Barghouti: A Palestinian Mandela would rescue the peace process
West Palm
Beach, FL
A strong
Palestinian leader is required for the peace process.
Nelson
Mandela‘s achievements illustrate the power of leadership in politics. Palestinians
adore Mandela and wish to have one of their own. Without a strong and wise leader
Palestinians are drifting apart ideologically and geopolitically. How can they
negotiate viable peace with Israel when the West Bank and Gaza act as two rival
mini-states?
Excluding
the Hamas led Gaza strip from the ongoing Mideast negotiations is a formidable
impediment to the peace process. However, there is a way for the peace process to
bypass Hamas without bypassing Gaza. The people of Gaza are eager to join their
brethren outside the strip in the struggle for independence and economic
security. Living conditions in Gaza are sterile, largely due to regressive governance
and border blockade by Israel. Given
Hamas’s current unpopularity, there may be a way to integrate Gaza in the peace
efforts, a way which requires Israel’s cooperation.
Palestinians
have a Mandela- like leader who has been in an Israeli jail since 2002: Marwan
Barghouti - educated, secular and pragmatic.
Polls show Barghouti to be popular in Gaza, in his native West Bank, the
refugee camps, Israeli prisons, and even among some Israeli liberals.
Israel
incarcerated this popular leader for allegedly planning terror and murder.
Barghouti acknowledges indirect involvement in isolated, bloody acts of
resistance during the second intifada, but he is certainly not a murderer. Not
many of Israel’s founders could claim moral superiority over Barghouti.
In a 2002
letter to the Washington Post Barghouti expresses his opposition to terrorism: "While I, and the Fatah movement to
which I belong, strongly oppose attacks and the targeting of civilians inside
Israel, our future neighbor, I reserve the right to protect myself, to resist
the Israeli occupation of my country and to fight for my freedom." http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-10-28-marwan-barghouti-the-most-influential-man-in-palestinian-politics/#.UrTshjh3tjp
If freed,
Barghouti would have an excellent chance to be elected as the new president of
the Palestinian Authority. His election would
unify Palestinians, strengthen their leadership and enable them to negotiate
enforceable peace terms.
Israel’s
hard liners blame Arafat for missing a “historic” peace opportunity offered by former
President Clinton and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Assuming that
the offer was historic, Arafat in the late nineties was too weak and
compromised to speak on behalf of his people and the wider Arab world.
Today President
Mahmoud Abbas is as lacking in clout as former President Arafat was in his
later years. Regrettably, Israel’s leaders have so far considered political
weakness of Arab adversaries as an opportunity to drive a hard bargain. While
Palestinian weakness may serve the interest of Israel at the negotiating table,
the full execution of peace terms would require genuine acceptance of the
people involved.
Over his
eleven years in prison, Barghouti’s interest in peace making has not changed
but his strategy has. He no longer supports rushing for peace talks, not before
Palestinians are united and able to negotiate from a position of power. He now believes
that, with settlements expanding, Israel is not serious about peace: “it must be understood
that there is no partner for peace in Israel when the settlements have doubled.”
http://palestinechronicle.com/old/view_article_details.php?id=19214
In early
December I attended a talk by former Congressman Robert Wexler (Director of the
Washington-based Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace) to a group of
mostly Jewish leaders of the Palm Beach area. Wexler, who has easy access to -and support
of- President Obama, explained “that this
is a historic opportunity to make peace with the Arabs”. He added that Arabs
are weaker than ever, Hamas is exhausted,
Abbas is reasonable and friendly; Egypt and Syria are destabilized. What better
conditions are needed for striking a deal, Wexler rhetorically asked?
Wexler, who spoke with full sincerity, makes a
valid point that time is ripe for Israel to make a deal. However, it may be counterproductive
to exploit the adversary’s current weakness to try to reach a “perfect”, but abstract
agreement. Think of the two fragile and feeble Israel peace agreements with
Egypt and Jordan. If the people of Israel expect to experience and enjoy true peace
with the Arabs reconciliation terms must be reasonable and enforceable.
Israel
should not consider a strong Palestinian leader a threat. If Barghouti did not
exist, Israel would have had to invent one. By keeping this Mandela-like figure
behind bars Israel shows narrow vision of what makes peace possible and
lasting.