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Myths of the Intifada
The Weekly Standard | 4/25/02 | Fred Barnes

Posted on 05/01/2002 10:38:20 AM PDT by Ancesthntr

Myths of the Intifada

Yasser Arafat has propagated three myths about the deals he turned down. Now Dennis Ross has set the record straight.

by Fred Barnes 04/25/2002

PALESTINIAN and other apologists for Yasser Arafat have propagated three myths about his failure to reach peace with Israel. And only now--two years after Israeli-Palestinian peace talks collapsed because of Arafat's intransigence--is the truth becoming known. This is mostly thanks to Dennis Ross, the Middle East negotiator for both the first Bush administration and President Clinton.

The first myth is that the final deal offered to Arafat would have created a new Palestinian state fragmented into four "cantons" on the West Bank, each surrounded by Israeli territory, none connected to Gaza. It was understandably unacceptable to the Palestinians. The second is that Arafat actually accepted a later, more generous peace settlement, only to have it nullified by the election of Ariel Sharon as Israeli prime minister in February 2001. And the third is that this final offer, an official United States proposal made by Clinton, was never put on paper, making it a matter not to be taken seriously, then or now. (Yes, the myths conflict. Arafat is said to have turned down one final deal but accepted another, later, final offer.) Myth number one has an element of truth. Indeed, the terms of the peace settlement offered by then-Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak at Camp David in July 2000 involved four separate clusters of territory on the West Bank and no land link to Gaza. Arafat said no and didn't make a counteroffer. Instead, in September, he started a violent new intifada, or insurrection, against Israel. But the myth, persistently voiced by such Arafat sympathizers as James Zogby of the Arab American Institute and the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, is that this was the final peace proposal. It wasn't.

Following the Camp David summit, Arafat asked for another meeting, according to Ross, and was told he would need to be prepared to accept a deal before a new summit would be set up. So Arafat "agreed to set up a private channel between his people and the Israelis," Ross told Brit Hume on "Fox News Sunday" on April 21. Arafat knew the United States was "poised to present our ideas" when he ordered a new intifada. The United States asked Arafat to prevent violence from erupting after Sharon's provocative visit to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem and he said he would. "He didn't lift a finger," Ross said.

In December 2000, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were brought to Washington. And on December 23, President Clinton presented a new plan to them. The Palestinians would get 97 percent of the West Bank, Arab neighborhoods in East Jerusalem would become the capital of the new Palestinian state, refugees would be allowed to return to Palestine but not Israel, and a $30 billion fund would be established to compensate refugees. This was the final offer: The cantons were gone and a land link to Gaza was included.

And that leads into myth two, that Arafat accepted the fresh and far more generous proposal. True, he said yes when he met with Clinton on January 2, 2001, in the Oval Office. "Then he added reservations that basically meant he rejected every single one of the things he was supposed to give," Ross said. He rejected the idea Israelis would have sovereignty over the Western Wall in Jerusalem and other religious sites. He rejected the scheme for refugees and what Ross called "the basic ideas on security . . . So every single one of the ideas that was asked of him, he rejected." How can Ross be so sure of that? He was in the room with Clinton and Arafat when it happened.

As for myth three, Palestinian spokeswoman Hanan Ashrawi and others have dismissed the U.S. offer, which the Israelis under Barak were willing to accept, as so inconsequential it wasn't even written down and publicly announced. But by late 2000, Ross said, Americans had learned Arafat's negotiating style. Any formal offer would be taken as the floor for further negotiations requiring more Israeli concessions. But with the Clinton administration soon to leave office, there wasn't time to allow Arafat to prolong talks. "We wanted them to understand we meant what we said," Ross said. "You don't accept it, it's not for negotiation, this is the end of it, we withdraw it . . . It couldn't be the floor for negotiations. It was the roof." So for Arafat, it was take it or leave it. He left it, and soon the negotiating environment changed with the election of Sharon and George W. Bush.

In truth, the offer was written down when it was initially presented by Clinton in December. "He went over it at dictation speed," Ross said. After Clinton left the meeting, Ross stayed behind to make certain the Palestinian negotiators had gotten "every single word." They had. A footnote: Ross insists the Palestinian negotiators were ready to accept the offer. They "understood this was the best they were ever going to get. They wanted [Arafat] to accept it." He refused. Why? Ross believes Arafat simply doesn't want to end the conflict with Israel. His career is governed by struggle and leaving his options open. "For him to end the conflict is to end himself," Ross said.

