Bush
Backs Sharons
West Bank Land Grab
By Bill Van Auken
16 April 2004
World Socialist Website
With his endorsement
of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharons disengagement
plan Wednesday, President George W. Bush broke with nearly four decades
of official US diplomacy, dropping even the pretense that Washington
is committed to a negotiated settlement of the Middle East conflict.
He has aligned the US government publicly and unequivocally with Israeli
aggression and the dispossession of the Palestinian people.
The US president,
who launched his invasion against Iraq a little over a year ago under
the pretense of upholding the inviolability of United Nations resolutions,
made clear his contempt for every UN decision relating to the rights
of the Palestinians. The US-Israeli pact sanctioning the Israeli annexation
of Palestinian land flies in the face of longstanding UN resolutions
condemning the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and demanding its
termination.
The unilateral deal
announced by Bush and Sharon calls for the dismantling of a relative
handful of fortified Israeli enclaves in the Gaza Strip and evacuating
some 7,500 settlers in return for the US supporting Israels right
to permanently annex a vast portion of the West Bank territory that
it seized in its 1967 war with neighboring Arab states. Zionist settlements
in this territory house some 240,000.
Sharon also received
Bushs explicit endorsement of Israels ongoing construction
of its security fence, a vast wall that bisects the West
Bank and will displace hundreds of thousands more Palestinians.
Israeli officials
familiar with the talks said that Sharon came to Washington with several
proposals regarding the territory his government proposed to annex in
the West Bank. Bush chose the one most onerous for the Palestinians.
It commits Israel to withdrawing from only four insignificant settlements
in the northwest of the occupied territory, which house barely 500 settlers.
Bush likewise joined
with Sharon in supporting the unilateral abrogation of the right of
Palestinian refugees forced to flee by Zionist terror in 1948-49 to
return to their homes in what is today Israel.
Sharon was quoted
in the Israeli press as responding to Palestinian outrage over the deal
by saying, I said that we were going to deal them a lethal blow,
and they were dealt a lethal blow.
This US-Israeli
diktat marks a resurgence of the kind of unbridled imperialism and colonialism
that prevailed in the region in the aftermath of World War I. It recalls
the drafting of the Sykes-Picot agreement, which drew lines in the sand
demarcating colonial spheres of influence, with the voiceless Arab masses
forced to submit at the point of a gun.
Not only were Palestinian
representatives excluded from the talks leading to this illegal land
grab, the announcement of the US-Israeli deal was made in a manner that
suggested the Palestinian people and their historic grievances do not
even exist.
Bush called the
Israeli measures historic and courageous, adding, If
all parties choose to embrace this moment, they can open the door to
progress. But neither Washington nor Sharon recognizes any other
parties. Never mind the door to progress, the Palestinian Authoritys
president Yassir Arafat cannot even open the door to his besieged compound
in Ramallah without risking assassination by an Israeli sniper.
In light of
new realities on the ground, Bush declared, it is unrealistic
for Palestinians to expect the Israelis to abandon their illegal settlements
and give back the land they seized in 1967. In the same breath, he insisted
that the Palestinians sole path to an independent state was the
suppression of any resistance to the Israeli conquerors. If they
want a state which provides a hopeful future to their people, they must
fight terror. They must be resolute in the fighting of terror.
The facts on
the ground to which Bush refers are, in fact, the product of systematic
terror by the Israeli state, which drove Palestinians off their land
and replaced them with Zionist settlements. The Palestinians demand
for the right of return is likewise a response to the Zionist terror
unleashed with the creation of Israel, in which three quarters of a
million people were driven from their homes and villages and dispersed
to refugee camps throughout the region.
Bush and Sharon
posed for the cameras at the White House as allies in the war
on terror and champions of peace and democracy. But the world
knows they are partners in aggression. Both are conducting rapacious
occupations that have engendered mass resistance, and both have been
shaken by the fierceness of that resistance.
Bush came into office
with two interrelated foreign policy objectives: first, to invade Iraq
and, second, to provide full US support for Israeli attacks on the Palestinians.
These aims were part of a broader agenda of establishing undisputed
US hegemony over the Middle East and its oil reserves.
As former treasury
secretary Paul ONeill recounted in Ron Suskinds book The
Price of Loyalty, the US president signaled a turn toward unconditional
backing for the Israeli regime at the first meeting of his National
Security Council (NSC) in January 2001.
According to ONeills
account, Bush announced to the NSC: Were going to correct
the imbalances of the previous administration on the Mideast conflict.
Were going to tilt it back toward Israel. He added that
the US would pull back from any attempt to broker a settlement.
Warned by Secretary
of State Colin Powell that such a move could produce dire
consequences, encouraging Sharon to use unbridled military might against
the Palestinians, Bush responded: Maybe thats the best way
to get things back in balance.... Sometimes a show of strength by one
side can really clarify things.
