The Sharon Proposal, Spring
2001
US Pres. Clinton and
Israeli PM Barak each made it clear that their respective successors,
George Bush and Ariel Sharon, were free of prior negotiating positions
and that Israel’s new ‘unity’ government was under no obligation to
proceed with pre-election final status talks. Himself a hard-line settler
and principal architect of much of Israel’s settlement program, Sharon
had rejected withdrawal from the OPT during his election campaign and
responded to the formula of land-for-peace with characteristic belligerence.
Regarding any eventual evacuation of settlements, Sharon’s position
was simple: “[A]s long as there is no peace we are there. And if in
the future, with God’s help, there is peace, there will certainly be
no reason for not being there.”
[i]
Palestinian submission
to Israeli settlement and land confiscation was, then, the primary prerequisite
for the peace Sharon envisioned. Yet, the paradox between achieving
real peace and pursuing settlement was far from lost on the new PM,
who had earlier opined that, “[w]ere there not Jewish settlements today
on the Golan Heights and Judea and Samaria, Israel would long ago have
returned across the Green Line. If there is one source that prevented
the agreement... and complicated... negotiations, it was [sic] only
the Jewish settlements.”
[ii]
By May 2001, more than
500 Palestinians had been killed since the start of the Intifada (September
2000) and over 14,000 injured. Israeli losses totaled 82, 18 of these
civilians inside Israel.
[iii]
That month, the report of the US-led Mitchell Committee
of Inquiry (mandated in October 2000 to investigate the causes of violence)
was published, calling on Israel to, “freeze all settlement activity,
incl. the ‘natural growth,’” “lift closures,“ and, “ensure that security
forces and settlers refrain from the destruction of homes and roads,
as well as trees and other agricultural property.” The report demanded
coordinated PA actions to “apprehend and incarcerate terrorists,” and
urged both sides to return to and implement existing agreements.
[iv]
Sharon termed the call
for a settlement freeze, “total madness,” and demanded a two-month period
of ‘absolute quiet’ from the Palestinians before considering any “concessions.”
[v]
The PA, on the other hand, accepted the Mitchell
Committee’s recommendations in their entirety and called in vain on
the US to oversee its implementation in full. In the meantime, with
the conflict escalating daily into a series of reinvasions of PA areas,
Sharon outlined the “concessions” he had in mind. Rejecting any return
to outstanding commitments or final status talks, he proposed merely,
“a non-belligerency agreement, for a lengthy and indefinite period,
in an agreement that does not have a timetable, but a table of expectations.”
His offer would, he suggested, “give them [the Palestinians] the necessary
minimum,” by providing up to a 2% transfer of Area C, creating small
connecting corridors between some existing A and B Area pockets. In
all, the plan would grant the PA some unspecified form of control over
43% of the West Bank and leave the Gaza Strip unchanged. In the remaining
57% of the West Bank, Israeli settlements would “safeguard the cradle
of the Jewish people’s birth and also provide strategic depth.”
[vi]
It is doubtful whether
Sharon’s 43%-plan was ever more than a sop to those, internationally
and locally, who found it easier to support his government’s military
policies when they were coupled with a declared long-term ‘vision.’
The PM himself was under no illusions as to the likelihood of ending
the Intifada through legitimizing confiscation and settlement at the
expense of Palestinian statehood. The uprising had, from the outset,
been directed precisely against these persistent traits in Israeli policy.
One month into the Intifada, Fateh’s West Bank leader Marwan Barghouthi
had explained: “We were calm for seven years in order to give a chance
to negotiations... But the Israelis used that time in order to... continue
their policy of a fait accompli on the ground: the new settlements,
the expropriations, the confiscation of land... Why should calm now
be restored? So that they can resume the same policy?”
[vii]
With its patently unacceptable
and highly contingent “concessions” presented, Israel proceeded with
its stepped-up military assault on PA territories and Palestinian population
centers. By October, one year into the Intifada, 700 Palestinians had
been killed (145 of them children), 384 homes demolished, nearly 400,000
trees uprooted and 25 new settlement ‘footholds’ established.
[viii]
As all hope of returning to peace talks was swept
away, Israel’s Internal Security Min. Uzi Landau gave voice to the alternative
vision of the government: “We must strike at them militarily and economically,
at the prestige and authority and stability of the Palestinian Authority
until it collapses.”
[ix]
[i]
Sharon quoted in Ha’aretz, 12 April 2001, reproduced
in FMEP, Report on Israeli Settlement,
May-June 2001, p. 3.
[ii]
Sharon, quoted in Davar (Israeli daily), 14 July
1995, reproduced in ibid.
[iii]
Of the other Israeli losses, 36 were soldiers and 28
were settlers. “Peace Monitor,”
Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. XXXI, No. 1 (Autumn 2001),
pp. 103-125, p. 103.
[iv]
See summarized text of Mitchell Committee report in PASSIA
Diary 2002, p. 292.
[v]
Sharon quoted in Sharon-Peres Symbolize Achievements of Zionism,
23 May 2001, see: www.palestinecampaign.org. Also, “Peace Monitor,” Journal of Palestine
Studies, Vol. XXXI, No. 1 (Autumn 2001), pp. 103-125, p. 104.
[vi]
Sharon quoted in Ha’aretz,
12 April 2001, reproduced in FMEP,
Report on Israeli Settlement, May-June 2001, p. 3.
[vii]
Quoted in Le Monde,
26 October 2000, reproduced in FMEP, Report on Israeli Settlement, March-April 2001, p. 3.
[viii]
During the same period, 173 Israeli soldiers and civilians
were killed. PASSIA Diary 2002,
pp. 260-261 & p. 268. (Citing LAW, Peace Now, PCHR-Gaza, and B'Tselem
statistics.)
[ix]
In making this September 2001 address at a dinner held
in honor of the Hebron settler community, Landau drew on the Bible
to describe the Palestinians: “There is nothing good about them, they
are all just wounds and bruises and putrefying sores” [Isaiah 1:6].
Quoted by Arutz Shev’a (settler radio station), 2 September
2001, reproduced in FMEP, Report on Israeli Settlement, September-October
2001, p. 16.
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