What's important about the history of peace talks in the Middle East is what it tells us about Arafat. The inescapable conclusion is that he will never reach a settlement with Israelis leading to two countries, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in peace. The Israelis? An honest recounting of the Clinton-led peace talks shows they were willing, though hardly eager, to make substantial concessions to reach a settlement. Had Arafat gone along, Ross believes Barak could have sold the deal to the Israeli people, even as Palestinian terrorism continued and Sharon's election victory loomed. Maybe so, but that was a moment in time that, because of Arafat, has now passed away.

Fred Barnes is executive editor of The Weekly Standard.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: arafat; intifada; israel; lies; mideast; peace
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It is about time that someone with some degree of credibility (Barnes) interviewed someone in the know (Ross) about what really happened in the "peace" talks. This should, once and for all, kill the lie that Israel gave nothing to the PA in the negotiations.
1 posted on 05/01/2002 10:38:22 AM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: dennisw; travis mcgee; veronica; thinkin' gal; lent; oldeconomybuyer; sabramerican...
PING!
2 posted on 05/01/2002 10:39:50 AM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: Ancesthntr
Freaking BTT!!!
3 posted on 05/01/2002 11:00:37 AM PDT by =Intervention=
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To: Ancesthntr
Amusing to see the terrorist apologists here try to ignore these facts.
4 posted on 05/01/2002 11:57:06 AM PDT by spqrzilla9
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To: Ancesthntr
"In truth, the offer was written down when it was initially presented by Clinton in December. "He went over it at dictation speed," Ross said. "

Sorry folks, 'Dictation speed' sums it up. If the facts of this offer was as good as claimed now, it would have been written out and spread over all the world's press immediately for all to see, including the Palestinians. No one would believe an Arafat version (dictated).

All this spin after a couple of years puts the unpublished original offer in what computer people call 'vaporware'. Without any mention of the settlement resolution at the time of the ghost offer, it is all urban legend.

Occupants of a jail have 95% of the space but have no control. Get real, set up legitimate separate States with recognized borders with right and guarantee of separate existence for both.

5 posted on 05/01/2002 12:21:48 PM PDT by ex-snook
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To: Ancesthntr
"For (Arafat) to end the conflict is to end himself," Ross said.

This is true. Hamas would fulfill this fear.

6 posted on 05/01/2002 12:42:04 PM PDT by aimhigh
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To: =Intervention=; spqrzilla9; aimhigh
Thanks for your comments.

Spqrzilla9: please see post # 5 for confirmation that you are correct.

7 posted on 05/01/2002 12:47:26 PM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: ex-snook
Get real, set up legitimate separate States with recognized borders with right and guarantee of separate existence for both.

The Palestinian leadership will never accept this.
They want Israel wiped from the face of the earth.
Put it to the normal folks of Palestine and it might, MIGHT, go over but the leadership will never let it happen.

8 posted on 05/01/2002 12:50:49 PM PDT by Just another Joe
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To: ex-snook
The reason why the proposal was never put into writing was explained in the article. Since Dennis Ross is a credible person, and likely to be the only credible person with knowledge of these events who will ever talk about it, I tend to believe him. As far as I'm aware, he's got no ax to grind, which is the very basis for his credibility. I've seen him on TV dozens of times, and he gives me the impression of someone who honestly wants to solve the problems of that area, and who merely states facts when answering questions on the subject.

If you cannot accept the word of an eyewitness that is as neutral as could be expected in this situation, then I don't know whose word you would accept. As such, I cannot take your objections too seriously.

9 posted on 05/01/2002 12:54:19 PM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: ex-snook
Pathetic job of apologizing for the acts of terrorists. You need more practice.
10 posted on 05/01/2002 12:56:56 PM PDT by spqrzilla9
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To: ex-snook
Get real, set up legitimate separate States with recognized borders

That was tried in '48. Didn't work.

