Why are
we repeatedly surprised every time Mahmoud Abbas fails to sign a peace
agreement with Israel?
By Ari Shavit Apr.24.2014
There
are some moments a journalist will never forget. In early 1997, Yossi Beilin
decided to trust me, and show me the document that proved that peace was within
reach. The then-prominent and creative politician from the Labor movement
opened up a safe, took out a stack of printed pages, and laid them down on the
table like a player with a winning poker hand.
Rumors
were rife about the Beilin-Abu Mazen agreement, but only a few had the
opportunity to see the document with their own eyes or hold it in their hands.
I was one of those few. With mouth agape I read the comprehensive outline for
peace that had been formulated 18 months earlier by two brilliant champions of
peace -- one, Israeli, and one, Palestinian. The document left nothing to
chance: Mahmoud Abbas is ready to sign a permanent agreement. The refugee from
Safed had overcome the ghosts of the past and the ideas of the past, and was
willing to build a joint Israeli-Palestinian future, based on coexistence. If
we could only get out from under the Likud’s thumb, and get Benjamin Netanyahu
out of office, he will join us, hand in hand, walking toward the two-state
solution. Abbas is a serious partner for true peace, the one with whom we can
make a historic breakthrough toward reconciliation.
We
understood. We did what was necessary. In 1999, we ousted Likud and Netanyahu.
In 2000, we went to the peace summit at Camp David. Whoops, surprise: Abbas
didn’t bring the Beilin-Abu Mazen plan to Camp David, or any other draft of a
peace proposal. The opposite was true: He was one of the staunchest objectors,
and his demand for the right of return prevented any progress.
But
don’t believe we’d give up so quickly. During the fall of 2003, as the Geneva
Accord was being formulated, it was clear to us that there were no more
excuses, and that now, Abbas would sign the new peace agreement and adopt its
principles. Whoops, surprise: Abu Mazen sent Yasser Abed Rabbo (a former
Palestinian Authority minister) instead, while he stayed in his comfy Ramallah
office. No signature, no accord.
But
people as steadfast as us don’t give up on our dreams. So in 2008 we got behind
Ehud Olmert, and the marathon talks he held with Abbas, and the offer that
couldn’t be refused. Whoops, surprise: Abu Mazen didn’t actually refuse, he
just disappeared. He didn’t say yes, he didn’t say no, he just vanished without
a trace.
Did we
start to understand that we were facing the Palestinian Yitzhak Shamir? No, no,
no. In the summer of 2009, we even supported Netanyahu, when he made overtures
to Abbas with his Bar-Ilan speech, and the settlement freeze. Whoops, surprise:
the sophisticated objector didn’t blink, or trip up. He simple refused to dance
the tango of peace with the right-wing Israeli leader.
Have we
opened our eyes? Of course not. Again, we blamed Netanyahu and Likud, and
believed that in 2014, Abu Mazen wouldn’t dare to say no, not to John Kerry.
Whoops, surprise: In his own sophisticated, polite way, Abbas has said no in
recent months to both Kerry and Barack Obama. Again, the Palestinian
president’s position is clear and consistent: The Palestinians must not be
required to make concessions. It’s a complicated game – squeezing more and more
compromises out of the Israelis, without the Palestinians granting a single
real, compromise of their own.
Take
heed: Twenty years of fruitless talks have led to nothing. There is no document
that contains any real Palestinian concession with Abbas’ signature. None.
There never was, and there never will be.
During
the 17 years that have gone by since Beilin took that document out of his safe,
he’s gotten divorced, remarried, and had grandchildren. I also divorced,
remarried, and brought (more) children into the world. Time passes and the
experiences we’ve accumulated have taught both Beilin and me more than a few
things. But many others haven’t learned a thing. They’re still allowing Abbas
to make fools of them, as they wait for the Palestinian Godot, who will never
show up.
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