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  • Israel's "new Middle East"*
  • "According to security sources"
  • Behind the smokescreen of the Gaza pullout*
  • From The Hague to Mas'ha*
  • The long road home
  • "You and I and the next war"
  • The great experiment
  • Israel's missed opportunities for peace (partial list)
  • A four-letter word
  • To talk with Hamas
  • A massacre foretold
  • For whom the bells toll
  • "God wills it!"
  • Vanunu: the terrible secret
  • Ehud Barak: a villa in the jungle
  • Pioneers of terrorism
  • Myth-based propaganda
  • A quick guide to the Palestine-Israel conflict
  • In clear sight of Yad Vashem
  • Europe, Israel and the Palestinians
  • Checkpoints and house demolitions
  • The power of saying no
  • Sharon - the end of an era?
  • State land, state people
  • The return of Palestinian refugees is an existential necessity for Israeli Jews
  • Israel's use of terrorist tactics
  • Summer rains and Saad
  • Bickering while Rome burns
  • Inshallah
  • A vision of Palestine
  • Peace work and virtual Palestine
  • Tsunami in Gaza, celebration of peace in Jerusalem
  • Pussycat
  • Kidnap of BBC reporter Alan Johnston
  • Blood on our hands
  • The Livni-Rice Plan
  • Exercise in escapism
  • Flushing out the traitors and criminals in our midst
  • The people of Palestine must seize power now
  • On generals and admirals
  • Crocodile tears
  • Hope at the edge of the precipice
  • Saving Mahmoud Abbas
  • The dirty word
  • Israel keeping on a steady course to apartheid
  • An Israeli love story
  • A stupid war
  • A trap for fools
  • White elephants
  • Not only territory, but viability
  • Saying no to the hunters of Goliath
  • A bruised reed
  • Medical conditions caused by political decisions
  • The Palestinian Mandela
  • So, what is different about the village of Wadi Fuqeen?
  • Revisiting the partition of Palestine
  • Say it with flowers
  • How to get out?
  • Between apartheid and the status quo
  • The right to our Palestinian land must be restored
  • Separate but unequal in Palestine
  • O'Bethlehem
  • Will peace cost me my home?
  • A generous offer to the Palestinian refugees?
  • How they stole the bomb from us
  • Non-stop ethnic cleansing
  • Torture and torment in 2007 AD
  • Israel's Palestinians speak out
  • See Gaza and weep
  • Prerequisites for peace between Israel and Palestinians
  • Help! A cease-fire!
  • The case of the White Bird
  • The hands of Esau
  • Israel paralysing Christianity in Holy Land
  • This time next year?
  • Worse than a crime
  • The strangulation of Gaza
  • An end foreseen
  • Blood and champagne
  • Is Israel using prohibited “thermobarbaric” weapons in its holocaust?
  • The right to equate Gaza with Auschwitz
  • How Israel taught Hamas all it knows
  • "Kill a hundred Turks and rest..."
  • Gaza's “bigger holocaust”
  • Gaza: Oxfam has the answer
  • Photos of the sea
  • "I came, I saw, I destroyed!"
  • The “rogue entity”
  • Manifest destiny?
  • Jewish settlers flood Palestinian neighbours with sewage
  • Good for Carter
  • Time is running out for Israel*
  • The ongoing Nakba
  • With friends like these...
  • Will Gaza ever get a whiff of its offshore gas?
  • Land of Hope and Glory
  • Escaping forward
  • Grabbing Jerusalem's bread and water
  • Ehud Olmert’s Syrian peace spin
  • Palestinians must learn media skills
  • Palestinian envoy to Britain told to be more proactive
  • Israel deporting Jerusalem Christians
  • Who needs enemies?
  • Tactics that ended apartheid in South Africa can end it in Israel
  • Occupation by bureaucracy
  • A mission to uphold the law
  • When guilt turns red
  • Détente or hidden agendas?
  • A West Bank town’s fight to survive
  • "If I forget thee, Umm Touba..."
  • Palestinian family denied even half a house 
  • The powerful own the law
  • The struggle against Jerusalem’s quiet ethnic cleansing
  • Breaking the Gaza siege
  • Truth and consequences under the Israeli occupation
  • Palestinians unfairly hit by Israeli policy in Gaza
  • Double standards and cowardice still guide Western diplomacy
  • Will the Palestinian Authority be there to greet the “freedom” boats when they reach Gaza?
  • Blocking a Gazan's path to San Diego
  • Free Gaza
  • Israeli investigation of assault on Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer a whitewash
  • Photo story: Gazans forced back to the Middle Ages
  • Voyage of the 'Little People' shames self-righteous West
  • Israel's outposts seal death of Palestinian state
