Global Policy Forum

Obama Should Support Palestinian Statehood at the United Nations

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The Israeli government has said a UN vote on Palestinian statehood would be meaningless, whilst at the same time saying it would represent an "existential" threat to Israel itself. The author of this article points out that it was the UN General Assembly in 1947 that decided there should be two states. The UN therefore constitutes the perfect forum for Palestine’s grievances. The Palestinian move to seek recognition of statehood at the UN, and ideally membership in the UN, is a belated gesture of frustration with the obvious failure of direct negotiations. Israel continues to build settlements and occupy Palestinian land whilst Mahmoud Abbas, chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, is dedicated to establishing peace with Israel. The UN remains the only forum in which to try and achieve it.

By MJ Rosenberg

July 22, 2011


The "pro-Israel" lobby has cowboyed up for the fight against any Palestinian statehood bid at the United Nations this fall. It may have already convinced President Obama to issue a veto if a statehood resolution comes before the Security Council and to vote "no" if it gets to the General Assembly.


The lobby, of course, is taking its cues from the Netanyahu government, which appears terrified by the very idea of UN involvement. The Israeli government's position is contradictory. On the one hand it says a United Nations vote would be meaningless, while on the other that it would represent an "existential" threat to Israel itself.

The biggest contradiction of all is the assertion that the Palestinian attempt to resolve their conflict with Israel at the United Nations represents a threat to diplomacy -- rather than diplomacy itself.

After all, what is the United Nations other than an arena for conflict resolution by means of diplomacy? Having abandoned the effort to end the occupation through violence, the Palestinians are turning to the UN. What could be wrong with that?

In fact, there is nothing wrong with it. The Jews of Palestine (who would later become Israelis) knew that the United Nations was the only forum to achieve recognition of a state when they turned to it in 1947. As any Israeli will tell you, it was the United Nations General Assembly that granted Israel its birth certificate. Israel's own Declaration of Independence says as much:

On the 29th November, 1947, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution calling for the establishment of a Jewish State in Eretz Israel; the General Assembly required the inhabitants of Eretz Israel to take such steps as were necessary on their part for the implementation of that resolution. This recognition by the United Nations of the right of the Jewish people to establish their State is irrevocable.

The Israelis went to the United Nations for precisely the same reason the Palestinians will. Attempts at negotiations had failed. The Palestinian leadership in the late 1940s was dominated by extremists who had no interest in compromise with the Jews. The Israeli leadership today is similarly inflexible.

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu refuses even to temporarily halt the seizure of Palestinian land during the course of negotiations, insisting on his right to keep building on occupied West Bank land he asserts will be his after negotiations anyway.

Every effort by President Obama to facilitate negotiations has been rebuffed by Netanyahu, even coming to Washington to rally the lobby-dominated Congress against an Obama framework that is identical to plans Israel had previously endorsed.

So the Palestinians are going the United Nations route which Israel, and its lobby, incredibly insist is antithetical to diplomacy.

In fact, recognition of the State of Palestine by the United Nations would be a first step on the road toward successful negotiations which must follow UN action. After all, no UN action can force Israel to end the occupation of the West Bank. The army and the settlers will still be there, UN or no UN.

That is why the Palestinian leadership says that one of the first things the new State of Palestine would do will be to ask Israel to commence negotiations over borders, security arrangements, refugees, Holy Places, etc. The only difference UN recognition would make is that it would be near impossible for Netanyahu to say "no" after the United Nations had, in effect, declared that it was occupying not some vague entity but another people's state.

That is why the Israeli right and its camp followers here are so opposed to any UN action. It could lead to negotiations and, worst of all, to Israel's negotiated withdrawal from the West Bank.

Here is David Harris, head of the American Jewish Committee and one of the lobby leaders closest to Netanyahu, writing this week about the prospect that Israel might have to leave the West Bank.

Israel, which will be asked to take enormous, even unprecedented, risks for an agreement, given its challenging neighborhood and small size - it was only nine miles wide at its narrowest point until 1967, which for [Abba] Eban evoked "insecurity and danger" and, as a result, "a memory of Auschwitz. "
This hysterical rhetoric (Auschwitz!) is a throwback to the days before the Palestinians recognized not only Israel's right to exist but to security.


It conveniently ignores that it was from within those "Auschwitz borders" that Israel defeated the combined forced of Egypt, Syria and Jordan in six days in 1967 (at the cost of 776 Israeli lives) while in 1973, from vastly expanded borders, losing 2688 soldiers and almost the war itself following an Egyptian and Syrian attack. That struggle lasted three weeks.

It intentionally ignores the fact that the Palestinian leader pushing for UN action is Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, who is not only a moderate, but whose forces work every day with the Israeli army and security agencies to prevent violence and terrorism. Fayyad, like President Mahmoud Abbas, is dedicated to peace with Israel and not even David Harris would be able to come up with a single action by either that demonstrates otherwise.

As for Hamas, any Israeli-Palestinian agreement would not even get to draft form if it did not include an absolute end of violence, and the means to inflict violence, on the part of Hamas. Does Harris fear that Israeli negotiators don't understand that? An agreement is, by definition, signed by both sides. Would Israeli negotiators agree to withdraw from even an inch of territory if they thought it would jeopardize Israel's security let alone evoke a "memory of Auschwitz?"

Of course not.

Taking their case to the United Nations is a powerful statement by the Palestinian leadership that they have rejected terrorism once and for all and are determined to live in peace alongside Israel. It is also a sign that the "hard men" of violence who once dominated Palestinian politics are relics of the past. The future belongs to people like Salam Fayyad who, in the words of renowned New Republic writer and life-long Zionist, Leon Wieseltier, is the man who "all Israelis and Palestinians, who are not maniacs, have dreamed" of.

This is a moment of opportunity, perhaps the last. Friends of both Israelis and Palestinians should do everything they can to support action by the UN. to create a Palestinian state this fall.

The alternative, the end to diplomacy and the rebirth of utter despair and hopelessness, will inevitably lead to disaster for Israel, for Palestine and for American interests too.




 

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