Michael Sharnoff: Alternative Solutions to Palestinian Unilateralism
MIDEASTINSIGHTS ⋅ NOVEMBER 9, 2011 (Originally published in Middle East Insights)
Last month, senior Palestinian negotiator Nabil Shaath declared that negotiations between the Middle East Quartet (US, UN, EU and Russia) reached a deadlock and he chided special envoy Tony Blair as serving only Israeli interests. However, Shaath suggested that Palestinians could be encouraged to return to direct talks if Israel imposed a full settlement freeze and agreed that the 1967 boundaries would serve as the basis for negotiations. In response, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has agreed to a partial settlement freeze to persuade Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to return to the negotiating table, but the gesture was rebuffed since it did not entail a total halt to all construction activity.
On November 11, the Security Council is expected to vote on Abbas’s controversial bid for the United Nations to recognize the state of Palestine along the 1967 boundaries comprising the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. However, attempts to bypass direct talks with Israel and gain recognition of Palestine appear to be backfiring. Britain, France and Colombia intend to abstain – which essentially counts as a rejected vote – and therefore it is unlikely Palestinians will secure a majority in the Security Council.
The Paradox of Palestinian Disunity and Reconciliation
In the event Palestinians gain a majority in the Security Council, the United States would be placed in a difficult position. If Washington uses its veto – which it has threatened to do – the bid would be rejected and the Palestinians would lack legal grounds to challenge Israel diplomatically. A US veto would be welcomed by Israel, which has insisted that peace can only be achieved through negotiations. However, blocking Palestinian statehood could also be perceived as hypocritical since Washington has professed its support for freedom, dignity and human rights during the Arab Spring.
Since the Johnson Administration, US policy has insisted that negotiations, not unilateral steps, are necessary to achieve peace. However, while the Obama Administration has made Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking a priority, Palestinian physical and ideological disunity represents a critical stumbling block. Israel can negotiate with Abbas’s Palestinian Authority, but this regime only represents some 2.3 million Palestinians in the West Bank. Abbas has no legal jurisdiction in the Gaza Strip and has recently been embarrassed and upstaged by Hamas’s success in securing the release of over 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for one Israeli soldier. Therefore, even if a hypothetical scenario arose in which Netanyahu agreed to all of Abbas’s demands to sign a peace agreement, there is no guarantee that Hamas would accept the legitimacy of an Israel-PA brokered settlement, allow for a power sharing government, agree to terminate their state of belligerency with Israel, or recognize its right to exist.
Paradoxically, while Palestinian disunity obstructs the possibility of a two-state reality, Hamas-Fatah unity poses challenges to both Israel and the United States. Israel has insisted that it will not directly negotiate with Hamas, which it views as a terrorist organization. Hamas is designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) by the State Department and deems it illegal for Americans to “knowingly provide ‘material support or resources’ to a designated FTO.” Even if such a unity coalition was composed of technocrats who are unaffiliated with Hamas, the Islamist radical movement would maintain its ideology whose short-term vision is the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza with Jerusalem as its capital. It would still adhere to a long-term vision of liquidating Israel, facilitating the return of 5 million refugees and transforming Palestine into an Islamic state. Therefore, advocating dialogue with Hamas would further undermine Washington’s position.
Confronting Possible Post-UN Vote Scenarios
While it is unclear how Palestinians will respond if their request for international recognition fails, there are indications that they could respond both diplomatically and militarily.
On October 20, Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer for Palestine to the UN, told the Palestinian newspaper al-Ayam that Palestinians would seek other options if the Security Council rejected their request. These options included soliciting additional diplomatic support to upgrade the Palestinians status from “observer entity” to that of a “non-member nation.” This title, which would enhance Palestinian recognition, would be granted by the General Assembly, from which the Palestinians would easily gain a majority of votes.
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