11 posted on 05/01/2002 12:57:10 PM PDT by aimhigh
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To: Ancesthntr
Those of us who were actually paying attention to these "peace talks" while they were going on remember that the whole thing fell apart because Arafat refused to concede the so-called "right of return" for 5 million Palestinians to overrun Israel, while insisting that the Palestinian state must be made completely Jew free.
12 posted on 05/01/2002 12:58:09 PM PDT by Alouette
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To: Ancesthntr
A footnote: Ross insists the Palestinian negotiators were ready to accept the offer. They "understood this was the best they were ever going to get. They wanted [Arafat] to accept it." He refused. Why? Ross believes Arafat simply doesn't want to end the conflict with Israel. His career is governed by struggle and leaving his options open. "For him to end the conflict is to end himself," Ross said.

So if we just wait for Arafat to die, and find a moderate to replace him, there will be peace.

13 posted on 05/01/2002 12:59:04 PM PDT by xm177e2
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To: ex-snook
I wonder... why hasn't Arafat ever publicly put forth a reasonable peace proposal?
14 posted on 05/01/2002 1:00:04 PM PDT by xm177e2
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To: ex-snook
From the PLO charter
Article 15: The liberation of Palestine, from an Arab viewpoint, is a national (qawmi) duty and it attempts to repel the Zionist and imperialist aggression against the Arab homeland, and aims at the elimination of Zionism in Palestine. Absolute responsibility for this falls upon the Arab nation - peoples and governments - with the Arab people of Palestine in the vanguard. Accordingly, the Arab nation must mobilize all its military, human, moral, and spiritual capabilities to participate actively with the Palestinian people in the liberation of Palestine. It must, particularly in the phase of the armed Palestinian revolution, offer and furnish the Palestinian people with all possible help, and material and human support, and make available to them the means and opportunities that will enable them to continue to carry out their leading role in the armed revolution, until they liberate their homeland.

Note, however, that the PLO's translation sometimes deviates from the original Arabic so as to be more palatable to Western readers. For example, in Article 15, the Arabic is translated as "the elimination of Zionism," whereas the correct translation is "the liquidation of the Zionist presence." "The Zionist presence" is a common Arabic euphemism for the State of Israel, so this clause in fact calls for the destruction of Israel, not just the end of Zionism.
Where subtleties in the original Arabic are important, the Arabic word has been inserted in parentheses.

15 posted on 05/01/2002 1:02:09 PM PDT by Just another Joe
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To: xm177e2
See posts #8 and #15.
16 posted on 05/01/2002 1:03:07 PM PDT by Just another Joe
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To: Alouette
...while insisting that the Palestinian state must be made completely Jew free.

Arafat was just following the behavior of his sponsors, the Saudis, who insist that their contrived nation also be Judenfrei. Numerous other Arab nations have the same requirement, de facto if not de jure. Quite open-minded of them, isn't it?

17 posted on 05/01/2002 1:03:49 PM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: Ancesthntr
BRIT HUME, FOX NEWS: Former Middle East envoy Dennis Ross has worked to achieve Middle East peace throughout President Clinton's final days in office. In the months following Clinton's failed peace summit at Camp David, U.S. negotiators continued behind-the-scenes peace talks with the Palestinians and Israelis up until January 2001, and that followed Clinton's presentation of ideas at the end of December 2000.

Dennis Ross joins us now with more details on all that, and Fred Barnes joins the questioning.

So, Dennis, talk to us a little bit, if you can -- I might note that we're proud to able to say that you're a Fox News contributing analyst.

DENNIS ROSS: Thank you.

HUME: Talk to us about the sequence of events. The Camp David talks, there was an offer. That was rejected. Talks continued. You come now to December, and the president has a new set of ideas. What unfolded?

ROSS: Let me give you the sequence, because I think it puts all this in perspective.

Number one, at Camp David we did not put a comprehensive set of ideas on the table. We put ideas on the table that would have affected the borders and would have affected Jerusalem.

Arafat could not accept any of that. In fact, during the 15 days there, he never himself raised a single idea. His negotiators did, to be fair to them, but he didn't. The only new idea he raised at Camp David was that the temple didn't exist in Jerusalem, it existed in Nablus.

HUME: This is the temple where Ariel Sharon paid a visit, which was used as a kind of a pre-text for the beginning of the new intifada, correct?

ROSS: This is the core of the Jewish faith.

HUME: Right.

ROSS: So he was denying the core of the Jewish faith there.

After the summit, he immediately came back to us and he said, "We need to have another summit," to which we said, "We just shot our wad. We got a no from you. You're prepared actually do a deal before we go back to something like that."