The implementation
of this policy entailed support for the Sharon regimes campaign
of political assassinations against Palestinian militants and leaders,
and its policy of massive retaliation and collective punishment in response
to the terrorist attacks that these assassinations helped generate.
Since the outbreak
of the so-called al-Aqsa Intifada in September 2000sparked by
then-Likud leader Ariel Sharons provocative visit to Temple Mountapproximately
2,700 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli security forces, the
great majority of them civilians and nearly 600 of them children. During
the same period, around 840 Israelisincluding soldiers, settlers
and civilians, 100 of them childrenhave been killed in a series
of suicide bombings and other attacks.
While the Bush administration
used the war on terror as the pretext for invading and occupying
Iraq, Sharon has invoked the same rationale as a cover for Israeli expansionism
and a merciless campaign aimed at stamping out Palestinian nationalism
and reducing the Palestinians to a powerless and humiliated people.
For the masses throughout
the Arab world, the two occupations and the resistance against them
are increasingly seen as interrelated parts of a single process. Indeed,
the connections between the two are becoming increasingly evident.
For many years,
Israel has used US arms to carry out its repressive actions against
the Palestinians. Now, the US military is using Israeli expertise and
advisers in devising tactics and rules of engagement for carrying out
the brutal campaign to suppress the nationalist uprising against the
US occupation of Iraq.
At the same time,
Bush and Sharon were brought together in the White House Wednesday by
their respective political crises. Confronted with growing opposition
to his policy in Iraq and damning revelations about the failure of the
White House to take any action to prevent the September 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks, Bush welcomed the announcement of his support for Sharons
annexation scheme as an opportunity to distract public attention and
deceive the American people into thinking he is promoting peace in the
Middle East.
Sharon, facing possible
indictment on corruption charges and the likely breakup of his right-wing
coalition, hopes that the unconditional support of the government that
provides the money, aid and arms that keep Israel afloat will rescue
him from defeat.
The deal in Washington
marks the collapse of a so-called peace process that had
already proved to be a fiction in the decade following the 1993 handshake
between Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in the
White House Rose Garden.
It marks one more
humiliation for Arafat, who at that time accepted the US-brokered agreement
with Israel on the theory that it represented a trade of land
for peace. In reality, the pact envisioned the same terms that
Israel and Washington are today imposing unilaterallythe maintenance
of at least some of the West Bank settlements and the renunciation of
the right of returnbut as part of a negotiated final status agreement
that would involve the creation of a Palestinian state.
Every Israeli government
since then has proved itself determined to sabotage any advance toward
a Palestinian state or any genuinely democratic settlement of the Palestinian
question. Instead, the consistent Israeli negotiating stance has been
to demand that Arafat repress any resistance to Israeli occupation,
thereby discrediting him among the broad masses of the Palestinian people.
Nor has any US governmentDemocratic
or Republicanexerted any real pressure on Israel. After the Bush-Sharon
announcement on Wednesday, the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate,
Massachusetts Senator John Kerry, issued a statement endorsing the unilateral
declaration as a positive step. He told the Washington Post:
Whats important obviously is the security of the state of
Israel, and thats what the prime minister and the president, I
think, are trying to address.
In a separate interview
with the New York Sun, Kerry declared: Ive always felt that
the right of return is contrary to the viability of a Jewish state,
and thats what Israel is.
For the Democratic
challenger, as for the Republican incumbent, the Palestinian people
do not exist.
No doubt, domestic
politics enter into the calculations of both Bush and Kerry. Both are
currying favor with the Zionist lobby in the hopes of gaining cash and
votes. Bush is also appealing to his Christian-Zionist base,
which sees Israeli dominance as the path to Armageddon.
More fundamentally,
Washingtons support for Israeli expansionism is bound up with
the same drive for hegemony that underlies its colonialist venture in
Iraq. It has propped up Israel with an estimated $6 billion in annual
aid and loans for maintaining a garrison state through which it projects
its power in the Middle East.
The policies pursued
by Washington and Israel are destabilizing the entire region and creating
the conditions for revolutionary upheavals. Not only Arafat, but all
of the corrupt Arab regimes stand exposed by the US-Israeli deal. The
visit by Egypts Hosni Mubarak just before Wednesdays announcement
and the scheduled arrival of Jordanian King Abdallah II on April 21
provide a measure of the servility of the Arab ruling classes toward
US imperialism.
This colonialist
pact will provide no escape for the Israeli people from the vicious
cycle of repression and violence. Rather, it will further inflame the
Palestinian masses.
Only a program that
unites Jews and Arabs on a democratic, secular and genuinely anti-imperialistthat
is, socialistbasis can provide a way out of the bloody impasse.