Bring Back the PLO:
Palestinians Must Redefine Struggle
by Ramzy Baroud
 It’s never easy, although a sure assertion, to maintain that the Palestinian front, at home as well as abroad remains as fragmented and self-consumed, thus ineffective, as ever before, but most notably during the disastrous post-Oslo period.
Such a realization wouldn’t mean much if the inference is concerned with any other polity; but when it’s made in regards to a nation that is facing an active campaign of ethnic cleansing at home, and an international campaign of sanctions and boycott – as shameful as this may sound – then, the problem is both real and urgent.
Palestinians in the West Bank, especially in areas that are
penetrated by the imposing Israeli imprisonment wall – mostly in the
north and west, and increasingly everywhere else - are losing their
land, their rights, their freedoms and their livelihood at an alarming
speed, unprecedented in their tumultuous history with the Israeli
military occupation. The 700 kilometre wall, once completed, will
further fragment the already splintered West Bank – Israel’s settlement
project since 1967 has disfigured the West Bank using Jews-only bypass
roads, military zones and so forth, to ensure the viability of the
country’s colonization scheme, but rendered Palestinian areas disunited
and isolated, thus the entire two state solution, under the current
circumstances simply inconceivable.
Gaza, which Yitzhak Rabin
had once wished would sink into the sea, and which Israel has laboured
to dump on any one foolish enough to take responsibility for it - so
long as it’s not part of any comprehensive agreement that would include
Jerusalem and the West Bank - maintains its ‘open air prison’ status.
Palestinians there are being reduced to malnourished refugees,
manipulated into violence and discord, a spectacle that Israel is
promoting around the world as an example of Palestinian lack of
civility, and their incapacity to govern themselves.
Occupied
East Jerusalem has completely surrendered territorially to the Israeli
colonial scheme; the Israeli government insistently refuses to consider
Jerusalem as an issue that warrants negotiations; nothing to talk
about, according to Israeli officials who see Jerusalem as their
state’s undivided and eternal capital. Vital movement from and into
Jerusalem is increasingly impossible for West Bank Palestinians. Muslim
and Christian properties in the city are interminably threatened,
targeted or desecrated. The most recent targeting of al-Haram al-Sharif
- underground digging and similar Israeli schemes - is intended to
further exasperate Muslim fury, and emphasize the point that Israel
retains the upper hand in its relations with the Palestinians.
Other
major issues such as settlements, water, refugees, borders, etc,
continue to be dictated by Israel’s unilateral actions, while the
Palestinian role is relegated to that of the hapless, submissive and
often angry victim. It goes without saying that if such decisive
matters go largely unchallenged by a solid, popular Palestinian
strategy, one mustn’t be surprised if other issues: such as the need to
restructure the progressively more fragmented Palestinian national
identity, the need for a powerful, sustained and articulate Palestinian
voice in the media and an influential body that unites and channels all
Palestinian efforts around the world to serve a clear set of
objectives, are receiving little or no attention whatsoever.
It
must also be acknowledged, as uncomfortable as this may be to some,
that the Palestinian democratic experience is rapidly succumbing to
Israeli pressures, American meddling – tacitly or otherwise coordinated
with Arab as well as other governments – and the fractious Palestinian
front that has been for decades permeated with ideological exclusivism,
cronyism, and corruption. Though one cannot help but rail against the
American government’s abortion of what could have been the prize of
Arab democracy, still, the joint American-Israeli anti-democratic
scheme would’ve faced utter defeat if Palestinian ranks where united,
rather than self absorbed.
The Palestinian Liberation
Organization, since its formation by the Arab League in 1964, but most
significantly since its reformation in the early 1970s under
Palestinian leadership, was for long regarded as the main body that
eventually brought to the fore the Palestinian struggle as – more than
a mere question of a humanitarian issue that needed redress – a
national fight for freedom and rights. There was, more or less, a
national movement that spoke and represented Palestinians everywhere.
It gave the Palestinian struggle greater urgency, one that was lost, or
willingly conceded by Arafat on the White House lawn in September 1993,
and again in Cairo, May 2004.