He agreed to set up a private channel between his people and the Israelis, which I joined at the end of August. And there were serious discussions that went on, and we were poised to present our ideas the end of September, which is when the intifada erupted. He knew we were poised to present the ideas. His own people were telling him they looked good. And we asked him to intervene to ensure there wouldn't be violence after the Sharon visit, the day after. He said he would. He didn't lift a finger.

Now, eventually we were able to get back to a point where private channels between the two sides led each of them to again ask us to present the ideas. This was in early December. We brought the negotiators here.

HUME: Now, this was a request to the Clinton administration...

ROSS: Yes.

HUME: ... to formulate a plan. Both sides wanted this?

ROSS: Absolutely.

HUME: All right.

ROSS: Both sides asked us to present these ideas.

HUME: All right. And they were?

ROSS: The ideas were presented on December 23 by the president, and they basically said the following: On borders, there would be about a 5 percent annexation in the West Bank for the Israelis and a 2 percent swap. So there would be a net 97 percent of the territory that would go to the Palestinians.

On Jerusalem, the Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem would become the capitol of the Palestinian state.

On the issue of refugees, there would be a right of return for the refugees to their own state, not to Israel, but there would also be a fund of $30 billion internationally that would be put together for either compensation or to cover repatriation, resettlement, rehabilitation costs.

And when it came to security, there would be a international (NOT ISRAELI) presence, in place of the Israelis, in the Jordan Valley.

These were ideas that were comprehensive, unprecedented, stretched very far, represented a culmination of an effort in our best judgment as to what each side could accept after thousands of hours of debate, discussion with each side.

FRED BARNES, WEEKLY STANDARD: Now, Palestinian officials say to this day that Arafat said yes.

ROSS: Arafat came to the White House on January 2. Met with the president, and I was there in the Oval Office. He said yes, and then he added reservations that basically meant he rejected every single one of the things he was supposed to give.

HUME: What was he supposed to give?

ROSS: He supposed to give, on Jerusalem, the idea that there would be for the Israelis sovereignty over the Western Wall, which would cover the areas that are of religious significance to Israel. He rejected that.

HUME: He rejected their being able to have that?

ROSS: He rejected that.

He rejected the idea on the refugees. He said we need a whole new formula, as if what we had presented was non-existent.

He rejected the basic ideas on security. He wouldn't even countenance the idea that the Israelis would be able to operate in Palestinian airspace.

You know when you fly into Israel today you go to Ben Gurion. You fly in over the West Bank because you can't -- there's no space through otherwise. He rejected that.

So every single one of the ideas that was asked of him he rejected.

HUME: Now, let's take a look at the map. Now, this is what -- how the Israelis had created a map based on the president's ideas. And...

ROSS: Right.

HUME: ... what can we -- that situation shows that the territory at least is contiguous. What about Gaza on that map?

ROSS: The Israelis would have gotten completely out of Gaza.

ROSS: And what you see also in this line, they show an area of temporary Israeli control along the border.

HUME: Right.

ROSS: Now, that was an Israeli desire. That was not what we presented. But we presented something that did point out that it would take six years before the Israelis would be totally out of the Jordan Valley.

So that map there that you see, which shows a very narrow green space along the border, would become part of the orange. So the Palestinians would have in the West Bank an area that was contiguous. Those who say there were cantons, completely untrue. It was contiguous.

HUME: Cantons being ghettos, in effect...

ROSS: Right.

HUME: ... that would be cut off from other parts of the Palestinian state.

ROSS: Completely untrue.

And to connect Gaza with the West Bank, there would have been an elevated highway, an elevated railroad, to ensure that there would be not just safe passage for the Palestinians, but free passage.

BARNES: I have two other questions. One, the Palestinians point out that this was never put on paper, this offer. Why not?

ROSS: We presented this to them so that they could record it. When the president presented it, he went over it at dictation speed. He then left the cabinet room. I stayed behind. I sat with them to be sure, and checked to be sure that every single word.

The reason we did it this way was to be sure they had it and they could record it. But we told the Palestinians and Israelis, if you cannot accept these ideas, this is the culmination of the effort, we withdraw them. We did not want to formalize it. We wanted them to understand we meant what we said. You don't accept it, it's not for negotiation, this is the end of it, we withdraw it.