  • Sailing into Gaza
  • Israeli PR fails the “decent, honest and truthful” test
  • Palestinian village faces army reign of terror
  • Israelis hinder academic pursuits
  • Israel turns Gaza into prison for Palestinian scholars
  • Israel must rein in settler movement, protect Palestinian children
  • A new initiative for ending the Israeli occupation...
  • Israel's dark arts of ensnaring collaborators
  • Israeli apartheid in action
  • Keeping the sea-lane to Gaza open permanently
  • A notional interview with Paul McCartney
  • Will fair Britannia be rescued from wicked baron’s tower?
  • Archaeology becomes a curse for Jerusalem's Palestinians
  • Israel’s breeding ground for Jewish terrorism
  • Logic of the Dark Ages
  • Israel’s “city of coexistence” shows its true colours
  • Israel “brand” will magically smell sweeter
  • Tractatus Logico Palestinicus
  • Israel bars visit to father’s grave
  • Israeli murder of 47 in Kafr Qassem commemorated
  • Israel’s travesty of tolerance on display
  • Land thieves
  • Israel tightens chokehold on village of entrepreneurs
  • The real goal of Israel’s blockade of Gaza
  • Who will stop the settlers?
  • Gaza’s Grim Reaper
  • Hebron settlers take their fight into Israel
  • Arab town blamed for Jewish Pride march’s cancellation
  • Spot the difference
  • World leaders sing the praise of fruitless peace talks
  • Oh, come all ye faithful…
  • Hamas will not be shaken by Israeli war crimes
  • Can there be any doubt who the real terrorists are?
  • What is Israel's goal in Gaza?
  • Self-defence
  • Israel’s lie machine working flat out to dodge “killer” question
  • Palestinians – write your history
  • The real goal of the slaughter in Gaza
  • Keep your eye on the ball – the slaughter in Gaza is not about rockets
  • Molten lead
  • Profile of Sderot
  • Speak out against the slaughter in Gaza
  • The nucleus of evil
  • Israel's new war ethic
  • Israel’s propaganda mainstay, Sderot, is a lie (like everything else)
  • Israel’s aim is to make the Gazan prison even more secure
  • Palestinians will never forget
  • Criticism of Israel's war crimes mounts
  • Revise terror list – de-classify Hamas and move forward
  • How many divisions?
  • Blueprint for Gaza attack was long planned
  • “Our humanity is incomplete,” says Queen Rania
  • Israel bars Arab parties from election
  • Could the rising anger of British MPs over Gaza shake America’s complacency?
  • Gaza 2009: betrayal and cowardice brought us to this
  • Israeli assault injures 1.5 million Gazans
  • In Gaza our love for God is in “intensive care”
  • How to sell “ethical warfare”
  • From diet to shoah
  • Israel’s doctrine of destruction
  • Gaza’s pastor speaks of his people’s suffering at Israel’s hands
  • Ritual murder in Gaza
  • Stripping Palestinians of their right to self-defence
  • Black flag
  • Did the Israeli army wage a Jewish jihad in Gaza?
  • Israeli university welcomes “war crimes” colonel
  • Still patting the Mad Dog?
  • Divesting from Israel’s “weapon of mass destruction”
  • “Salt of the earth” send aid convoy to Gaza while Brown sends the Royal Navy to help lawless Israel
  • Be fair to Hamas, Mr Obama
  • The only Palestinian woman in Israel’s parliament
  • Israel’s military Mephistopheles
  • Remember Ophira?
  • Palestinian villages become Israel’s playground
  • Thank you, George Galloway
  • Bedouin baby’s power struggle with Israel
  • Israel’s Occupation
  • Turkey’s fallout with Israel deals blow to settlers
  • Wake up, Christians, or lose the Holy Land
  • Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's shame
  • Biberman & Co
  • Remembering Land Day
  • Changing the rules of war
  • Palestinian student foils Israeli bid to wreck family’s education hopes
  • Israel on trial
  • Who’s the boss?
  • Israel Railways accused of racism over sacked Arab guards
  • Shattering the myth of democracy and equality in Israel
  • Let’s skip Gaza: Pope’s PR blunder
  • Law and justice first, Mr Mitchell. Peace comes later
  • Thanks, Palestinians, for St George!
  • Piracy off the promised land
  • What kind of democracy is that?
  • The emperor’s old clothes
  • Farewell to Gaza’s courageous priest
  • Israeli activist to be jailed for caring – unless the world protests
  • Ghada Karmi exposes Israeli racism
  • Pope’s “pilgrimage” mired in politics
  • Quarrel on the Titanic
  • How many secret prisons does Israel have?
  • Can Obama meet Netanyahu's challenge?
  • Netanyahu adviser moves out of the shadows