Aside from snuffing out the
Palestinian national project, reducing it to self autonomous areas,
rendering irrelevant millions of Palestinians, mostly refugees,
scattered around the world – thus demoting the international status of
the PLO into a mere symbolic organization, Oslo had given rise to a new
type of thinking in the rank of Palestinians adopted by those who see
themselves as pragmatic and whose language is that of real politic and
diplomacy.
This, as it transpired, revealed itself as the most woeful
case of self-defeatism that continues to permeate most Palestinian
circles whose new ‘strategy’ is confined to the acquiring of qualified
funds from European countries, which eventually dotted the West Bank
with NGOs, mostly without a clear purpose, examined agenda and no
coordination.
Involving oneself in such useless projects is
ineffectual, while rejecting them without a clear alternative can be
equally frustrating, if not demoralizing. An official within the Abbas
circle chastised me during a long airplane ride once for subscribing to
the Edward Said’s school, whose followers, I was told, wish to parrot
criticism from the outside, and refrain from “getting their hands
dirtyâ€, i.e. getting involved in the Palestinian Authority’s
institution building, and so forth.
While such a claim is
utterly fabricated, no viable institution can possibly come out of the
current setting: an amalgam of a most violent occupation and the utter
internal corruption, sanctioned, if not fed by both Israel and the US
government. The truth is that there have been no serious collective
Palestinian efforts to redress the mistakes of Oslo and to breathe life
into the PLO. (The Intifada was a popular expression of Palestinians
disaffection with Oslo and the occupation, but, alone, it can hardly be
considered a sustainable strategy). Neither a religious movement like
Hamas, nor a self exalted one like Fatah, is capable of approaching
this subject alone, nor are they individually qualified to alter the
Palestinian course, which seems to be moving in random order.
The
problem is indeed more exhaustive than a mere ideological or even
personal quarrels between two rival political parties; rather, it’s an
expression of a prevailing Palestinian factionalism that seems to
consume members of various Palestinian communities regardless of where
they are based. My frequent visits and involvement in many activities
organized by Palestinian groups seem to leave me with the same
unpleasant feeling: that there is no collective national strategy, but
incoherent actions undertaken mostly by groups, however well intended,
whose work never boasts a unified national agenda.
With the
absence of centrality everywhere, individuals hoping to fill the vacuum
are offering their own solutions to the conflict, once more without any
serious or coordinated efforts and without a grassroots constituency,
neither in the Occupied Territories nor among major Palestinian
population concentration in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, etc. Others like
the Geneva Initiative enthusiasts find it acceptable to negotiate a
solution on Palestinians’ behalf – without any mandate whatsoever - and
obtain sums of money to promote their ideas, though the whole
enterprise is run by a few individuals, who has no representations or
sustained grassroots work among what one would expect to be their
primary constituency, Palestinians themselves.
Oslo has lost
its relevance as a ‘peace’ treaty, but the individualism it imposed on
Palestinians still prevails; its legacy was that of self-preservation,
instead of the collective good, and in my mind, no Palestinian party,
including Hamas is immune from subscribing to its luring values. To
avoid further debacles, Palestinians must ditch their factionalism and
quit thinking of their relationship with their struggle in terms of
funds, ideology (though flexible to fit political interests) or
religious interpretations. They are in urgent need of strenuous efforts
to formalize a new collective strategy that pushes for specific
principles which can only be achieved through national consensus.
Waving flags in the face of passers by, and the proverbial ‘preaching
to the choir’ alone will lead nowhere. Individual ‘initiatives’ will
further confuse the Palestinian ranks. Only a consistent, cohesive and
reasonable strategy that emanates from the Palestinians themselves can
engage international public opinion - with the hope of breaking the
patronage system that unites the West, especially the United States to
Israel - can possibly slow down the Israeli army bulldozers currently
carving up the West Bank into a system of cantons, and high walled
prisons. Reforming and revitalizing the PLO is not an option - it is a
must.
- Ramzy Baroud is an Arab American writer. His latest
book: The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People’s
Struggle is available at Amazon. His website is ramzybaroud.net.
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