One and Two State
Solutions
The
Myth of International Consensus
By KATHLEEN
CHRISTISON
January 24, 2008
Counter Punch
http://www.counterpunch.com/christison01242008.html
Among the panoply of reasons
put forth against advocates of a one-state solution for
Palestine-Israel, perhaps the most disingenuous is the
injunction, repeated by well meaning commentators who
believe they speak in the Palestinians' best interests, that
Palestinians would simply be irritating the international
community by pressing for such a solution, because the
so-called international consensus supports, and indeed is
based upon, a two-state solution. At a time when the
"international consensus" could not be less interested in
securing any Palestinian rights, particularly in forcing
Israel to withdraw from enough territory to provide for real
Palestinian statehood and genuine freedom from Israeli
domination, this call for compliance with the wishes of an
uncaring international community is at best an empty
argument, at worst a hypocritical dodge that undermines the
Palestinians' right to struggle for equality and
self-determination. By telling the Palestinians that they
cannot even speak out for one state without antagonizing
some mythical consensus around the world, this line of
argument undermines their right simply to think about an
alternative solution.
The one-state solution is
envisioned as an arrangement that would see Palestinians and
Jews living together as citizens of a single, truly
democratic state, with guaranteed rights to equality and
guaranteed equal access to the instruments of governance.
Such a solution would mean the end of Zionism as currently
conceived and the end of Israel as an exclusivist Jewish
state, but it would guarantee equal civil and political
rights for Israeli Jews and the right to encourage further
Jewish immigration, just as it would guarantee -- for the
first time -- equal civil and political rights for
Palestinians and the right of Palestinian refugees exiled
over the last 60 years to return to their homeland.
The notion of establishing
a single state for Palestinians and Jews, although
historically not a new idea, has regained currency in recent
years as it has become increasingly obvious that Israel's
absorption of more and more Palestinian land in the occupied
territories -- land stolen from Palestinians for constantly
expanding settlements, a vast network of roads for the
exclusive use of Israelis, the monstrously destructive
separation wall, and Israeli military bases and closed
security zones -- has made the vision of "two states living
side by side in peace" a cruel joke.
Establishment of a single
state is strongly supported by a small but growing core of
scholars and activists. Virginia Tilley raised the idea in
her 2005 book The One-State Solution. Ali Abunimah
continued the discussion with One Country the
following year, and Joel Kovel contributed Overcoming
Zionism in 2007. In the last few years, numerous
articles, international conferences, and debates between
advocates and opponents of one state, largely in Europe and
Israel, have addressed the possibilities. An emerging
grassroots movement in Palestine is directing its energies
toward promoting one state, working with scholars and
solidarity activists around the world.
But many treat the idea
with casual disdain, dismissing it as "naively visionary,"
"an illusion," or simply "a non-starter." Other opponents at
least give the idea more thought and have put forth some
reasoned, and often quite soundly reasoned, argumentation
for their opposition. This article will address only one of
the objections: one of the most commonly heard, that a
single state would violate an "international consensus"
supporting the two-state solution.
This argument holds that
international bodies such as the United Nations and its
subsidiaries, as well as human rights organizations and the
leaderships of most nations in the world -- including, not
least, the PLO and the Palestinian Authority themselves --
want the end of the occupation and support Israel's
continued existence inside its 1967 borders, along with the
establishment of a Palestinian state in the one-quarter of
Palestine that would thus be left to the Palestinians. This
international consensus is automatically assumed to be
sacrosanct, apparently simply because it is international
(and perhaps also because it does not endanger Israel's
continued existence as a Jewish state).
The most obvious response
to this honoring of the international consensus is that in
actuality the international community is not in the least
interested in what becomes of the Palestinians, now or ever
in the past, and does not give more than lip service to any
particular solution. Whatever "international consensus"
exists has never been interested in specific positions but
primarily in accommodating the U.S. and its policies --
which ultimately means preserving Israel's existence above
all, supporting a two-state solution because that is the
position to which the U.S. and Israel currently themselves
pay lip service, but not exhibiting concern for Palestinian
rights in any respect. The international community does not
initiate policies; it merely parrots and goes along with the
positions promoted by the centers of international power, in
this case the U.S. and Israel.
There is in fact no
international consensus supporting two states for
Palestine-Israel. Those who cite UN Security Council
Resolution 242 as the basis for two states ignore the
reality that the resolution never imagined two states. When
it was adopted in the wake of the 1967 war, during which
Israel captured territory from Jordan, Egypt, and Syria, it
called for Israel's withdrawal "from territories occupied"
in the war and affirmed the right of all states in the
region "to live in peace within secure and recognized
borders" (a formulation later twisted into the demand that
Palestinians and other Arabs recognize Israel's "right to
exist"). Although it became the basis for future peace
initiatives, as well as the basis for future UN resolutions,
Resolution 242 did not even mention Palestinians except as
"the refugee problem" and clearly did not put forth a
proposal for two states in Palestine-Israel. The
international consensus at this point acted as though it had
never even heard of Palestinians. At the time, any
consideration of the fate of the occupied West Bank and Gaza
was directed solely at ending Israel's control and returning
these territories to Jordan and Egypt respectively, their
original occupiers.