  • When will world leaders show “cruel racists” zero tolerance?
  • Calm voice, big stick
  • “If you want peace, prepare for war”
  • “Racists for Democracy”
  • The futility of pursuing a two-state Israeli-Palestinian solution
  • Where are the missing settlers?
  • Forget “negotiations”, Obama: the situation cries out for law and justice
  • Jewish town in Galilee demands “loyalty oath”
  • “The victim is the guilty party”: 12 Israeli Arabs indicted over Jewish gunman’s death
  • Israeli Premier Netanyahu’s media manipulations
  • All in a day’s work for the Israeli army: beating and torturing children
  • Canadian ambassador to Israel honoured at illegal park
  • Israel’s Holocaust reparations swindle
  • Israeli doctors colluding in torture
  • Netanyahu reaffirms commitment to racism and expansionism – thanks to US tax dollars
  • Israel calls on Jewish fanatics to “save” Galilee from its own Arab citizens
  • The two-state solution, Israeli-style
  • The Johnny procedure
  • Israel offers Palestinians day shoppers, not statehood
  • Internet surfers paid to spread Israeli propaganda
  • Israel’s Netanyahu lies to fend off Obama’s pressure
  • Can an “Arab soul” yearn for Israel’s anthem?
  • Israel seeks ways to silence human rights groups
  • Israel’s school apartheid highlighted by court case
  • Israel begins sell-off of refugees’ land
  • US turns blind eye to Israel's new separation policy
  • The IDF – Israel's organ grinder
  • The first Israeli Jew in Fatah’s parliament
  • Boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel now urgent – Israeli academic
  • Israeli fascism: the “Bogie” Ya’alon horror show
  • The long struggle to reclaim Beersheva’s Great Mosque
  • Israel turns up the heat to evict Bedouin from desert lands
  • The travelling music is always the same
  • Prof Yehuda Hiss: the missing link in Palestinian organ theft?
  • Palestinian embassy in London strangely silent as Israeli terror-strikes and land-grabs continue
  • Israeli advertisements warn against marrying non-Jews
  • Israel’s Arab citizens call general strike in response to wave of “racist” measures
  • Israel blocks money to Gaza’s disabled
  • Branded “an enemy of Palestine” – should I laugh or cry?
  • How low will Israel stoop to win the propaganda war?
  • The not-so-hidden persuaders
  • How US tax breaks fund Israeli settlers
  • UN General Assembly president “frustrated” in his attempts to end blockade of Gaza
  • Israel’s fear of Jewish girls dating Arabs
  • On Palestinian civil disobedience
  • The comic genius of Binyamin Netanyahu
  • Binyamin Netanyahu’s UN speech: the pathology of evil
  • Gaza peace protester is prisoner in own home
  • Goldstone report's fate sealed by threats to Palestinian economy
  • Deception, spin and lies
  • “Silly season” fatwa
  • Israeli police don Arab disguise: notorious army method to be used inside Israel
  • Self-defence stories from Gaza
  • “Where have all the friendships gone...”
  • How the “most moral army in the world” wages war on students
  • Time for Britain to make amends for crimes against Palestine
  • A line in the sand: Barack Obama’s treachery in the Middle East
  • Spotlight on Palestine: an interview with Stuart Littlewood
  • The United Nations should acknowledge Palestine’s statehood
  • “Campus Watch” copycats close in on Israeli professors
  • Arab teens need “protecting from Israeli justice”
  • NATO had better steer clear of Israel
  • Have Israeli spies infiltrated international airports?
  • What festive cheer will the West bring to the Holy Land this Christmas?
  • “...And a little child shall lead them”
  • Israel’s Arab women workers need not apply
  • Israel’s notorious Hannibal procedure: army directive behind shooting of mental patient
  • Rules of human decency apply to Israelis too
  • Spot the difference: Israel’s Prussian heritage – and destiny?
  • Israeli-style “justice” for Palestinian student Berlanty – official version
  • Israeli war crimes suspect says quest for justice is for losers
  • Partition in Palestine is still the issue
  • Egypt’s President Mubarak blows his chance to behave decently
  • Gaza's untold story
  • Reaching the Gates of Hell is not so easy
  • Tactics of desperation: using false accusations of “anti-Semitism” as a weapon to silence criticism of Israel’s behaviour
  • Egypt lacks the milk of human kindness
  • The Iron Wall
  • Gaza robbed of the most basic human right: the right to health
  • Spiteful Mubarak succeeds only in creating a PR disaster for Egypt and himself
  • What next, Viva Palestina?
