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From Oslo to Ground Zero
Jerusalem Post ^ | 7/19/02 | Ruth Wisse

Posted on 07/22/2002 8:44:08 AM PDT by carton253

From Oslo to Ground Zero

By Ruth Wisse

On September 2, 1002, I got a call from Richard Bernstein of the New York Times, asking me to comment on an article on the “peace agreement” that was about to be signed by Yitzhak Rabin, the prime minister of Israel, and Yasser Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

My foreboding was registered in the next day’s paper: “Ms. Wisse’s concern is that in dealing with Mr. Arafat, the Israelis are, in effect, intervening in Arab politics, choosing the PLO chief, whom she called ‘a killer’ to be the leader of the Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

If things go wrong, and she believes there is a good chance they will, it is Israel that will bear responsibility,” she said. “It’s the first time that an Israeli government is doing something for which I, as an American Jew, would not like to bear moral responsibility.”

Bernstein’s gentle summary barely conveyed my anguish. The re-establishment of a Jewish state was, to my mind, the most hopeful achievement of the 20th century, and the noblest proof if proof was necessary of the high world of Jewish civilization. Because of the many difficulties the country still faced, I believed that Israel had the right to ask of Jews like myself who lived outside its borders every kind of economic, political, and spiritual support.

However, I did not believe that Israel could claim my support for putting into power a mob of professional murderers and extortionists. As a non-citizen, I could do nothing to stop the leaders of Israel from carrying out this plain. But as a citizen of the world, I knew that this was the worst possible move they could make.

The physical threat to the country as then uppermost in the minds of many other American opponents of the Oslo Accords. Norman Podhortez, Frank Gaffney, and others predicted that hostilities against Israel would like increase if Arafat was installed as head of a proto-Palestinian state. For the same reason, the voters of Israel had elected Rabin on a platform that explicitly rejected overtures to the PLO.

Military experts in Israel pointed out that the overhasty agreement had not taken account of security needs or developed a set of fall-back procedures should Arafat fail to keep his side of the bargain.

Although the Infitada was claiming many Israeli lives in stabbings and other such random attacks, friendly columnists warned that things could get much worse if Israel compromised its policy of deterrence.

I full shared these apprehensions for Israel’s safety. The Arab war against Israel, which began formally on the day of its creation in 1948, was the most lopsided war in modern history prolonged by the preposterous asymmetry of fast-growing Arab Muslim populations and Jewish people already decimated of its European population.

Arab dictators and monarchs, none of who rules democratically, had refused to accept the reality of a sovereign Jewish people in its historic homeland. In rejecting the partition of Palestine, they had also condemned its Arabs to the status of permanent refugees to provide enduring “evidence” of Jewish liability.

Israel had been defending itself on the axiomatic premise that peace could only come if the Arabs stopped their aggression against it. It was now about to reverse that sensible policy by rewarding its most virulent enemy.

Arafat was before Osama bin Laden the world's leading terrorist. As confounder of Al-Fatah in the late 1950s and head of the PLO since 1969, Arafat had spearheaded an "armed Palestinian revolution" against Israel. The PLO's targets were always civilians: The murder of the Olympic athletes at Munich in 1972 was but the most notorious example of its methods.

Moreover, this terrorist network was paid by Arab governments to act as their proxy their hit man in the ongoing war against Israel. The PLO was tolerated, supported, and encouraged by Arab rulers only to the extent that it furthered the war against Israel and bought protection for their own regimes.

Yet Israel was now prepared to recognize the PLO terrorist network as the representative of the Palestinian people, entrusting its 20,000-armed "policemen" with the protection of Israel from terrorists.

Although Rabin said he expected Arafat to end the violence against Israel unrestrained by the human rights concerns of a democratic society; Arafat was much likelier to use his dictatorial powers to increase the violence of Palestinian aggression against Israel.

The risks of this so-called peace process far exceeded questions of security. The PLO founded in 1964, before Israel gained the disputed territories was the most dedicated ideological font of anti-Semitism since Adolf Hitler's Nuremberg Laws institutionalized Aryan racism.

The PLO "Covenant" was not a summons to national self-liberation, such as Zionists or other modern national leaders issued in their time. The PLO denied Jews their history and peoplehood in order to claim national legitimacy in their stead. It did not simply oppose the Jews as occupiers of part of the land it claimed for its own, but rejected the historical reality of a millennial-old Jewish people.

