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Vol. XVII, No.1
Fall, 2002
ARTICLES
Terrorist or Freedom
Fighter? The Impact of Trauma and Injustice
Lessons From John Bull's Troubled Island
Rebuilding A Damaged
Palestine
Not All Is Lost
Sri Lanka Stops War To
Talk Peace
LESSONS FROM JOHN BULL'S
TROUBLED ISLAND
by Sharon Sadeh
Reprinted from Ha'aretz,
May 15, 2002 (Ha'aretz, website at http://www.haaretz.co.il/),
Distributed by Common Ground News Service, with permission to reprint
An unusual debate took place last month in the British House of
Commons. Politicians discussed whether there is a similarity between
the conflicts in Northern Ireland and the Middle East, and if so,
whether it would is possible to apply the lessons of one to the other.
David Trimble, the Protestant Unionist leader and First Minister of the
Northern Ireland executive, contended that the two conflicts were not
analogous. "On the Middle East I am a little concerned about some of
the parallels that are drawn with Northern Ireland," he said. "Between
1970 and1995 we had many different political initiatives, none of which
succeeded. The process [in Northern Ireland] after 1995 was more
successful [because] the terrorists became convinced that their
campaign would fail and there was a change in the underlying ideology.
Even Irish Republicans realized the blood and soil nationalism that
they had been attached to was wrong. I do not see any sign of a similar
ideological change in the Middle East."
Prime Minister Tony Blair said in
response that Trimble was mistaken. "I believe there is a parallel. I
do not believe that it would ever have been possible to have a process
unless there was continuous engagement in a detailed proposal to work
our way out of the impasse, and a political vision to go alongside
that."
Blair is right, says Michael
Ancram, deputy leader of the Conservative Party and shadow foreign
secretary. Ancram served in the Northern Ireland Office between 1993
and 1997, first as a permanent undersecretary and then as minister. He
was involved alongside the prime minister at the time, John Major, in
the contacts that paved the way for the first cease-fire with the IRA
in August 1994 and the formulation of the joint Declaration of
Intentions for the governments of Britain and Ireland, which was the
basis for the peace accord signed in April 1998.
Ancram said: "Conflict resolution
has certain common strands, and I was involved in resolving a conflict
by using mechanisms which I think do have a relevance to the Middle
East as well." His visit here [London] in February, during which he met
Yasser Arafat and leading Israeli politicians, including Benjamin
Netanyahu and Shimon Peres, reinforced this belief, he says. Ancram
told Ha'aretz that he remembers well his initial days at the Northern
Ireland Office: "When I arrived in Northern Ireland in 1993, all talks
had broken down. Nobody was talking to anybody. The two governments
were not talking to each other, the parties were not talking to us,
they were not talking to each other. And very slowly we began to have a
process of dialogue again."
Representatives of both sides met
secretly at first to discuss issues like security and economics - from
this point, the process began to move forward. "The two governments put
together frameworks which were not blueprints, but road maps. Showing
that there was a way through, and then saying to the parties you cannot
say there's no answer, because we show there are
answers."
The question is, he said, whether
one is prepared to work toward such answers, or to find another way
through. "And that was the dynamism that pushed that process forward."
At the same time, a global effort
was undertaken to raise funds for developing Northern Ireland, which
until the 1990s, was one of the weakest areas in the United Kingdom.
"The moment the first cease-fire took place, in August 1994, the
investment began ... we had conferences on the Northern Ireland
economy, where business people came and said `if there's peace, we'll
invest.' And all of that was part of saying to all the parties involved
in the conflict that at the economic and political level, there are
benefits by ceasing violence and moving forward on a democratic basis
of dialog. They are all tied together these things - low level talks,
economic benefits, confidence building ... In Northern Ireland, we
called it the peace dividend. People can physically feel that life is
better, because there is peace. The process began to create a
dividend in the communities to the extent that they started to say the
terrorist organizations are no longer defending us, they are no longer
working for us, they are actually harming us, hindering us; and
suddenly these organizations became isolated."
The successful formula was worked
out at the end of marathon negotiations at the Stormont Castle, just
before Easter 1998. The accord stipulated that a joint government of
Protestant Unionists (pro British) and Catholic Republicans (Irish
nationalists) could be established, as well as mechanisms for deepening
the social and economic integration of the two parts of Ireland.
One of the major stumbling blocks
was the mutual enmity between the two sides. "One of the problems was
that the Northern Protestant population was frightened of being
dominated by the Catholic majority in all Ireland. Ian Paisley [the
leader of extreme Protestants opposed to the Northern Ireland peace
process] was talking about domination by the Pope and the Catholic
Church. The Catholic population was frightened by the Protestant
majority in Northern Ireland. So there were fears both ways, and in
Northern Ireland I was always told that they were based on theological
grounds."
The challenge, Ancram says, was to
show people that fear was not necessarily justifiable in the long term.
"When the two governments produced their framework document, at first
everybody threw their hands in the air. The Unionists of the time said
this is a sell-out; the Nationalists said this is a betrayal of the
concept of one Ireland; and we just said this is not a blueprint, it is
just showing you that if you talk you might find a way through. In the
end, the Good Friday agreement is not far away from the framework
document."
Neglect and
Discrimination
Ancram says he detected the same
suspicious mood during his visit to Israel and the territories earlier
this year. "I was talking to people in the Middle East and got the same
sense of mutual fear as was in Northern Ireland." This fear can only be
overcome through a slow process of confidence-building, he says.
Direct, bilateral agreements are needed rather than international
conferences. These agreements must offer security on one hand - "so you
don't find yourself being blown up in a restaurant in Tel Aviv" - and a
removal of the political and economic suffocation of the Palestinians
on the other hand.
