    linked to Israel and others criss-crossing the territory.
    The settlements and the infrastructure to sustain them
    would have been off-limits to the Palestinians and guarded
    by the army, creating effectively closed Israeli military
    zones deep in the West Bank. All of this was a sure recipe
    for destroying the viability of the proposed Palestinian
    state. Arafat was being asked to approve a labyrinth of
    Israeli land corridors that would have consolidated a
    series of Palestinian ghettoes under the guise of
    statehood.

    2. A wide "security zone," supervised by the Israeli army,
    would be maintained along the Jordan Valley in the West
    Bank, from the Dead Sea to the northern Jewish settlement
    of Meholah.


    Such a security zone exists already, so we do not need to
    speculate on what it would look like. A few thousand
    settlers in the Jordan Valley have ensured that the area,
    nearly a fifth of the West Bank, has been all but annexed
    to Israel for decades. Most Palestinians, apart from those
    living in the Valley itself, are barred from entering it.
    The Valley is one of the most fertile areas of the West
    Bank, its huge agricultural potential currently exploited
    mainly by Israel. Depriving Palestinians of both
    territorial and economic control over the Valley would
    again make the Palestinian state unviable.

    3. On East Jerusalem, Israel demanded massive territorial
    concessions in line with its illegal annexation of the
    part of the city occupied by Israel in 1967.


    Israel wanted to maintain territorial contiguity for its
    illegal settlements in East Jerusalem, home to nearly a
    quarter of a million Jews, with the Palestinian
    inhabitants forced as a result into a series of what
    Haaretz refers to as "bubbles."

    Maintaining Israel's current expanded municipal borders
    for Jerusalem would have had two damaging consequences for
    the Palestinians: first, it would have severed the city,
    the economic and touristic hub of any Palestinian state,
    from the rest of the West Bank; and second, the large
    settlements of Maale Adumim and Har Homa, built deep in
    Palestinian territory but now considered by Israel to be
    part of Jerusalem, would have remained under Israeli
    sovereignty. The West Bank would have been cut in half,
    creating further movement restrictions for Palestinians in
    the West Bank.

    In the Old City, Israel demanded that the Jewish and
    Armenian quarters and parts of the so-called "sacred
    basin" outside the walls be annexed to Israel, and that
    the mosques of the Noble Sanctuary (known as Temple Mount
    to Jews) be placed under an "ambiguous" sovereignty
    ,
    doubtless later to be exploited by the stronger party,
    Israel. These demands would ensure that Palestinian areas
    of East Jerusalem were carved up into a series of
    ghettoes, a mirror image of Israeli policies in the West
    Bank.

    In addition, Israel hoped Camp David would belatedly
    legitimize its annexation and ethnic cleansing in 1967 of
    an area of the West Bank close to Jerusalem called the
    Latrun Salient. Today the area has been transformed by the
    Jewish National Fund into an "Israeli" nature reserve
    called Canada Park using tax-exempt donations from
    Canadians.


    The sum effect of these "generous" proposals was to offer
    the Palestinians far less than the remaining 22 percent of
    their historic homeland.
    They would have had to subtract
    from a state in Gaza and the West Bank large parts of the
    expanded municipality of Jerusalem, as well as the Latrun
    Salient, eight percent of the West Bank to accommodate the
    settlements, and a further 20 percent for a security zone
    in the Jordan Valley.

    In other words, the Palestinians were being asked to sign
    up to a deal that would give them a very compromised
    sovereignty over no more than about 14 percent of their
    historic homeland
    -- or something very similar to the
    Bantustans that have been created for them before and
    since Camp David by the growth of the settlements and the
    creeping annexation of their land by the separation wall.

    In return for Barak's "generosity," what counter-demands did the Palestinians make that scuppered the talks and thereby "unmasked" Arafat, as Barak and Clinton have long maintained? What damning evidence is cited?