The PLO charter read in part: "The claim of historical or religious ties between Jews and Palestine does not tally with historical realities or with the constituents of statehood in their true sense. Judaism, in its character as a religion, is not a nationality with an independent existence. Likewise, the Jews are not one people with an independent identity. They are rather citizens of the states to which they belong."

Whereas anti-Semitism in Europe had stigmatized the Jews as an alien and unassimilable people, the PLO brought Palestinian nationalism into being as a replacement for a Jewish people it said did not exist.

Consider, then, what it meant for Israel to give the PLO responsibility for governing the Palestinian Arabs on the basis of a letter that promised to inaugurate "a new epoch of peaceful coexistence."

First, Israel was capitulating to Arafat because it felt it could no longer tolerate the toll of terrorism, yet asking the terrorists to renounce the methods that had handed them this major triumph. Surely, the evidence entitled Arafat to believe that terrorism had vindicated his professional calling.

Second, all that Israel extracted from him in return was a promise that "those articles of the PLO Covenant which deny Israel's right to exist, and the provisions of the Covenant which are inconsistent with the commitments of this letter are now inoperative and longer valid."

Arafat would submit (note the future conditional tense) the necessary changes to the Palestinian National Council for approval. But if the PLO covenant was predicated on Jewish illegitimacy, what possible import could Arafat have ascribed to an agreement with the people he intended to supplant?

Third, the precipitous deal with Arafat, based on secret negotiations conducted by non-elected Israelis, had the hallmarks of a revolutionary act rather than a considered democratic process. Declaring Arafat an ally over the objections of many patriotic citizens and overseas supporters had the absurd effect of repudiating friends with the expectation of gaining security from enemies.

The self-styled "fixers" who thought they were reforming Arafat actually furthered his agenda. They did not even require as a precondition of his reign public disavowal of the entire PLO Covenant and the articulation of a new set of ideological principles for cooperation with a sovereign Jewish state. Just as no new vocabulary of coexistence was extracted as the minimal test of reconciliation, so Arafat's flagrant violations of the accords were ignored from the day after its signing in Washington. In the ensuing months, instead of requiring that the US and Europe help to monitor every PLO action and communication within the disputed territories in acknowledgement of the enormous risk Israel had taken, Israel's officials threw all their diplomatic resources into promoting financial and diplomatic assistance for the PLO. The hate message of terrorist extremists became the daily fare of an entire generation of Palestinian schoolchildren.

A recent article by Dan Polisar ["The Myth of Arafat's Legitimacy," Azure, summer 2002] documents the regime of corruption that was created by Arafat "a regime characterized by a massive police force whose specialty was intimidation of political opponents; an executive branch in which Arafat alone made all major decisions and in which the civil service was reduced to a corrupt patronage machine; the institutionalized absence of the rule of law, and a judiciary that lacked any independence; and the intimidation of the media and human rights organizations ."

Polisar challenges the "myth of legitimacy" that Arafat acquired as leader of the Palestinian Arabs, without mentioning Israel's role in granting him that legitimacy. When Israel empowered a terrorist on the basis of promises it had no rational cause to expect him to keep, it freed him to rule as he wished, and allowed him to do so as a trusted leader.

The effect of Oslo on Israel's reputation was also exactly the opposite of what its architects promised. To be sure, public opinion initially applauded the treaty and the Nobel Peace Prize seemed to grant it the seal of approval. By plucking Arafat out of Tunis and placing him in charge of a Palestinian Authority, Israel had implied that it could put an end to Arab aggression; the term "peace process" suggested that Israel's concessions would bring an end to the war against it. But since Israel could no more impose peace on the Arabs through concessions than it had by winning wars, this charade only meant that Israel would be blamed more relentlessly when it turned out that the conflict had never ended at all.

The painful truth of the so-called "Arab-Israeli conflict" is that only the Arabs have the power to stop it. Oslo did great damage inside Israel by encouraging the false hopes of an anxious society. Tenfold greater was its damage in the international arena by conveying the misimpression that Israel could put an end to Arab belligerence if only it were more forthcoming.

