|
|||||||||
| Palestine | |||||||||
George Mitchell hoping for a quick-fix fake peace?
For real peace he must bang heads together at the United Nations to finish their unfinished business
|
|||||||||
| Thursday, September 2,2010 16:57 | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
Stuart Littlewood argues that the US-sponsored direct talks between Israel and Mahmoud Abbas are farcical, lopsided and designed to achieve “a fake, temporary peace” whose aim is temporarily “to save a few worthless political skins”.
On the eve of the silliest peace talks in history, the big question is this. What makes Obama’s envoy George Mitchell, a negotiator of high repute, say there is “no role” for Hamas? The talks are silly because they seek to overturn what the United Nations has already decided for resolving the Israel-Palestine conflict and drive a bulldozer through the building blocks of justice. It might be music to Zionist ears, but to people of good will it’s a cruel, futile and immensely damaging ploy. Unequal partners, partisan auspicesThe talks are also silly because they bring together two people who by no stretch of the imagination could qualify as partners for peace. And they sit down under the auspices of a third party with an appalling track record in the Middle East and whom no-one trusts to act fairly.
How about that? Conflict can be ended only by supporting those who stand for peace and condemning those who don’t. But does he know – has he really taken the trouble to find out – who actually stands for peace and justice in the ever-escalating obscenity of the Israeli occupation of Palestine? And is he absolutely clear who “the men of violence” are? Get it wrong and matters are made worse.
Mitchell is such an awesome peace-monger that he has become a visiting Professor at Britain's Leeds Metropolitan University's School of Applied Global Ethics, and the university is developing a new Centre for Peace and Conflict Resolution bearing his name. If Mitchell is so clued up you have to wonder why he took the job – a veritable poisoned chalice. And you’d think a person with his vast experience would stick to accepted rules of engagement for conflict resolution and peace-making. I'll mention just three:
There is no-one more concerned than Hamas. As the democratically elected authority they are the principle stakeholder on the Palestinian side. Obviously they must be allowed to represent the Palestinian case. It matters not one jot or tittle that the White House has "identified" Hamas as a terrorist organization. They have legitimacy. Besides, millions outside the White House can point to Israel's much worse terror crimes. Israel’s litany of ignored UN resolutionWhat, I wonder, will he be saying to the Israeli team about UN Resolution 181 of 1947, which declares that "the City of Jerusalem shall be established as a corpus separatum“ administered by the United Nations?
Resolution 242 also emphasizes the need for
Will Mitchell bang the table to demand long overdue action on Security Council Resolution 338 (1973), which called on the parties concerned to start immediate implementation of Security Council Resolution 242? Stand up, any suitable partners for peace and any genuine peace-brokersIsraeli foreign policy is driven by manifesto promises like:
Netanyahu’s belligerent coalition government probably won’t survive unless he uses all means to achieve these unlawful and hugely provocative aims and resists demands to give back Israel’s ill-gotten gains. A thief is clearly no partner for peace.
Obama is US president courtesy of the pro-Israel lobby. He is like putty in their hands. And he’s so ill-informed that he told the American Irael Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) it's OK for Israel to grab the hallowed City of Jerusalem and turn it into the permanent headquarters of the Zionist regime. Jerusalem "will remain the capital of Israel and it must remain undivided", he blurted. When it dawned on him that he’d made a monumental blunder he tried to wriggle out: "Well, obviously, it's going to be up to the parties to negotiate a range of these issues. And Jerusalem will be part of those negotiations... And I think that it is smart for us to work through a system in which everybody has access to the extraordinary religious sites in Old Jerusalem, but that Israel has a legitimate claim on that city." A legitimate claim? Who says? And negotiate what? Has the president forgotten that the UN decided long ago that Jerusalem, along with Bethlehem, was to become an international zone? Stuart Littlewood is author of the book Radio Free Palestine, which tells the plight of the Palestinians under occupation. For further information please visit www.radiofreepalestine.co.uksource |
|||||||||
|
tags: Obama / Hamas / US / Palestinian / IOF / Netanyahu / Gaza / Jerusalem / UN Resolution / AIPAC / Abbas / Mitchell / US Senator / White House / Palestinian Refugees / Security Council / pro-Israel lo by / International Community / Bethlehem / Palestine Liberation Organization
Posted in Palestine |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
| Related Articles | |||||||||
|
|