Washington
Is Being
Toothless On Israel
By
Ali Abunimah
The
Electronic Intifada,
11August 2003
US
President George W. Bush's administration is considering economic measures
to prevent Israel from building its separation wall in the occupied
West Bank. The proposed punishment is to subtract from US loan guarantees
for Israel $1 for every dollar Israel spends on building the barrier
inside the West Bank. AIPAC, the main pro-Israel lobbying organization
in Washington, estimates the cost of the barrier at $1 million per kilometer,
and much of the 640-kilometer barrier has been or will be built inside
the occupied areas.
Such a move would
reflect concerns expressed by Bush and US Secretary of State Colin Powell
that the wall makes achieving a two-state solution more difficult. However,
the administration appears to be split. Bush embodied this ambivalence
recently at the White House by criticizing the wall when standing next
to Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas one day, and saying nothing
the next when Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon openly defied him,
insisting the wall would be built.
Powell, meanwhile,
has been the subject of press speculation that he and his deputy, Richard
Armitage, would not serve in a second Bush administration. Powell dismissed
the reports as "nonsense" and "rumor," but on 6
August, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd saw in the story an attempt
by Powell's neoconservative rivals to dislodge him in favor of one of
their own. Dowd observed: "Just as the neocons made their move
on Powell, pro-Israel hawks scorned the secretary for not being on their
team in the peace process. Israel's supporters scoffed at the new threat
to cut loan guarantees as a State Department policy, not a White House
policy."
Such infighting
does nothing to convince Israel or anyone else that Washington is serious
and determined to pursue the "road map."
For the Bush administration,
the situation could be an uncomfortable reprise of an earlier episode
involving the administration of former US President George H.W. Bush.
In 1991, the elder Bush imposed an almost identical punishment on Israel
to force the Israeli government to attend the Madrid Peace Conference.
However, settlement construction continued, derailing a nascent peace
process. At the time, the president's comment that he was "one
lonely little guy" up against "something like a thousand (pro-Israel)
lobbyists on the hill working the other side of the question,"
earned him the lasting enmity of the pro-Israel lobby and may have helped
lose him the 1992 election. Then Democratic presidential candidate Bill
Clinton seized on the comment in the campaign, accusing Bush of breaking
down "the taboo against overt anti-Semitism." In American
political terms such accusations are poison.
As the 2004 elections
approach, Democrats and Republicans are again competing to make fervent
pledges of allegiance to Israel. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, a
Texas Republican, recently toured Israel and addressed the Knesset,
even as Bush was receiving the Israeli and Palestinian prime ministers
in Washington. DeLay's speech was so strident that it prompted a Labor
Party lawmaker to remark that DeLay was more extreme than even the Likud.
Prior to his trip, DeLay displayed an almost racist view of Palestinians,
while openly challenging Bush's stated goal of a Palestinian state by
declaring: "I can't imagine this president supporting a state of
terrorists, a sovereign state of terrorists." Not to be outdone,
a delegation of 29 Democratic congressmen will head for Israel this
month. Leading Democrats were among the first to condemn withholding
loan guarantees to Israel because of the wall.
The lack of any
serious debate about Israel in the US political arena is perhaps best
illustrated by the attitude of Howard Dean, a former Vermont governor
and Democratic presidential hopeful. Dean has generated enthusiasm among
liberals because he vocally opposed the war in Iraq and supports universal
healthcare. Yet when it comes to Israel, Dean takes no risks.
Dean was asked last
November by the Jewish weekly, The Forward, whether he supported the
views of the liberal Zionist group Americans for Peace Now, or those
of AIPAC, which backs the Sharon government to the hilt. He answered:
"My view is closer to AIPAC's view." Dean's official Statement
of Principles on the Middle East Peace Process supports a two-state
solution, but says that, "to get there, the Palestinian Authority
will have to fight terrorism and violence." Yet he has not had
a word to say about Israeli violence that has killed three Palestinians
for every Israeli in the past three years and rendered intolerable the
lives of millions of people. The leading candidates' views get only
more hawkish.
With the political
fundamentals in Washington being what they are, any action that the
Bush administration takes to confront Sharon is likely to be timid at
best. Sharon probably knows this, and his defiance did not stop at his
White House pledge to pursue building the wall. As soon as Sharon returned
to Israel, his government announced tenders for 22 new housing units
for Jewish settlers in Gaza. This prompted the State Department to protest
that a "freeze is a freeze."
And this is only
the tip of the iceberg. Last May, Israel's housing minister, Effie Eitam,
announced plans to build almost 12,000 new housing units in the occupied
territories - a fact virtually ignored by the Bush administration. In
early August, Israel's Haaretz daily reported, Eitam announced a major
new financial incentive plan to encourage increasingly impoverished
Israelis to move to the settlements.
Thus, with no check
on Israel, the road map could be in an impasse. The one factor focusing
some attention on Israel's rejectionist policy is the decision of the
different Palestinian factions to respect a cease-fire against Israeli
civilians. Hopefully, the factions will have the wisdom to maintain
this, despite Israel's provocations and Washington's inaction.
This article first
appeared in The Daily Star on 9 August 2003.