When the Arabs resumed their vilification of Israel, Europe joined in with a vengeance. Once Israel had fostered the impression that its concessions could bring peace to the Middle East, Europeans could blame Israel on the pretext that it had not made enough concessions. The political and economic balance between Israel and its enemies is anyhow tipped so strongly in favor of the Arabs that Europeans would normally court Arab oil and markets at the expense of Israel's security.

Many European politicians look for an excuse to hold Israel responsible for the aggression against it. This excuse seemed on hand when Israel said that peace could be won by yielding Arafat authority. In truth, the resurgence of European anti-Semitism has been the most shocking outcome of the Oslo accords. Israelis feel that they should be respected for having given such obvious proof of their good will. Instead, the country has been increasingly slandered as the obstacle to peace.

This brings us to the third, and by far the most damaging, consequence of Oslo: the creation in Gaza and the disputed territories of a terrorist polity. President Bill Clinton was not thinking of the danger to America when he hosted Israel's signing of the treaty with Arafat on the White House lawn.

But the legitimation of Arafat was a boost to the coalition of all anti-democratic forces ranged against the West. Those forces may have used Israel as the excuse for anti-Western aggression, but Israel was only the most vulnerable target of hostility aimed at democracy entire.

How many of the terrorists freed by Israel at the behest of America and Europe as part of the "peace accord" have since plied their trade against democracies other than Israel?

How much anti-Western propaganda did Arafat pump into the region, and how much did his perceived triumph over Israel help to inspire al-Qaida and other Islamists in their wars against America?

How much help and encouragement did Arafat's troops provide to other terrorist groups and Middle Eastern dictators?

How straight or crooked is the road between September 1993 and September 11, 2001? Although placing Arafat in charge of a Palestinian Authority was hailed as a "peace initiative," it actually opened the door for anti-Western propaganda and conspiracy on an unprecedented scale. The terrifying spread of suicide bombers signals the creation of an Arab-style Hitler youth that is being trained to sacrifice itself for a murderous ideal.

Just as the Jews were merely the first, but by no means the only intended victims of German conquest in the 1930s, so the Jews are merely the first, but by no means the only intended victims of those who have declared war on Western civilization. The perceived capitulation of Israel to Arafat endangered democracy no less than it endangered the country itself, for it seemed to prefigure the way any democracy might act if confronted by terrorism for long enough.

It is not pleasant to think back on a political blunder that could have and should have been avoided. No one wants to pour salt into Israel's open wounds. Foresight would have been an advantage only if the opponents of Oslo could have prevented catastrophe. Yet we must face up to the damage of what the American columnist Charles Krauthammer rightly called "the most catastrophic, self-inflicted wound by any state in modern history."

As the current government of Israel and the Israel Defense Forces try valiantly to undo some of the disaster of the "peace process" that brought Arafat and the PLO into power, the most important task facing champions of democracy is to examine and weigh the false premises that allowed for the false promises of Oslo.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: arafat; israel; oslotreaty
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This article does a fantastic job of explaining, not only the mistake that Israel made in recognizing and legitimizing Araft as the leader of the Palestinians, but the author draws a line from Oslo to the attack on the World Trade Towers.
1 posted on 07/22/2002 8:44:08 AM PDT by carton253
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To: SJackson; Grampa Dave; Cinnamon Girl
I thought you might enjoy this article. It is very good!
2 posted on 07/22/2002 9:01:37 AM PDT by carton253
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To: dennisw
Could you ping your list... this article is very good!
3 posted on 07/22/2002 9:01:59 AM PDT by carton253
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To: carton253; monkeyshine; ipaq2000; Lent; veronica; Sabramerican; beowolf; Nachum; BenF; angelo; ...
Almost as long as a Raimundo! But good!!
4 posted on 07/22/2002 9:06:57 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
I tried to edit it... but I couldn't. The points are very good and something the West needs to hear.
5 posted on 07/22/2002 9:08:46 AM PDT by carton253
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To: carton253
Anyone have a solution?
6 posted on 07/22/2002 9:09:53 AM PDT by OldFriend
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To: OldFriend
I do... if you act like a rabid dog, you need to be put down like a rabid dog.

My solution would be twofold. To Israel, I would say that Shimon Peres needs to be retired. After all that has happened, he still believes that you can have peace with Arafat. He has too much power and affects policy. His policy is faulty and has been proven to not work. Yet, he stays with it.

