‘Long Live the (Dead) Peace Process’: Abbas
Prioritizes US Ties over Palestinian National Unity
by Ramzy Baroud Posted
on December 10, 2020
https://original.antiwar.com/ramzy-baroud/2020/12/09/long-live-the-dead-peace-process-abbas-prioritizes-us-ties-over-palestinian-national-unity/
No one seemed as excited about the election of Joe Biden being the next
President of the United States as Palestinian Authority President, Mahmoud
Abbas. When all hope seemed lost, where Abbas found himself desperate for
political validation and funds, Biden arrived like a conquering knight on a
white horse and swept the Palestinian leader away to safety.
Abbas was one of the first world leaders to
congratulate the Democratic President-elect on his victory. While Israeli Prime
Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, delayed his congratulatory statement in
the hope that Donald Trump would eventually be able to reverse the results,
Abbas suffered no such illusions. Considering the humiliation that the
Palestinian Authority experienced at the hands of the Trump Administration,
Abbas had nothing to lose. For him, Biden, despite his long love affair with
Israel still represented a ray of hope.
But can the wheel of history be turned back?
Despite the fact that the Biden Administration has made it clear that it will not be
reversing any of the pro-Israel steps taken by the departing Trump
Administration, Abbas remains confident that, at least, the "peace
process" can be restored.
This may seem to be an impossible dichotomy, for
how can a "peace process" deliver peace if all the components of a
just peace has already been eradicated?
It is obvious that there can be no real peace if
the US government insists on recognizing all of Jerusalem as Israel’s
"eternal" capital. There can be no peace if the US continues to fund
illegal Jewish settlements, bankroll Israeli apartheid, deny the rights of
Palestinian refugees, turn a blind eye to de facto annexation underway in
Occupied Palestine and recognize the illegally-occupied Syrian Golan Heights as
part of Israel, all of which is likely to remain the same, even under the Biden
Administration.
The "peace process" is unlikely to
deliver any kind of a just, sustainable peace in the future, when it has
already failed to do so in the past 30 years.
Yet, despite the ample lessons of the past, Abbas
has decided, again, to gamble with the fate of his people and jeopardize their
struggle for freedom and just peace. Not only is Abbas building a campaign
involving Arab countries, namely Jordan and Egypt, to revive the "peace
process", he is also walking back on all his promises and decisions
to cancel the Oslo Accords, and end "security coordination"
with Israel. By doing so, Abbas has betrayed national unity talks between his
party, Fatah, and Hamas.
Unity talks between rival Palestinian groups seemed
to take a serious turn last July, when Palestine’s main political parties issued a joint statement declaring their
intent to defeat Trump’s "Deal of the Century". The language used in
that statement was reminiscent of the revolutionary discourse used by these
groups during the First and Second Intifadas (uprisings), itself a message that
Fatah was finally re-orienting itself around national priorities and away from
the "moderate" political discourse wrought by the US-sponsored
"peace process".
Even those who grew tired and cynical about the
shenanigans of Abbas and Palestinian groups wondered if this time would be
different; that Palestinians would finally agree on a set of principles through
which they could express and channel their struggle for freedom.
Oddly, Trump’s four-year term in the White House
was the best thing that happened to the Palestinian national struggle. His
administration was a jarring and indisputable reminder that the US is not – and
has never been – "an honest peace broker" and that Palestinians
cannot steer their political agenda to satisfy US-Israeli demands in order for
them to obtain political validation and financial support.
By cutting off US funding of the Palestinian
Authority in August 2018, followed by the shutting down of the Palestinian mission
in Washington DC, Trump has liberated Palestinians from the throes of an
impossible political equation. Without the proverbial American carrot, the
Palestinian leadership has had the rare opportunity to rearrange the
Palestinian home for the benefit of the Palestinian people.
Alas, those efforts were short-lived. After
multiple meetings and video conferences between Fatah, Hamas, and other
delegations representing Palestinian groups, Abbas declared, on November 17, the resumption of
"security coordination" between his Authority and Israel. This was
followed by the Israeli announcement on December 2 to release over a billion dollars of
Palestinian funds that were unlawfully held by Israel as a form of political
pressure.
This takes Palestinian unity back to square one. At
this point, Abbas finds unity talks with his Palestinian rivals quite useless.
Since Fatah dominates the Palestinian Authority, the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) and the Palestine National Council (PNC), conceding any
ground or sharing leadership with other Palestinian factions seems
self-defeating. Now that Abbas is reassured that the Biden Administration will
bequeath him, once again, with the title of "peace partner", a US
ally and a moderate, the Palestinian leader no longer finds it necessary to
seek approval from the Palestinians. Since there can be no middle ground
between catering to a US-Israeli agenda and elevating a Palestinian national
agenda, the Palestinian leader opted for the former and, without hesitation,
ditched the latter.
While it is true that Biden will neither satisfy
any of the Palestinian people’s demands or reverse any of his predecessor’s
missteps, Abbas can still benefit from what he sees as a seismic shift in the US
foreign policy – not in favor of the Palestinian cause but of Abbas personally,
an unelected leader whose biggest accomplishment has been sustaining the
US-imposed status quo and keeping the Palestinian people pacified for as long
as possible.
Although the "peace process" has
been declared "dead" on multiple
occasions, Abbas is now desperately trying to revive it, not because he – or
any rational Palestinian – believes that peace is at hand, but because of the
existential relationship between the PA and this US-sponsored political scheme.
While most Palestinians gained nothing from all of this, a few Palestinians
accumulated massive wealth, power, and prestige. For this clique, that alone is
a cause worth fighting for.
Ramzy Baroud is a journalist and the Editor
of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the
author of five books. His latest is These Chains Will Be Broken: Palestinian
Stories of Struggle and Defiance in Israeli Prisons (Clarity Press).
Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and
Global Affairs (CIGA) and also at the Afro-Middle East Center (AMEC). His
website is www.ramzybaroud.net
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