  • Truth will prevail: Israel panicking as the truth catches up with it
  • Israel's new rocket defence system
  • Gaza: what are promises of humanitarian aid worth?
  • In memory of Martin Luther King
  • The Liebarak
  • “Lost tribe” on fast track to Israel
  • Barack Obama’s paralysis in face of Zionist lobby
  • Arab politicians face tide of “persecution” in Israel
  • Israel stole 2 billion dollars from Palestinian workers: 40-year deception exposed
  • Israel’s war on protest: army used to deport activists against Apartheid Wall
  • Losing patience with squabbling “two-rump” Palestine
  • Sex, lies and videotape
  • Jews-only homes for Ajami
  • Israel’s re-branding exercise in Haiti backfires as past catches up
  • The long arm of Israel must be amputated
  • The new McCarthyism in Israel
  • Mossad’s murderous reach: the larger political issues
  • Do you have to be Jewish to report on Israel for the New York Times?
  • “Peace or apartheid” are not the only options for Israel
  • The truth about Israel as only Gideon Levy can tell it
  • Is Europe planning seal of approval for Israeli settlers?
  • Does Israel hope to spark a new wave of suicide bombing?
  • Rachel Corrie family finally puts Israel in dock
  • The decline of Israel and the prospects for peace
  • Israel’s “No renting to Arabs” policy
  • Israelis unhappy with weak loyalty of “British dogs”
  • Israel’s provocation at al-Aqsa
  • “By way of deception, thou shalt do war”
  • Samson and the second Nakba: a short history of the Jewish Hercules
  • Israel unveils “green” strategy to defeat enemies
  • Palestine's "turbulent priest" delivers a blistering Easter message
  • The so-called “only democracy in the Middle East”
  • Israel and the “delegitimization” oxymoron
  • The Palestinians are winning the legitimacy war: will it matter?
  • Israel: total boycott against total occupation
  • Rule by law or defiance
  • Reversing Israel’s faux legitimacy
  • Was Israel ever legitimate?
  • Israel and the question of legitimacy
  • The dark underbelly of Israel's security state
  • Mossad operation threatened against reporter
  • Did banned media report foretell of Gaza war crimes?
  • Israel’s Stasi watch over imams
  • Not much time remains for Israel – film review
  • Israel’s red line: real democracy
  • US funds Israel’s apartheid roads plan
  • Israel’s rebranding strategy focuses on delegitimizing critics and opponents
  • Israeli public sector's door closed to Arab workers
  • Even picnics in Israel are political
  • Israel’s bomb out of the shadows
  • Gaza humanitarian flotilla versus Israel’s evil navy
  • Israeli butchery at sea
  • Criminal pirate Israel makes a fool of the OECD only days after it clasped the viper to its bosom
  • The concentration camp that is Gaza
  • The madness of arrogance: Israel's attack on the Gaza aid flotilla
  • Israeli MP’s terror on aid ship: “Plan was to kill activists and deter future convoys”
  • Pirates in the Mediterranean: Israel’s shameful justification for murdering peace activists
  • “Mad dog” diplomacy: a cornered Israel is baring its teeth
  • Sea blockade of Gaza was “temporary” – 15 years ago
  • Is Israel planning act of desperation? It still holds two stolen nukes for possible port attack
  • “No citizenship without loyalty!”
  • Rise people, rise: call for zero tolerance of Israeli crimes
  • What legitimacy does Israel have?
  • You’re talking bollox, Mr Regev
  • Israeli MP who joined flotilla faces witch-hunt
  • An open letter to the Israeli Jewish public: support the Gaza Flotilla!
  • Israel's Gaza blockade: letting the chips fall where they may
  • Israel plans dig at burial place of Prophet Muhammad’s companions and Saladin warriors
  • The Israel/Palestine one-state solution sounds like a good idea, but...
  • Cutting through the confusion about Israel/Palestine
  • “Let them eat coriander!” Blockade “eased” as Gaza starves more slowly
  • Letters from Palestine: a must-read book
  • Lieberman’s “peace" plan: strip Palestinians of citizenship
  • Jerusalem politicians face expulsion by Israeli occupation authorities
  • Boycott Israel campaign wants Israel to abide by international law
  • Witch-hunt begins in Israeli schools and colleges
  • Israel's new “video game” executions
  • Israel’s parliamentary mob
  • Netanyahu: I deceived US to destroy Oslo accords
  • This Time We Went Too Far: review of Norman Finkelstein’s book on Israel’s Gaza blitzkrieg
  • Israel’s secret police exposed
  • Ethnic cleansing in the Israeli Negev
     