He feels that if there is a ray of
hope in the current situation, it derives from the fact that "there is
a much greater sense that there is now a road map, that both the Camp
David and Taba negotiations showed that there was a way through, that
it is not an impossible problem, and I think that can create the basis
for confidence building.
"What was a hindrance for progress
in talks in Northern Ireland before we had our framework done, was that
people said `this is a waste of time, there's no way through.' And we
heard that from a lot of people, why should we bother to stop? There is
no way through, we'll never resolve this. And the framework document
the two governments produced said: `Yes, there is.'"
The conflict in Northern Ireland
continued for over 26 years and was engendered by feelings of
deprivation by the Catholic community in Northern Ireland. This
community comprises 42 percent of the population in this area, which
numbers 1.6 million people. The Catholic residents felt that the
British establishment intentionally discriminated against them. The
protest movement led by civil rights activists in 1968-1969 against
discriminatory policies toward the Catholics in the areas of housing
and social benefits, and against the cruel treatment by the security
forces, did not produce results. The IRA began a violent campaign that
spread into Britain, aided by financial contributions from Irish living
in the United States, weapons shipments from Libya, and training
conducted jointly with other terror organizations, including the PLO.
The actions of the Irish
underground invited retaliatory actions on the part of the Protestant
underground organizations. Thus, the British army and security forces
found themselves engaged in two battles at the same time. The military
confrontation, which lasted from January 1971 through July 1997,
claimed the lives of about 3,600 people in Northern Ireland and the
British isles. During these years, the British employed a variety of
military tactics, starting with internment without trial, and
escalating to military raids on the bases of "Irish terrorists" and
"targeted killings" of IRA men. The elite SAS unit was the main
"executioner" in these operations.
Giving up Dreams
These are the same tactics being
used by Israel in the current conflict with the Palestinians, and yet
Israel was strongly condemned by Britain because of that. Isn't this an
example of a double standard or hypocrisy?
"No, because Britain changed its
policy when it realized that the conflict in Northern Ireland has no
military solution. I came to Northern Ireland toward the end of the
major military campaign. You could have military answers to immediate
problems, but in the end you cannot resolve them only by military
action, but through the political process. That realization on both
sides was key for making progress."
In the Middle East conflict,
Ancram says, both Israel and the Palestinians must be prepared to make
painful compromises, just as Britain and Ireland ultimately did.
Ireland revoked an article in its Constitution that stipulated unifying
both parts of Ireland. The IRA, which had vowed never to lay down its
arms until this unification was achieved, declared a cease-fire and
began to gradually disarm. The British ended its direct rule over the
area, delegating authorities to the local government in Belfast and
agreeing to bring Sinn Fein, the political wing of the IRA, into
government. They also significantly reduced their troops deployed in
Northern Ireland and made changes in the local police force that were
intended to>underplay Northern Ireland's connection to British
sovereignty.
Ancram said: "The changes in the
Irish Constitution were an important psychological step in creating
confidence in the other side. Similarly, Catholics began to overcome
their fear. They felt that even though they did not get all they wanted
- a united Ireland - still, they did get parity ofesteem and full
participation in the democratic process." This change was felt, first
and foremost, in the economic sphere. Unemployment among Catholics
plummeted from 23 percent in 1991 to 9 percent in 1999, among
Protestants it fell from 11 percent to 5 percent.
A similar process could occur
among the Palestinians, but first they need to give up their
unrealistic dreams, he says. "There has to be some degree of
compromise, as we know, on the Palestinian side. No way a settlement
can be reached with an unqualified right of return for the
Palestinians, because demographically that is or could be in time the
end of the Jewish state of Israel."
On the other hand, he adds,
"Israel should make some accommodation with regards to the Jewish
settlements. Ultimately, the Middle East settlement will be based on
two states, but it isn't just Jordan and Egypt agreeing to support such
settlement - it has to be acknowledged by all those countries that
threaten the security of Israel within the area. They've got equally to
say `We accept the State of Israel.'"
But in the meantime, the
Palestinians are overwhelmingly in favor of the continuation of the
armed struggle against Israel, a position which is also held by the
Palestinian leadership? "I think, undoubtedly, over many years, there
has been propaganda within the Palestinian population, which has
created a culture, created a mind-set, which is a mind-set at the
moment which doesn't encompass a democratic solution. It has also been
further strengthened by neighbors such as Syria and Iraq. But this
attitude can be changed, as indeed happened with the Catholic
population in Northern Ireland. But, there's no point talking to people
who cannot deliver. I think it is very difficult to know whether Arafat
could ever do a deal. The person who can do the final deal has to be
someone who can deliver."
There must be some creativity,
Ancram says. For example, an Israeli-Palestinian accord could be
defined as in interim agreement without a definite time frame, instead
of a final accord that puts an end to the conflict. Again, he refers to
the Northern Ireland example: "People in theRepublican side in Northern
Ireland, or in Ireland, said there is no compromise on the principle of
one Ireland. The sanctity and integrity of the island and land of
Ireland was not up for negotiation. So the way they managed to get
around this was to say that the Good Friday agreement was an interim
agreement. The Republicans were prepared to accept that there was a
separate region of Northern Ireland and becoming part of the democratic
process within it, because they were persuaded that it was an interim
agreement. But how long is an interim agreement? Interim could be
200-300 years."
In the end, Ancram says, he is
optimistic," because I believe that the indomitable spirit of man
somehow breaks through all the hurdles that are placed on it by
political systems and everything else. Somewhere there's human spirit
which says we all want to be able to live with each other peacefully."
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©2002, 2003, 2004,2005. All rights reserve. The Nonviolent
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