    The Palestinians, according to the document, were willing
    to accommodate Israel's "demographic needs" and agree to
    border changes. They insisted on two conditions, however:
    that Israel's annexation of the West Bank not exceed 2.3
    percent of the territory, and that any land swap be based
    on the principle of equality. Israel, it seems, could not
    accept either term.

    The Palestinians also wanted the land corridor connecting
    the two parts of their state, the West Bank and Gaza, to
    be under their sovereignty, presumably so that such
    connections could not be severed at Israeli whim. In
    addition, Arafat expected the usual trappings of
    statehood: an army and control of Palestinian airspace.
    Israel opposed all these demands.

    Concerning Jerusalem, the Palestinians wanted an "open
    city," much in line with the original United Nations
    Partition Plan of 1947, connected to both the Israeli and
    Palestinian hinterlands. The Palestinians objected to the
    prospect of living in "bubbles" and demanded instead
    territorial contiguity in East Jerusalem. They also wanted
    most of the Armenian quarter in the Old City, though
    appear to have been ready to cede the Jewish quarter
    ethnically cleansed of Palestinians in 1967.

    On the other major contentious issue, Arafat wanted Israel
    to admit sole responsibility for the Palestinian refugees
    created by the 1948 war. The document, however, notes that
    the Palestinians "showed understanding of the sensitivity
    of the issue for Israel, and willingness to find a
    formulation that would balance these feelings with their
    national needs." This suggested at the very least that the
    Palestinian leadership was willing to do a deal on the
    refugees.

    According to some critics, Barak entered the Camp David
    negotiations in bad faith, setting the bar so high that
    Israel and the Palestinians were bound to fail to reach an
    agreement. But why would Barak want, or at least risk,
    such an outcome? The document suggests two related
    reasons.

    First, it notes that parallel to his preparations for Camp
    David Barak was working on a "separation" plan if the
    talks failed. The scheme was ready by June 2000, a month
    before the negotiations, and was approved by the cabinet
    in the immediate wake of the intifada, in October 2000.
    According to Haaretz, Barak's separation proposal
    encompassed all aspects of Palestinian life and was to be
    implemented over several years.

    Many of these secret dealings by Barak are recorded in my
    book Blood and Religion, including the fact that his
    deputy defense minister, Ephraim Sneh, drew up a
    "separation map" shortly before Camp David. Shlomo Ben
    Ami, Barak's chief negotiator at the talks, observed
    later: "He [Barak] was very proud of the fact that his map
    would leave Israel with about a third of the [West Bank]
    territory." According to Ben Ami, the prime minister said
    of the ghettoes he intended to leave behind for the
    Palestinians: "Look, this is a state; to all its intents
    and purposes, it looks like a state."

    After Barak lost office in early 2001, he lobbied publicly
    first for unilateral separation and later for
    disengagement. His military mentor and successor as prime
    minister, Ariel Sharon, was persuaded reluctantly to
    abandon his maximalist positions and settle for Barak's
    plan. He agreed to separation's logical outcome, the West
    Bank wall, in summer 2002, and to disengagement from Gaza
    in early 2004.

    From the document, it seems clear that Barak and much of
    the Israeli leadership assumed from the outset that they
    would need to cage the Palestinians into ghettoes, or
    Bantustans familiar from South African apartheid. The
    failure of Camp David simply gave Barak and his successors
    the pretext to implement the policy.

    Second, the document reveals that Barak made a demand of
    Arafat he must have known the Palestinian leader could not
    accept. Barak wanted formal recognition not of Israel, but
    of Israel as a Jewish state. Much more than semantics
    depended on extracting this concession. It required of
    Arafat that he renounce the rights of two groups that
    constitute the overwhelming majority of Palestinians.

    Recognition of Israel as a Jewish state would have
    forfeited the right -- protected by international law and
    United Nations resolutions -- of the refugees to the homes
    they were ethnically cleansed from by the Israeli army in
    1948. Their right of return, whether realized in practice
    or not, has been sacrosanct for Palestinians ever since.

