|
The
New People |
Why doesn’t Bush let Sharon run his
press office?
By Robert Fisk, Independent (London) 26,
June 2002
Put your flak jackets on,
President George Bush has spoken. He wants a regime change in Palestine, just as
he wants a regime change in Iraq. He reads the Israeli government press handouts
and accurately quotes them to his American people.
Ariel Sharon, wants the
destruction/ liquidation/ resignation of Yasser Arafat. So does Mr Bush. "Peace
requires a new and different Palestinian leadership so a Palestinian state can
be born," Bush told the fearful American people, waiting for the next
apocalypse, be it on 4 July or after.
So, no Palestinian state unless
Arafat goes. There were no Bush conditions for Israel. He did not secure an end
to the continuing building of Jewish settlements for Jews and Jews only on Arab
(that is somebody else’s) land. Nor did he secure a halt to continuing Israeli
military "incursions" — how I love that word "incursions."
Mr. Sharon, in his highly
mendacious demand for Palestinian "transparency," has demanded Palestinian
reform must be neither cosmetic nor an attempt to preserve Arafat. And what does
Mr Bush say? Why, that Palestinian reform "must be more than cosmetic changes or
a veiled attempt to preserve the status quo."
Why, I wonder, doesn’t Mr. Bush
let Ariel Sharon run the White House press bureau? Not only would it be more
honest — we would at least be hearing the voice of Israel at first hand — but it
would spare the American President the ignominy of parroting everything he is
told by the Israelis.
All that he offers to the
Palestinians is a ghastly mockery of what the Palestinians are told to do by the
Israelis.
There never has been an "interim"
state, let alone a "provisional" state. These are fantasies of the Israelis and
Mr. Bush. White House "officials" — we can guess who they are — believe a
Palestinian state can be "achieved" within 18 months. Let’s forget international
law provides for no such entity.
Let’s go over again that most
crucial and most dishonest part of the Bush statement:
"When the Palestinian people have
new leaders, new institutions and new security arrangements with their
neighbours," he told us, "the United States of America will support the creation
of a Palestinian state, whose border and certain aspects of its sovereignty will
be provisional until resolved as part of a final settlement in the Middle East."
Let’s see what this means: when
the Palestinians have elected a leader whom the Israelis want — a condition that
could go on to the crack of doom — the Americans will support a Palestinian
state whose very existence will mean nothing unless Israel approves what that
state wants to do.
In other words, the United States
will be Israel’s spokesman in any negotiations. A growing number of Americans
know they are being suckered by their own government and their own press, that
their country’s foreign policy is being manipulated to give maximum support to
one and only one country in the Middle East.
So will "certain aspects of its
sovereignty." Note these weighty words: "certain aspects" of its sovereignty.
What, I wonder, does this mean? Do these "certain aspects" include the
continuation of illegal Jewish settlement building? Or the absence of any
international guarantees for this interim/provisional state? Or perhaps a
get-out clause for the United States to wash its hands of the whole shebang if
Israel decides to annex the entire West Bank?
Note, again, the weasel words.
Palestine’s borders will be "provisional. . .until resolved as part of a final
settlement in the Middle East."
Yet never before has an occupied
people been led by so pathetic a person as Yasser Arafat. Nineteen years ago,
this same Yasser Arafat swore to me on a hilltop above the Lebanese city of
Tripoli that his "Palestine" would be "a democracy among the guns." His
Palestine, he told me, would be unlike any other Arab state. There would be no
secret policemen, no "regime," no cronyism, no corruption.
Fast forward to the spring of
1998. I am listening to a French diplomat who has returned from Gaza. He and his
delegation carried a personal letter to Arafat from President Chirac. Again and
again, Arafat disregarded the letter, only interested in when the new French
school in Gaza will open. The diplomats understand. One of Arafat’s relatives
will be the headmistress of this school. Family before nation. The Chirac letter
stays unopened.
He was given time to prove his
loyalty to the West, to America, to Israel. He was supposed to have made
Israel’s settlements both safe and sacred.
Now, when he can no longer control
the people he was supposed to control — remember the BBC’s repeated question:
"Can he control his own people?" —- his usefulness is at an end. He must go, to
be replaced by our choice of leader — forget elections — who will be as
democratic as the new Afghan "interim" government.
George Bush insulted the
Palestinians and enraged the leadership of the Arab world. Who cares about the
latter? Most of them were appointed by us. But I have a feeling that the
Palestinians will not accept this nonsense.