    The Livni-Rice Plan

    Towards a just peace for apartheid?

    *By Jeff Halper

    3 May 2007

    Jeff Halper shows how Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and her US counterpart, Condoleezza Rice, are working on an apartheid plan that would confine Palestinians to small, disconnected, impoverished cantons deprived of their richest agricultural land and all their water.

    For years I have been one of the doom-sayers arguing that the two-state solution is dead and that apartheid has become the only realistic political outcome of the Israel-Palestine conflict ­ at least until a full-blown anti-apartheid struggle arises that fundamentally changes the equation.

    I based my assessment on several seemingly incontrovertible realities. Over the past 40 years, Israel has laid a thick and irreversible matrix of control over the occupied territories, including some 300 settlements, which effectively eliminates the possibility of a viable Palestinian state. No Israeli politician could conceivably be elected on the basis of withdrawing from the occupied territories to a point where a real Palestinian state could actually emerge, and even if s/he was, the prospect of cobbling together a coalition government with the requisite will and clout to carry out such a plan is highly unlikely, if at all. And given the unconditional bipartisan support Israel enjoys in both houses of the US Congress and successive US adminstrations, reinforced by the Christian right, the influential Jewish community and military lobbyists and a lack of will on the part of the international community to press Israel into making meaningful concessions, a genuine two-state solution seems virtually out of the question ­ even though it is the preferred option espoused by the international community in the moribund “Road Map” initiative.