If there was ever an
international consensus in favor of two states in Palestine,
this was during the year or so surrounding passage of the
1947 UN partition resolution, which divided Palestine into a
Jewish and an Arab state. This period of support for two
states ran from mid-1947, when a UN committee recommended
partition, until early 1948, when Israel and Jordan began
what became the theft of the territory designated for the
Palestinian Arab state, each taking approximately half of it
(except for Gaza, which Egypt controlled, but did not annex,
until Israel captured that tiny strip of land in 1967). The
international community expressed absolutely no concern over
this dismemberment of the second state supposed to be
established in Palestine -- or over Israel's ethnic
cleansing of the Palestinian population, or over the fate of
the 750,000 Palestinians forced into exile and consigned to
refugee camps in surrounding Arab countries, or over
Israel's and Jordan's continued control over territories
stolen from the Palestinians. So much for the international
consensus.
Today, whatever
international consensus exists in support of two states
arises not out of any true international interest in seeing
a Palestinian state formed alongside Israel, but from the
Palestinians' own formal decision in November 1988 to accept
the two-state formula. This came at the height of the first
Palestinian intifada and immediately after Jordan had
relinquished any claim to the West Bank. Even then, neither
the U.S., Israel, nor the international community accepted
the idea of allowing the Palestinians a state until several
years later, when the notion of two states gradually came to
be accepted implicitly as the logical outcome of peace
negotiations that continued through the 1990s. Throughout
the Oslo peace process, Palestinian statehood was still
rarely if ever explicitly mentioned as a likely outcome.
It was not until the last
days of President Clinton's term in January 2001 -- more
than 30 years after the occupation began, over 50 years
after Palestine had been dismembered -- that a U.S.
president first publicly and explicitly advocated
Palestinian statehood. (George Bush has been claiming to be
the first president to call for a Palestinian state, but
Clinton beat him to it by more than a year. Clinton does not
boast about being first on this issue, presumably because no
one wins political points in the U.S. by seeming to advocate
any benefit for Palestinians or demand any concessions from
Israel. Both Clinton and Bush have specifically ruled out
the likelihood that the Palestinian state would include all
of the Palestinian territories captured in 1967, as both
have asserted that Israel will retain control of major
settlement blocs in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.)
The "international
consensus" had little to say about the Palestinians' fate
throughout the dozen years between the PLO's acceptance of
the two-state formula in 1988 and the collapse in 2000 of
the only serious peace process that might have led to
genuine Palestinian statehood. The international community
did not press for a Palestinian state; it did not object to
Israel's continued expropriation of the territory where such
a state would have been located; it did not object to the
fact that the number of Israeli settlers in that territory
doubled during the years of the peace process intended to
resolve the questions of land and settlements.
The so-called
international consensus can hardly be said ever to have
stood for Palestinian statehood in any meaningful way. It is
engaged today, in fact, in an active effort to undermine any
prospect of genuine Palestinian statehood. By continuing to
support Israel as it makes a two-state solution an utter
impossibility and by turning away as Israel perpetrates what
in any other context would be recognized as war crimes
against a powerless civilian population, the vaunted
international consensus is in actuality helping to
perpetuate support for the decimation of an entire people
and its national aspirations. The humanitarian disaster that
is Gaza is entirely the result of the international
community's supine refusal to stand up to Israel and the
U.S. and its active support for an embargo on Gaza that is
imprisoning and starving 1.5 million inhabitants and
devastating the Gazan economy.
In an interview at the new
year began, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert crowed about
how much international support Israel enjoys for its program
of oppression. The international constellation of world
leaders supporting Israel, he said, is almost a kind of
divine intervention. "It's a coincidence that is almost 'the
hand of God' that Bush is president of the United States,
that Nicholas Sarkozy is the president of France, that
Angela Merkel is the chancellor of Germany, that Gordon
Brown is the prime minister of England and that the special
envoy to the Middle East is Tony Blair." How could Israel
have asked, he wondered, for a "more comfortable"
combination? The fact that Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas and the Palestinian Authority apparatus in Ramallah
support and encourage this nice comfort zone in which Israel
relaxes and encourages the humanitarian disaster being
imposed on fellow Palestinians in Gaza does not lessen the
responsibility of the "international consensus" for its part
in going along with these horrors.
Those who tout the
international consensus as something to be heeded point out
that public opinion polls in Israel, the U.S., and Europe
show strong popular support for an end to Israel's
occupation and consistently support the two-state formula by
large majorities. This is accurate, but these polls are
essentially meaningless. On Palestinian-Israeli issues, as
on the march toward war in Iraq, international public
opinion has virtually no impact on the policies pursued by
governments, and in any case public opinion on this issue is
merely reactive. In the minds of most people in liberal
western societies, Palestinian statehood is a nice concept
in a vague sort of way, but few understand what is happening
on the ground in Palestine and fewer still are willing to go
out on the streets to back up their casual "yes" answers to
pollsters with anti-occupation protests. Moreover, support
for statehood drops off when the precise nature of the
Israeli concessions required is spelled out. It is also
worth noting in any consideration of the importance of polls
on this issue that in Israel polls show the same large
majorities for ethnically cleansing Palestinians from Israel
and the West Bank as they do for permitting the Palestinians
a state.
Invocation of the
international consensus to induce Palestinians to stop
advocating true equality in a single state in all of
Palestine comes out of a kind of denial, a refusal to
acknowledge that the international consensus is so oblivious
to the injustice being perpetrated against the Palestinians
that it has not noticed and does not care that the
possibility of establishing two states died quite some years
ago. A real two-state solution -- in which a Palestinian
state in all of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem
would enjoy full sovereignty and independence in a
contiguous territory not segmented and not totally
surrounded by Israel -- is now a forlorn dream from which
the international consensus has yet to awaken.
Kathleen Christison
is a former CIA political analyst and has worked on Middle
East issues for 30 years. She is the author of
Perceptions of Palestine and
The Wound of Dispossession. She can be reached at
kathy.bill.christison@comcast.net.
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