Here's an old piece from the Palestinian intellectual Ahmad Khalidi. Khalidi represents a large Palestinian constituency....
Thanks, but no thanks
Statehood does not offer the equitable and fair solution the Palestinian
people deserve
Ahmad Samih Khalidi
senior associate member of St Antony's College, Oxford
senior associate member of St Antony's College, Oxford
The Guardian, Thursday 13
December 2007
The Palestinian state has now become the universal standard for all
solutions to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The international community
applauds the concept. President Bush proudly proclaims it as his
"vision". The Israelis have come to it belatedly, after years of
steadfast refusal and rejection.
{Actually, the Israelis accepted Palestinian statehood in 1947 when the UN attempted to partition the land into Jewish and Arab states. The Arabs violently rejected the plan and attempted to destroy Israel at its birth. They failed and the Palestinians have refused to make peace ever since, which is why today there is a Jewish state but as yet no Palestinian state. But back to Khalidi...}
{Actually, the Israelis accepted Palestinian statehood in 1947 when the UN attempted to partition the land into Jewish and Arab states. The Arabs violently rejected the plan and attempted to destroy Israel at its birth. They failed and the Palestinians have refused to make peace ever since, which is why today there is a Jewish state but as yet no Palestinian state. But back to Khalidi...}
Today Israel's prime minister, Ehud Olmert, not only supports the idea
but proclaims it as an existential Israeli interest: without it, Israel is
fated to disappear under dire assault from the ever-expanding Arab population
in both Israel and the occupied territories. This apparent human tide may yet
bring disaster to the Jewish state, by demanding equal civil rights to those of
the Jews themselves.
But statehood as such is a relatively recent addition to Palestinian
aspirations. The main Palestinian impetus after the disaster of 1948 was that
of "return"; it was more about reversing the loss of Arab land and
patrimony, than the fulfilment of classical post-colonial self-determination,
via statehood.
Driven into national concussion by the catastrophic forced displacement
of 1948 and up until the mid-1960s, the sense of a separate "Palestinian"
national identity all but disappeared. This "lost consciousness" was
only reversed by the emergence of Fatah under Yasser Arafat in the Arab
diaspora in the late 1950s.
It was only after the 1967 debacle that a new Palestinian national
identity began to take shape. At its core was the notion of the armed struggle
as a galvanising force. Armed struggle, according to Fatah, restored
Palestinian dignity and gave the Palestinians a say in determining their
future.
Statehood and state building had no real place in this scheme. Indeed,
the first tentative proposals to establish a state in Palestine (ie the West
Bank) were rejected as defeatist and a betrayal of the national cause. This was
certainly not an exercise in institution building, land acquisition and state
building by stealth, as in the Zionist movement before 1948. After the 1973
war, Fatah's leaders turned to the notion again. This was largely the result of
a realistic reading of the balance of power and a recognition of the limits of
what force, on the part of the Arab states or Palestinian irregulars, was
likely to achieve. Eventually, in 1988, Arafat himself backed the idea of a
Palestinian state within the 1967 borders as a historic compromise; Israel
behind these borders would get 77% of Mandatory Palestine, and the Palestinians
would be reconciled to the remaining 23%.
Today, the Palestinian state is largely a punitive construct devised by
the Palestinian's worst historical enemies; Israel and its implacable ally, the
US. The intention behind the state today is to constrain Palestinian
aspirations territorially, to force them to give up on their moral rights,
renege on their history and submit to Israel's diktats on fundamental issues of
sovereignty.
Its core is the rump Palestinian Authority that is now fundamentally
sustained by the IDF presence on the West Bank. The PA is increasingly being
turned into an accoutrement of Israeli occupation; its function is to serve
Israeli security interests as designated by Israel itself and the US military
teams that have been overseeing the buildup of Palestinian security forces.
It is very unclear how an independent state can be built on the spears
of the very force that is occupying it. Or how state institutions can be
constructed while the occupation continues to determine every aspect of
Palestinian life.
The notion of a state was an offshoot of the Palestinian struggle and
not its nodal point. Nonetheless, there was a period from the mid-1970s onwards
when the state could have represented the point where Palestinian national
aspirations met the boundaries of what is possible.
Now this concept is less attractive than ever. Olmert demands of
Palestinians that they must give up their history. President Bush decides for
them what their borders and rights must be. And Tony Blair wags a finger and
tells Palestinians that they won't get a state at all unless, it meets his high
standards (sic) of governance .
The temptation is to say, thanks, but no thanks. Under such
circumstances, Palestinians may just opt for something else. Palestinians could simply continue to say no to a state that does
nothing to address its basic needs. Either way, its hard to see how Israel can
win this struggle in the long term.
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