Second, Israel needs to decide if the West Bank is Eretz Israel (Samaria and Judea). If not, and they plan to trade land for peace, then stop building on it. We don't let Canadians build Canadian cities in North Dakota. And the Southwest situation is one that is about to bite us on the butt.

Then, I would wade through the rubble in Ramallah and tell Arafat that this destruction is his own making. The West will no longer restrain Israel. The USA will support Israel in whatever she has to do to bring peace inside her borders. Even if it means taking on the whole Muslim world... because I truly believe that is where we are heading.

Someone on one of these threads said... "it is time we stopped cringing in the corner, wringing our hands, hoping they won't hurt us, and go and fight the war that is coming anyway.

I don't go to war easily... but, you can't make peace with someone who doesn't want peace. Appeasement only makes the violence grow. Talks of peace only makes the violence grow. So, it's time to make those who make violence...pay with their lives if that is the only thing they understand.

We understood you can't make peace with Bin Laden... why do we force Israel to make peace with Arafat. Because Arafat does the necessary lip-service. Enough!

7 posted on 07/22/2002 9:21:24 AM PDT by carton253
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To: zhabotinsky
I thought you might enjoy this article!
8 posted on 07/22/2002 9:28:51 AM PDT by carton253
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To: carton253
Bumpa
9 posted on 07/22/2002 9:48:08 AM PDT by gridlock
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To: dennisw; 2sheep; Jeremiah Jr
Ausgezeichnet! Thanks for the flag.

Once Israel had fostered the impression that its concessions could bring peace to the Middle East, Europeans could blame Israel on the pretext that it had not made enough concessions.

10 posted on 07/22/2002 10:10:00 AM PDT by Thinkin' Gal
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To: carton253
Got a link to the article?
11 posted on 07/22/2002 10:21:22 AM PDT by Sir Gawain
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To: Sir Gawain
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/A/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1025787836241
12 posted on 07/22/2002 10:24:51 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
Thanks.
13 posted on 07/22/2002 10:26:29 AM PDT by Sir Gawain
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To: dennisw
Thank you...
14 posted on 07/22/2002 11:07:09 AM PDT by carton253
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To: carton253
Someone on one of these threads said... "it is time we stopped cringing in the corner, wringing our hands, hoping they won't hurt us, and go and fight the war that is coming anyway.

Couldn't help it... I love using the words "cringing" and "wringing" in the same sentence."

I agree with your comments above, although I think you go too easy on Shimon Peres. Arafat wasn't the only old adversary with whom Rabin made the mistake of dealing in the Oslo Process. Peres has been a self-congratulating, back-stabbing careerist who never missed an opportunity to betray Rabin since the 1940s.

Peres is the Midas of the pyrite touch, a harbinger of folly.




15 posted on 07/22/2002 11:13:40 AM PDT by Sabertooth
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To: Sabertooth
Oh... I didn't mean to be too soft on Peres. His time has passed, and it's time for him to go.

Actually, Peres (as a protege of Ben-Gurion) still holds to the hope that the first and second aylia had... that they can live peacefully with their Arab neighbors.

I don't know what it will take for Peres to realize he is riding a losing horse. Is it pride? Is it firm belief? Is it senility? Is not seeing the forest for the trees?

16 posted on 07/22/2002 11:19:42 AM PDT by carton253
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To: carton253
I don't know what it will take for Peres to realize he is riding a losing horse. Is it pride? Is it firm belief? Is it senility? Is not seeing the forest for the trees?

The lack of his own demise and the subsequent answering of all questions.

Peres is like Carter, Clinton, and every other washed-up, never-was, socialist Klingon. Their learning curves flatlined long ago.




17 posted on 07/22/2002 11:26:32 AM PDT by Sabertooth
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To: carton253
On September 2, 1002, I got a call from Richard Bernstein of the New York Times...

That's a strange date. Otherwise, thanks for posting the article.

18 posted on 07/22/2002 11:29:28 AM PDT by Carolina
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To: Carolina
That's my typo... spell check didn't catch that one...
19 posted on 07/22/2002 11:36:12 AM PDT by carton253
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To: Carolina
The true date is September 2, 1993. Note to self: proofread... proofread... proofread....
20 posted on 07/22/2002 11:37:12 AM PDT by carton253
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