    Now, if it is true that the two-state solution is gone, the next logical alternative would be the one-state solution, particularly since Israel conceives of the entire country between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River as one country ­ the Land of Israel ­ and has de facto made it one country through its settlements and highways. Seeing that Israel has been the only effective government throughout the land in past 40 years, why not go all the way and declare it a democratic state of all its inhabitants? (After all, Israel claims to be the only democracy in the Middle East.) The answer is clear: a democratic state in the Land of Israel is unacceptable (to Israel) because such a state, with a Palestinian majority, could not be “Jewish”.

    This leads us back, then, to apartheid, a system in which one population separates itself from another and then proceeds to dominate it permanently and structurally. Since the dominant group seeks control of the entire country but wants to get the unwanted population off its hands, it rules them indirectly, by means of a bantustan, a kind of prison-state. This is precisely what Ehud Olmert laid out to a joint session of Congress in May 2006 when he presented his “convergence plan” (to 18 standing ovations). And this is precisely what Condoleezza Rice, together with Israel’s foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, have been working on during Rice’s monthly visits to the region.

    The plan embodies the worst nightmare of the Palestinians. Phase II of the Road Map presents the "option" of an independent Palestinian state with provisional borders, "as a way station to a permanent status settlement". Livni is publicly pushing for Phase II to replace Phase I, raising Palestinian fears of being frozen indefinitely in limbo between occupation and a “provisional” state with no borders, no sovereignty, no viable economy, surrounded, fragmented and controlled by Israel and its ever-expanding settlements.

    For their part, Livni and Rice are proceeding very quietly, in stark contrast to the bluster of their male bosses. They have even refrained from giving a name to their plan, which Livni calls simply and innocuously “Israel’s peace initiative for a two-state solution”. Ari Shavit, a leading journalist in the Israeli daily Ha’aretz, asks:

    Does Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni have a clear diplomatic plan that she is trying to promote? Livni implies that she does, but refuses to explain. She speaks of the two-state vision. She talks about the need to divide the country politically. However, she does not explain what the plan really is.

    The plan is simple but far below the public radar. (The New York Times recently took Rice to task for “humiliating” herself by going to Israel frequently with no apparent plan). In order to seemingly conform to the Road Map initiative ostensibly led by the US, Livni talks of a two-state solution arrived at through negotiations. But the Road Map requires Israel to freeze its settlement building, something Israel steadfastly refuses to do. How can this be reconciled? How can Israel pursue a two-state solution while at the same time expanding its settlements and infrastructure in the very territories in which a Palestinian state would emerge?

    The answer lies in a little noticed but fundamental change in US policy, announced by President Bush in April 2004, and ratified almost unanimously by both houses of Congress. ”In light of new realities on the ground, including already existing major Israeli populations centers [which is what the Bush administration calls Israel’s massive settlement blocs],” he stated, “it is unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final status negotiations will be a full and complete return to the armistice lines of 1949.” In one fell (but immensely significant) swoop, Bush fatally undercut the very basis of international diplomacy towards the Israel-Palestine conflict, including his own Road Map: the withdrawal of Israel to the 1967 (1949) borders to make space for a genuine Palestinian state. Israel thus claims that settlement building within these settlement blocs does not violate the Road Map, since that territory has been unilaterally recognized by the US as belonging permanently to Israel. In this way between 15 and 25 per cent of the West Bank has been removed from negotiations and annexed de facto to Israel, while the “occupied territories” have been redefined as only that area outside the settlement blocs ­ and that to be negotiated and “compromised”.

