Friday, June 19, 2009

They don't want a state

Israel Harel

From the Palestinians's refusal to sit down with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu even after he recognized their right to a state - which is historic considering this is Likud's leader - it appears (again) that their overall goal never was, and apparently never will be, a Palestinian state alongside the Jewish state. They do want a Palestinian state, but much more they want there to be no Jewish state. Therefore, back in 1937, when the first partition plan was presented, they rejected proposal after proposal by the British, the Jews, the United Nations or the Americans for a two-state solution. They never made their own proposal.

Because there is support here and abroad for a Palestinian state alongside Israel, the Palestinians, who have misled their supporters about their real intentions, can present themselves to the world as peacemakers, backed by the most prominent Israeli and foreign media, and blacken the name of Israel even while carrying out bloody suicide attacks.
Netanyahu's recognition, which agonized him so, hit the Palestinians like a bolt out of the blue. From now on, they fear, they will have to reveal their real intentions. After all, if they are sincere about their agreement to the formulation of "two states for two peoples," and their state will now be the state of the Palestinian people also by Likud's consent, the formula's basic logic requires them to recognize the other state, Israel, as the state of the Jewish people.

Only a few minutes after Netanyahu's address, minutes in which the most visceral feelings were at work, the Arab nation's representatives took to the airwaves. Out of an uncontrollable urge, they lifted the veil from their real intentions. In Umm al-Fahm and Ramallah, in Damascus and Cairo, they rejected with outright hostility Netanyahu's demand that they recognize Israel as the Jewish people's national home. The prime minister granted recognition to a Palestinian state, but did not condition his recognition on a similar move by the Arabs recognizing Israel as the state of the Jewish people.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, without doubt the senior Arab statesman, declared that the Arabs would not recognize Israel as the state of the Jewish people. Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat joined in, declaring that the Arabs would not grant such recognition even in a thousand years. Such are the wages of unilateral Israeli recognition. If the Palestinians had wanted a state, they could have acted according to the following (very worthwhile) scenario. They could have said that recognition by Netanyahu of a Palestinian state is not enough, but it is a basis for negotiation. After all, they know that the United States, Europe and their supporters in Israel, of course, will put enormous pressure on the Israeli government, which in the end will make concessions in almost every area, including a concession on the demand that the Arabs recognize Israel as the national home of the Jewish people.

After all, quite a few Jews and influential institutions support their refusal in this matter. The Israel Democracy Institute, which was awarded the Israel Prize, refuses adamantly to include such a clause - that Israel is the national home of the Jewish people - in its proposed constitution, for which it received the award.

Nevertheless, even with the sharp sword of truth at their necks, some Jews refuse to give up their illusions. They, too, were quick to blame Netanyahu for the Arabs' refusal to shake the outstretched hand this time as well. And because that has been the way of such Jews throughout the generations, the galut - the exile - has lasted so long, the birth pangs of redemption are so hard and the blame always falls on their own people.

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