Uri Avnery: Memo For Obama
Memo For Obama
Uri Avnery, Gush Shalom
For: the President-Elect, Mr. Barack Obama.
From: Uri Avnery, Israel.
The following humble suggestions are based on my
70 years of experience as an underground fighter, special
forces soldier in the 1948 war, editor-in-chief of a
newsmagazine, member of the Knesset and founding member of a
peace movement: 1. As far as Israeli-Arab
peace is concerned, you should act from Day
One. 2. Israeli elections are due to take place in
February 2009. You can have an indirect but important and
constructive impact on the outcome, by announcing your
unequivocal determination to achieve Israeli-Palestinian,
Israeli-Syrian and Israeli-all-Arab peace in
2009. 3. Unfortunately, all your predecessors since 1967
have played a double game. While paying lip service to
peace, and sometimes going through the motions of making
some effort for peace, they have in practice supported our
governments in moving in the very opposite direction. In
particular, they have given tacit approval to the building
and enlargement of Israeli settlements in the occupied
Palestinian and Syrian territories, each of which is a land
mine on the road to peace. 4. All the settlements are
illegal in international law. The distinction sometimes made
between “illegal” outposts and the other settlements is
a propaganda ploy designed to obscure this simple
truth.
5. All the settlements since 1967 have been built
with the express purpose of making a Palestinian state –
and hence peace - impossible, by cutting the territory of
the prospective State of Palestine into ribbons. Practically
all our government departments and the army have openly or
secretly helped to build, consolidate and enlarge the
settlements – as confirmed by the 2005 report prepared for
the government (!) by Lawyer Talia Sasson. 6. By now, the
number of settlers in the West Bank has reached some 250,000
(apart from the 200,000 settlers in the Greater Jerusalem
area, whose status is somewhat different.) They are
politically isolated, and sometimes detested by the majority
of the Israel public, but enjoy significant support in the
army and government ministries. 7. No Israeli government
would dare to confront the concentrated political and
material might of the settlers. Such a confrontation would
need very strong leadership and the unstinting support of
the President of the United States to have any chance of
success. 8. Lacking these, all “peace negotiations”
are a sham. The Israeli government and its US backers have
done everything possible to prevent the negotiations with
both the Palestinians and the Syrians from reaching any
conclusion, for fear of provoking a confrontation with the
settlers and their supporters. The present “Annapolis”
negotiations are as hollow as all the preceding ones, each
side keeping up the pretense for its own political
interests. 9. The Clinton administration, and even more so
the Bush administration, allowed the Israeli government to
keep up this pretense. It is therefore imperative to prevent
members of these administrations from diverting your Middle
Eastern policy into the old channels. 10. It is important
for you to make a complete new start, and to state this
publicly. Discredited ideas and failed initiatives – such
as the Bush “vision”, the Road Map, Annapolis and the
like – should by thrown into the junkyard of
history. 11. To make a new start, the aim of American
policy should be stated clearly and succinctly. This should
be: to achieve a peace based on the Two-State Solution
within a defined time-span (say by the end of
2009). 12. It should be pointed out that this aim is based
on a reassessment of the American national interest, in
order to extract the poison from American-Arab and
American-Muslim relations, strengthen peace-oriented
regimes, defeat al-Qaeda-type terrorism, end the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars and achieve a viable accommodation with
Iran. 13. The terms of Israeli-Palestinian peace are
clear. They have been crystallized in thousands of hours of
negotiations, conferences, meetings and conversations. They
are: 13.1 A sovereign and viable State of Palestine
will be established side by side with the State of
Israel. 13.2 The border between the two states will
be based on the pre-1967 Armistice Line (the “Green
Line”). Insubstantial alterations can be arrived at by
mutual agreement on an exchange of territories on a 1:1
basis. 13.3 East Jerusalem, including the
Haram-al-Sharif (“Temple Mount”) and all Arab
neighborhoods will serve as the capital of Palestine. West
Jerusalem, including the Western Wall and all Jewish
neighborhoods, will serve as the capital of Israel. A joint
municipal authority, based on equality, may be established
by mutual consent to administer the city as one territorial
unit. 13.4 All Israeli settlements – except any
which might be joined to Israel in the framework of a
mutually agreed exchange of territories - will be evacuated
(see 15 below). 13.5 Israel will recognize in
principle the right of the refugees to return. A Joint
Commission for Truth and Reconciliation, composed of
Palestinian, Israeli and international historians, will
examine the events of 1948 and 1967 and determine who was
responsible for what. Each individual refugee will be given
the choice between (1) repatriation to the State of
Palestine, (2) remaining where he/she is living now and
receiving generous compensation, (3) returning to Israel and
being resettled, (4) emigrating to any other country, with
generous compensation. The number of refugees who will
return to Israeli territory will be fixed by mutual
agreement, it being understood that nothing will be done
that materially alters the demographic composition of the
Israeli population. The large funds needed for the
implementation of this solution must be provided by the
international community in the interest of world peace. This
will save much of the money spent today on military
expenditure and direct grants from the US. 13.6 The
West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip constitute one
national unit. An extraterritorial connection (road,
railway, tunnel or bridge) will connect the West Bank with
the Gaza Strip. 13.7 Israel and Syria will sign a
peace agreement. Israel will withdraw to the pre-1967 line
and all settlements on the Golan Heights will be dismantled.
Syria will cease all anti-Israeli activities conducted
directly or by proxy. The two parties will establish normal
relations between them. 13.8 In accordance with the
Saudi Peace Initiative, all member states of the Arab League
will recognize Israel and establish normal relations with
it. Talks about a future Middle Eastern Union, on the model
of the EU, possibly to include Turkey and Iran, may be
considered. 14. Palestinian unity is essential for
peace. Peace made with only one section of the people is
worthless. The US will facilitate Palestinian reconciliation
and the unification of Palestinian structures. To this end,
the US will end its boycott of Hamas, which won the last
elections, start a political dialogue with the movement and
encourage Israel to do the same. The US will respect any
result of democratic Palestinian elections. 15. The US
will aid the government of Israel in confronting the
settlement problem. As from now, settlers will be given one
year to leave the occupied territories voluntarily in return
for compensation that will allow them to build their homes
in Israel proper. After that, all settlements – except
those within any areas to be joined to Israel under the
peace agreement - will be evacuated. 16. I suggest that
you, as President of the United States, come to Israel and
address the Israeli people personally, not only from the
rostrum of the Knesset but also at a mass rally in
Tel-Aviv’s Rabin Square. President Anwar Sadat of Egypt
came to Israel in 1977, and, by addressing the Israeli
people directly, completely changed their attitude towards
peace with Egypt. At present, most Israelis feel insecure,
uncertain and afraid of any daring peace initiative, partly
because of a deep distrust of anything coming from the Arab
side. Your personal intervention, at the critical moment,
could literally do wonders in creating the psychological
basis for peace. This article was
published in the current issue of the progressive
Jewish-American monthly
TIKKUN. Uri Avnery is a journalist, peace activist,
former member of the Knesset, and leader of Gush
Shalom. He is a regular contributor to Scoop.
You can email correspondence to correspondence @ gush -
shalom . org (without the
spaces