They have the support of 130 countries ready to vote for an
independent state despite Israel’s wild arguments against it
By Adel Safty
In
the Art of War, the oldest military treatise in the world, Chinese writer Sun
Tzu states: “ All warfare is based on deception.”
If
Sun Tzu were alive today and had witnessed the Arab-Israeli conflict, he surely
would have had a great deal of observations to make, and not only about war as
deception: About how the Anglo-French-Israeli military campaign against Egypt
in 1956 turned into a political disaster for the invaders and a triumph for
Egypt; about the lightening speed of the 1967 Israeli assault on Egypt, Jordan,
and Syria; about Egyptian president Anwar Al Sadat’s brilliant use of deception
that preceded the 1973 war.
Sun
Tzu would have certainly commented about the lengthy and ultimately
unsuccessful Lebanon campaign in 1982.
Applying
Sun Tzu’s thinking to the diplomatic warfare at the UN, that is pitting Israel
and the US on one side, and the Palestinians and much of the international community,
on the other side, leads to the following conclusion: Despite their crushing
military superiority, the American/Israeli side is astonishingly weak
diplomatically. Its arguments are unreasoned, its statements indefensible, and
its assertions unsupported. In short, the weakness of its position is reflected
in the incoherence of its arguments.
And
thus one is tempted to formulate a new Sun Tzu principle for the Art of
Political War: When your opponent appears confused and incoherent, despite his
military superiority, it is a sign of weakness; press your political advantage
— while leaving him a way out.
The
Palestinians are seeking a UN declaration proclaiming Palestinian independence,
and possibly admitting Palestine as a member state to the UN.
President
Barack Obama, caught between vetoing the legitimate aspirations of the
Palestinian people, and angering Israel and its powerful supporters in the USA,
opted for expediency and threatened to veto Palestinian requests.
You
would think that involving the UN in affirming the Palestinian people’s right
to independence is a reasonable political initiative.
After
all, it was a UN resolution (181) in 1947 that recommended the partition of
Palestine, thus giving judicial basis for the establishment of the state of
Israel and the state of Palestine. Is the UN useful when it serves the
interests of Israel, but irrelevant when it serves those of Palestine?
The
Palestinian initiative, however, viewed from Washington, is most unreasonable.
It seeks to replace the deadlocked peace process with a set of dynamic
initiatives that strengthen Palestinian access to various UN agencies,
especially the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Access
to the ICC would enhance Palestinian ability to hold Israel accountable for
various charges of breach of international law including charges of war crimes
against the people of Palestine. This would be a formidable development which
Israel would be most anxious to block.
The
US is virtually alone in defending the untenable Israeli position. And thus,
trying to rally support for palpably untenable positions, leads directly to
confused and untenable arguments.
Consider
the American arguments. In urging some 70 countries not to support any
unilateral moves by the Palestinians at the UN, the State Department argued
that such a vote would ‘destabilise the region’ and ‘undermine peace efforts.’
How a UN diplomatic initiative can ‘destabilise’ the region and undermine
‘peace efforts’, is not clear. Is not the UN Palestinian initiative itself part
of the ‘peace efforts’?
The
same argument is repeated by Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently
told the visiting EU Parliament President Jerzy Buzek that if the UN General
Assembly recognised the Palestinian state, it would “bring peace talks with
Israel” to a deadlock.
I
hope Buzek asked the obvious question: “Tell me prime minister where are your
country’s peace talks with the Palestinians right now?
The
Obama administration has reportedly circulated a proposal for the resumption of
Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. But whatever credibility Obama may have
had as a result of his early and credible commitment to a peaceful settlement,
has been tarnished by his repeated failures to stand up to Netanyahu.
Obama
administration officials have also argued that an important statement by the
Quartet (UN, EU, USA, and Russia) outlining a “series of meetings and actions”
would likely change the dynamics and possibly prove more attractive than the
sought-after UN resolution.
This
is simply wishful thinking. The misnamed peace process has been principally
moved by Washington, with the other members of the Quartet standing by for the
occasional meetings and obligatory statement (although no statement was issued
at their recent Washington meeting). If Washington failed to convince its
stubborn Israeli ally to take the peace process seriously, why would the
members of the Quartet — who do not have nearly as much leverage over Israel as
Washington does — be more successful?
The
Palestinians have the support of some 130 states ready to vote for an
independent Palestine at the UN, including Belgium, Denmark, France, Ireland,
Luxembourg, Spain, Sweden and the UK.
And
what are the Palestinians being offered as an incentive to abandon their effort
at the UN? I am glad you asked. They are being offered “a series of meetings
and actions” by the Quartet. Simply laughable.
Writing
recently in the Israeli paper Haaretz, Louis Rene Beres asserts — without any
supporting evidence — that the Palestinian initiative is an attempt to
circumvent Oslo and the road map. Beres may not have noticed but Oslo has been
torpedoed by Netanyahu, who admitted so himself. The road map has been frozen
by Sharon whose principal aide Dov Weissglass admitted in an interview with
Haaretz in Oct 2004, that Sharon’s Gaza withdrawal plan was meant to freeze the
peace process and remove the road map from the agenda.
Reasoned
arguments are conspicuously absent on the American-Israeli side because its
position is thoroughly untenable and inherently weak.
Sun
Tzu advised: “In war, the way is to avoid what is strong and to strike at what
is weak.” The UN Palestinian initiative is a diplomatic strike at the right
place.
-This commentary was published in The GULF NEWS on 12/09/2011
-Adel Safty is Distinguished Professor Adjunct at the Siberian Academy of Public Administration, Russia. His new book, Might Over Right, is endorsed by Noam Chomsky, and published in England by Garnet, 2009
-Adel Safty is Distinguished Professor Adjunct at the Siberian Academy of Public Administration, Russia. His new book, Might Over Right, is endorsed by Noam Chomsky, and published in England by Garnet, 2009
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