So that's why they have it themselves recorded. And to this day, the Palestinians have not presented to their own people what was available.

BARNES: In other words, Arafat might use it as a basis for further negotiations so he'd get more?

ROSS: Well, exactly.

HUME: Which is what, in fact, he tried to do, according to your account.

ROSS: We treated it as not only a culmination. We wanted to be sure it couldn't be a floor for negotiations.

HUME: Right.

ROSS: It couldn't be a ceiling. It was the roof.

HUME: This was a final offer?

ROSS: Exactly. Exactly right.

HUME: This was the solution.

BARNES: Was Arafat alone in rejecting it? I mean, what about his negotiators?

ROSS: It's very clear to me that his negotiators understood this was the best they were ever going to get. They wanted him to accept it. He was not prepared to accept it.

HUME: Now, it is often said that this whole sequence of talks here sort of fell apart or ended or broke down or whatever because of the intervention of the Israeli elections. What about that?

ROSS: The real issue you have to understand was not the Israeli elections. It was the end of the Clinton administration. The reason we would come with what was a culminating offer was because we were out of time.

They asked us to present the ideas, both sides. We were governed by the fact that the Clinton administration was going to end, and both sides said we understand this is the point of decision.

HUME: What, in your view, was the reason that Arafat, in effect, said no?

ROSS: Because fundamentally I do not believe he can end the conflict. We had one critical clause in this agreement, and that clause was, this is the end of the conflict.

Arafat's whole life has been governed by struggle and a cause. Everything he has done as leader of the Palestinians is to always leave his options open, never close a door. He was being asked here, you've got to close the door. For him to end the conflict is to end himself.

HUME: Might it not also have been true, though, Dennis, that, because the intifada had already begun -- so you had the Camp David offer rejected, the violence begins anew, a new offer from the Clinton administration comes along, the Israelis agree to it, Barak agrees to it...

ROSS: Yes.

HUME: ... might he not have concluded that the violence was working?

ROSS: It is possible he concluded that. It is possible he thought he could do and get more with the violence. There's no doubt in my mind that he thought the violence would create pressure on the Israelis and on us and maybe the rest of the world.

And I think there's one other factor. You have to understand that Barak was able to reposition Israel internationally. Israel was seen as having demonstrated unmistakably it wanted peace, and the reason it wasn't available, achievable was because Arafat wouldn't accept it.

Arafat needed to re-establish the Palestinians as a victim, and unfortunately they are a victim, and we see it now in a terrible way.

HUME: Dennis Ross, thank you so much.

 


18 posted on 05/01/2002 1:07:06 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: Ancesthntr
"If you cannot accept the word of an eyewitness that is as neutral as could be expected in this situation, then I don't know whose word you would accept. "

You put your finger on it. Talk is cheap, show us the beef in writing. There is no reason why Ross waited this long to just talk about it. It seems there is a huge spin machine set in operation.

Separate States guaranteed by the US is the only answer today. Maybe at some future time, they could merge into one by mutual agreement.

19 posted on 05/01/2002 1:08:32 PM PDT by ex-snook
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To: Ancesthntr


 

 

 

 

 

 

How much of the West Bank did Israel offer the Palestinians? 

MAY 2000 PROPOSAL (before intifada)

 

 

DECEMBER 2000 PROPOSALS (four months into the intifada)

Projections of the Israeli offer in December 2000, and the December 2000 Bridging Proposal of US President Clinton

 

US Bridging Proposal

Israeli Proposal

clinton.gif (30083 bytes)
A map showing the projection of the bridging proposals of U.S. President William J. Clinton, December, 2000. Dark Gray areas are currently Areas A and B of Palestinian control. Light Gray areas would become part of the Palestinian state. Gray-striped areas would become part of the Palestinian state after an interim period.  Maps are adapted from . A map showing the projection of the Israeli proposals of the government of PM Barak, December, 2000. Dark Gray areas are currently Areas A and B of Palestinian control. Light Gray areas would become part of the Palestinian state. Gray-striped areas would become part of the Palestinian state after an interim period.  Maps are adapted from .

 

 

 

FINAL JANUARY 2001 PROPOSAL

 

 

 

 



20 posted on 05/01/2002 1:09:07 PM PDT by dennisw
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