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Obama's 'Jewish state' reference jars Palestinians
From time to time, the Palestine
Center
distributes
articles it believes will enhance understanding
of the Palestinian
political
reality. The following article was published by
the Associated Press
on 23 May
2011.
"Obama's 'Jewish state'
reference jars Palestinians"
U.S.-Israel tension over Barack
Obama's endorsement of Israel's pre-1967
borders is obscuring a flip side of the Middle
East coin: The past days' speeches by the U.S.
president contained difficult challenges for
the Palestinians as well.
Addressing the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee
Sunday, Obama reiterated his request that the
Palestinians drop their plans to appeal for
recognition at the United Nations this fall,
and — as he did in another Mideast speech
Thursday — raised tough questions about an
emerging Palestinian unity government that is
to include the Hamas militant
group.
Most difficult for Palestinians
is Obama's call to recognize Israel as the
Jewish homeland, essentially requiring the
Palestinians to accept that most refugees will
be denied the "right of return" to what is now
Israel.
Perhaps for this reason, the
Palestinians have remained largely quiet about
the substance of Obama's speeches, seemingly
content to watch Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu clash with the U.S.
administration over Israel's future
borders.
"It's really premature to jump
into any of these details," said Saeb Erekat,
the chief Palestinian negotiator, when asked by
The Associated Press about the demands Obama
made of the Palestinians.
The fate of
Palestinian refugees is one of the most
emotional and explosive issues in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Hundreds
of thousands of Palestinians either fled or
were expelled during the war surrounding
Israel's creation in 1948. Today, the surviving
refugees, with their descendants, number
several million people.
The Palestinians
claim they have the right to return to their
family's lost properties. Israel rejects the
principle, saying it would mean the end of the
country as a Jewish democracy. Israeli leaders
say the refugees should be entitled to
compensation and resettled in a future
Palestine to be established next to Israel, or
absorbed where they now live.
In his
speech last Thursday, Obama did not explicitly
mention the refugees. But by saying a final
peace deal must recognize "Israel as a Jewish
state and the homeland for the Jewish people,"
he appeared to back the Israeli
position.
The issue is so central to
Palestinian policy and society that no
Palestinian leader can be seen as abandoning
the rights of the refugees, particularly at a
time when peace efforts are at a standstill and
so many other difficult issues, such as borders
and the final status of Jerusalem, remain
unresolved.
Nabil Shaath, a senior
Palestinian official, said recognition of
Israel as a Jewish state would sell out not
only the refugees, but potentially open the
door to Israel expelling its roughly 1.5
million Arab citizens as well. This idea has
never been seriously raised in
Israel.
He said the Palestinian
recognition of Israel's right to exist, without
any reference to national character, should be
sufficient.
"We recognize Israel as a
state," he said. "It's a recognition of a state
to a state."
In his two recent speeches,
Obama took aim at two other central planks of
Palestinian policy: plans to ask the U.N. in
September to recognize an independent
Palestine, with or without a peace agreement;
and a unity deal struck between President
Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement and the
Iranian-backed Hamas militants.
In
Thursday's speech, Obama warned that "symbolic
actions to isolate Israel at the United Nations
in September won't create an independent
state." And referring to Hamas in Sunday's
address to AIPAC, a powerful pro-Israel lobby,
Obama stated: "No country can be expected to
negotiate with a terrorist organization sworn
to its destruction."
"We will hold the
Palestinians accountable for their actions and
their rhetoric," Obama said.
Erekat
insisted the world must embrace the Fatah-Hamas
reconciliation, meant to end the split that has
left rival governments in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip. The Palestinians claim both areas,
along with east Jerusalem, for their future
state, and Erekat said there can be no
independence without reconciliation.
In
any case, he said Abbas, and the umbrella
Palestine Liberation Organization, dominated by
Fatah, are the parties to negotiate peace with
Israel — not the "unity government" of the
Palestinian Authority which would be backed by
both parties.
Erekat, like other
Palestinians officials, declined to discuss
most of the specifics of Obama's speech,
including the issue of the Jewish state. For
now, he says the border issue should be the
focus of Mideast diplomacy.
The
Palestinians demand a return to the pre-1967
lines, which would require an Israeli pullout
from the West Bank and east Jerusalem, though
they are open to Obama's idea of agreed-upon
modifications through land swaps — as long as
they are small.
Erekat said if Netanyahu
accepts the 1967 lines he could raise any other
matter in negotiations. "Before I hear the
prime minister of Israel saying that he accepts
this principle, I think it would be a waste of
my time to discuss any other issue," Erekat
said.
Netanyahu says the 1967 lines are
"indefensible," and his anger toward the U.S.
president seemed palpable at a White House
meeting Friday.
But even Obama's
reference to the 1967 lines may not be entirely
to the Palestinians' liking.
Clarifying
his position Sunday, Obama said those lines
should be the basis for a peace deal, but that
the final borders could be adjusted to
accommodate "new demographic
realities."
That was seen as a
recognition that Israel could keep at least
some of the occupied area where it has settled
Jews. Some 500,000 Israelis live in Jewish
settlements, which are considered illegal by
the Palestinians and the international
community.
Obama also noted the 1967
lines have long been considered a basis for a
final peace deal, most recently in previous
negotiations that broke down in 2008. So his
embrace of those borders is not revolutionary.
"What I did on Thursday was to say publicly
what has long been acknowledged privately," he
said.
After initial shock and anger
toward Obama, members of Netanyahu's hard-line
coalition have begun to soften their
opposition.
Limor Livnat, a Cabinet
minister in Netanyahu's nationalist Likud
Party, called Obama's speech on Sunday
"excellent." She praised his tough line against
Hamas and support for Israel as a Jewish
state.
"Following the prime minister's
words, the president sharpened his message and
said things that he didn't say clearly
beforehand," she told Channel 2 TV. "These are
important things."
The
views
expressed in this article are those of the
author and do not
necessarily
reflect
those of The Jerusalem
Fund.
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