    And recognition would have further condemned more than one
    million Palestinian citizens of Israel to permanent status
    as marginalized outsiders in an ethnic state that
    privileges the rights of Jews over non-Jews. In effect,
    Arafat was being asked to give his blessing to Israel's
    attempts to outlaw the Palestinian minority's campaign for
    the country's reform into a "state of all its citizens" --
    or a liberal democracy.

    Both Olmert and his foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, were
    briefed about the Camp David document before they met
    current Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas at
    Annapolis. It is therefore notable that, rather than
    abandoning a demand that had wrecked the Camp David talks,
    both made recognition of Israel as a Jewish state a
    deal-clincher before the two sides had even met.

    Also interesting is that, whereas Barak was reluctant to
    divulge the demand he made of Arafat at Camp David,
    Olmert's government has been trumpeting it from the
    rooftops. Why the about-turn?

    The most likely explanation is that Barak expected Camp
    David to fail and was fearful that his demand for
    recognition might give away Israel's ulterior motives.
    Olmert, on the other hand, has succeeded in dressing up
    recognition of Israel as a Jewish state as the ultimate
    test of whether the Palestinians are serious about
    accepting a two-state solution. It is a maneuver he
    mastered last year when he needed to turn world opinion
    against Hamas following its election victory.

    In truth, Israel's need for recognition as a Jewish state
    is proof that it is not a democratic state, but rather an
    ethnic state that needs to defend racist privilege through
    the gerrymandering of borders and population. But in
    practice Olmert may yet use the recognition test to back
    Abbas, a weak and unrepresentative Palestinian leader,
    into the very corner that Arafat avoided.

    Before Annapolis, Livni declared: "It must be clear to
    everyone that the State of Israel is a national homeland
    for the Jewish people," adding that Israel's Palestinian
    citizens would have to abandon their claim for equality
    the moment the Palestinian leadership agreed to statehood
    on Israel's terms.

    Olmert framed the Annapolis negotiations in much the same
    way. It was about creating two nations, he said: "the
    State of Israel -- the nation of the Jewish people; and
    the Palestinian state -- the nation of the Palestinian
    people."

    The great fear, Olmert has repeatedly pointed out, is that
    the Palestinians may wake up one day and realize that,
    after the disappointments of Oslo and Camp David, Israel
    will never concede to them viable statehood. The better
    course, they may decide, is a South African-style struggle
    for one-person, one-vote in a single democratic state.

    Olmert warned of this threat on another recent occasion:
    "The choice ... is between a Jewish state on part of the
    Land of Israel, and a binational state on all of the Land
    of Israel."

    Faced with this danger, Olmert, like Sharon and Barak
    before him, has come to appreciate that Israel urgently
    needs to persuade Abbas to sign up to the two-state
    option. Not, of course, for two democratic, or even
    viable, states, but for a racist Jewish state alongside a
    Palestinian ghetto-state.

     
    gauharjk, Jan 10, 2008 IP
  2. Ibn Juferi

    Ibn Juferi Prominent Member

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    #2
    Good article, this is the same article where I posted a link to at another thread. It rebuts the nonsense that Barak made a "generous offer" to the Palestinians, when in reality all he offered is a creation of a Bantustan Palestine which has no chance of becoming a viable, independent State.
     
    Ibn Juferi, Jan 11, 2008 IP
  3. guru-seo

    guru-seo Peon

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    #3
    That offer was a joke! No wonder it was rejected, yet you have people in the media claiming that it was a good offer? Give me a break!
     
    guru-seo, Jan 11, 2008 IP
  4. gauharjk

    gauharjk Notable Member

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    #4
    Unfortunately, Palestinians are being demonised by the MSM and zionist-controlled media. Look at the truth. It is so different.

    The truth should come in the open. Only then will there be Justice, only then can there be peace...
     
    gauharjk, Jan 11, 2008 IP