    What Israel expects of the Palestinians, then, is a type of occupation-by-consent made possible by “negotiations” in which a priori the Palestinians lose up to 85 per cent of their historic homeland. Now this is patently unacceptable to the Palestinians. Israel’s initial attitude was: Who cares? The Palestinians have always been irrelevant, including in the Oslo “peace process”. In his congressional address, Olmert was explicit on Israel’s intention to impose a Pax Israeliana unilaterally if need be:

    We cannot wait for the Palestinians forever. Our deepest wish is to build a better future for our region, hand-in-hand with a Palestinian partner. But if not, we will move forward - but not alone. We could never have implemented the disengagement plan without your [America’s] firm support. The disengagement could never have happened without the commitments set out by President Bush in his letter of 14 April 2004, endorsed by both houses of Congress in unprecedented majorities.

    But here Olmert hit a snag. The Road Map ­ to which lip service must be paid ­ clearly calls for a negotiated end to the occupation and the conflict. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict, says the text, must be resolved “through a negotiated settlement leading to a final and comprehensive settlement”. Both Bush and Blair grabbed Olmert and told him that the “convergence plan” could not be imposed unilaterally. He would have to “pretend” (and I know that word was used by the British government) to negotiate with Mahmoud Abbas for a year. That is what lies behind the occasional meetings Olmert has had with Abbas, which Olmert has publicly limited to strictly “practical issues”. The Boston Globe reported on 15 April 2007, "Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas launched a US-initiated series of meetings on Sunday, bypassing some of the most contentious issues of the Middle East conflict”.

    “We will not discuss the core issues of the conflict ­ the issue of (Palestinian) refugees, Jerusalem and borders,” Olmert said in broadcast remarks at the weekly cabinet meeting.

    And here is where Tzipi Livni’s idea of substituting Phase II for Phase I comes in. After the year is over (in May 2007) and it is clear that the Palestinians have not been “forthcoming”, Israel will be allowed to declare the route of the Separation Barrier its “provisional” border, thus annexing about 10 per cent of the West Bank. That may not sound like much, but it incorporates into Israel the major settlement blocs (plus a half-million Israeli settlers) while carving the West Bank into a number of small, disconnected, impoverished “cantons”. It removes from the Palestinians their richest agricultural land and all their water. It also creates a “greater” Israeli Jerusalem over the entire central portion of the West Bank, thereby cutting the economic, cultural, religious and historic heart out of any Palestinian state. It then sandwiches the Palestinians between the barrier/border and yet another “security” border, the Jordan Valley, giving Israel two eastern borders. This prevents movement of people and goods into both Israel and Jordan, but also internally, between the various cantons. Israel also retains control of Palestinian airspace, the electro-magnetic sphere and even the right of a Palestinian state to conduct its own foreign policy.

    In that way the Palestinians get their state, albeit with “provisional borders”, Israel expands onto 82-85 per cent of the country while still conforming to the Road Map and apartheid ­ in the guise of a “two-state solution” ­ becomes political reality. And that’s where we stay forever.  

    But here I hit a snag. Make your case as persuasive as you might, neither Israelis nor Palestinians nor governments are willing to give up on the two-state solution, seeing nowhere to go from there. So I have to cut it some slack. Tzipi Livni herself, one of the few truly thinking government officials we Israelis have, has uttered some hopeful phrases lately, going further in tone and content than anyone in the Labour Party. “On the one hand, I want to anchor my interests on the security issue, demilitarization and the refugee problem,” she said recently, “and on the other I want to create a genuine alternative for the Palestinians that includes a solution to their national problem”.

    She has even criticized male approaches to the conflict over the years. “Did you see male hormones raging around you?” she was asked in a Ha’aretz interview (29 December 2006). "Sometimes there are guy issues," she answered candidly. “Was there a guy problem in the conduct of the [Lebanon] war?” pressed the interviewer. "Not only in the war,” she responded.

    In all kinds of discussions, I hear arguments between generals and admirals and such and I say guys, stop it. There's something of that here. During those days [of the war], the thinking was too militaristic. At the beginning of the war, some people thought that the diplomatic role was to provide the army with time. That's understandable: In the past we always achieved, we conquered, we released, we won, and then the world came and took away from us. The victory was military and the failure political. But this time it was the opposite.

    Livni, like most Israelis, cannot abandon the two-state plan. The alternatives ­ one state or apartheid ­ are clearly unacceptable. The existence of a Jewish state depends on that of a Palestinian one. Yet that has not constrained Israeli settlement expansion, which continues apace even as I write. Livni appears to believe, with most Israelis, that there is a thin magic overlap between the minimum the Palestinians can accept and the minimum Israel can concede ­ especially if emphasis is given to the Palestinian state and territory rather than to genuine sovereignty and economic viability. I doubt this, particularly in light of the fact that more than 60 per cent of the Palestinians in the occupied territories are under the age of 18 and need a truly viable future.

    Failing the carrot, Israelis ­ and here I¹m not really sure where Livni stands ­ turn to the stick, to military pressures, economic sanctions and daily hardship that, they believe, can compel the Palestinians to accept a truncated, semi-sovereign, non-viable mini-state. All that is needed is continued pressure on the part of Israel, combined with some “sweetening of the pudding” designed to make apartheid palatable to the international community. Giving the Palestinians 90 per cent of the occupied territories, for example. Though all the resources, sovereignty and developmental potential are found in the 10 per cent Israel would keep, simply offering them such a “generous offer” would place irresistible pressures on them to accept. Who, after all, really cares about ”viability”?

    I think the two-state solution is gone and apartheid is at the door. I do not see any way that “finessing” will liberate enough qualitative land for a viable Palestinian state to emerge. But if we are stuck with it for the meantime, I would then contend that three absolutely indispensable criteria have to be met to give any two-state solution at least a shot at success: (1) the Palestinians must obtain Gaza, 85-90 per cent of the West Bank in a coherent form (including its water resources) and an extra-territorial land connection between them; (2) they must have unsupervised borders with Arab states (the Jordan Valley and the Rafah crossing in Gaza), plus unrestricted sea- and airports; and (3) a shared Jerusalem must be an integral part of a Palestinian state with free and unrestricted access.

    I fear that the Livni-Rice plan falls far short of this. I don’t doubt Livni’s sincerity (something unusual for me to say about any politician, let alone one from Likud-Kadima), but I fear she, like almost all Israelis who seek peace, minimize what the Palestinians can accept beyond what they are capable of. And when they don’t accept, they are, of course, to blame. Thus Livni herself has said tellingly: “Abbas is not a partner for a final-status agreement, but he could be a partner for other arrangements, on the basis of the Road Map's phased process.”

    Can Livni pull it off? It all depends on her sincerity, her ability to manoeuvre an extremely right-wing Olmert government onto a path of true peace or, failing that, to get elected prime minister on her own and then establish a government that could take the momentous decisions a true and just peace with the Palestinians would require. A pretty tall order, but keep Tzipi Livni, not a name most people recognize today, in mind.

    In the meantime, the no-name, no-publicity, Livni-Rice non-plan proceeds on its course, concealed by seemingly larger events such as the Arab League initiative. But wait! What about the Arab League/Saudi initiative? Doesn’t that call for a two-state solution and a return of refugees? It does, of course, but few in the Arab world take it seriously. People there understand that justice for Palestinians means far less to the Arab governments than relations with the US and, yes, Israel, especially given the common Iranian threat. So the Arab League initiative is intended more to placate the Arab street than as an actual political position that will adversely affect the Livni-Rice plan.

    We in the peace camp must closely monitor the doings of Livni and Rice. There is nothing really secret; everything reported above has been said or reported upon in the Israeli press. It is simply a matter of connecting the dots, of picking up the hints and half-statements. We must develop the ability to comprehend the significance of bland non-news statements such as “Abbas is not a partner for a final-status agreement”, but if we, unlike the New York Times, want to “get it”. As it is, the Livni-Rice initiative is significant in exactly the reverse proportion to how it is perceived as newsworthy. 



    *Jeff Halper is the Coordinator of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD) and a candidate, with the Palestinian peace activist Ghassan Andoni, for the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize.



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