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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
REBUILDING A DAMAGED PALESTINE
by Robert Malley
Reprinted from The
New York Times, May 7, 2002
(The New York Times website: http://www.nytimes.com/)
Distributed by Common Ground News Service with permission to
reprint
One of the significant subplots in the current Israeli-Palestinian
confrontation is that while Prime Minister Ariel Sharon loudly
denounces Yasir Arafat for seeking to draw the international community
into the conflict, Israel's actions push inexorably toward that result.
Secretary of State Colin Powell's announcement that an international
conference will be held this summer is but the latest indication.
Beyond that, as the ability of the
Palestinian Authority to deliver basic social services or ensure law
and order declines, the prospects for more robust international
intervention increase. Ideas once considered far-fetched a peacekeeping
force, an international trusteeship or protectorate over the
Palestinian territories suddenly are being taken seriously. The
question is no longer whether the conflict will be internationalized,
but how. The challenge is to intervene in a way that accelerates rather
than impedes the search for an enduring solution.
Although the long-term strategy
behind Israel's military actions may be unclear, their immediate impact
on the Palestinian population is anything but. The operations have
crippled Palestinian security organizations, sapped the ability of
ministries to provide essential services and divided the territories
into disconnected parts.
Security concerns can legitimately
explain some of the Israeli Army's actions. But in more than one
instance, that rationale would be difficult to sustain. Civilian
ministries and medical facilities have been damaged; equipment and
public documents with no discernible intelligence value, like school
records, have been destroyed. The logic behind these actions appears to
have less to do with furthering Israel's security than with its
political goals. The result is that someone will have to reconstruct
those institutions and deliver services.
From Day One, the Palestinian
Authority has had to rely to a large extent on foreign help. Arguably,
every single one of its branches from security to financial services
has been supported, sometimes heavily, by one or several international
actors. To take the most conspicuous example, the United Nations Relief
and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East runs roughly
half of the social services in the West Bank and Gaza. But now, given
the damage, international involvement of a far different magnitude may
be necessary to help the Palestinian Authority provide shelter, restore
water and sewage systems, and deliver basic government functions like
security and law and order. All this explains why so many are thinking
so seriously about putting a transitional international structure in
place.
Of course it may seem odd to evoke
any international presence at this time, given Israel's refusal to
allow a United Nations fact-finding team in Jenin. The dispute over the
fact-finding plan shows the intensity of Israel's general distrust of
international interference, which it views as a reward for Palestinian
violence, and its particular distrust of the United Nations, which it
views as hopelessly anti-Israeli. But in this situation, there are no
appealing alternatives. Israel would be ill-advised to take on
administration of the territories, and the Palestinian Authority cannot
administer them on its own. Moreover, Israel's objections might well
subside if an international presence helped enhance security for
Israelis and if its representatives came from countries agreeable to
both sides.
The challenge is to create an
international role that reflects the goals and concerns of the two
parties. Lessons from the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and from conflict-resolution efforts elsewhere suggest a few key
principles. First, and most important, the political end game must be
clearly stated. To introduce an international apparatus without
initially defining the outcome and a time line for reaching that
outcome is to invite constant manipulation by the warring sides. Worse,
the international effort would risk being perceived by the Palestinian
people as a civilian counterpart to Israel's military occupation and
therefore a target of radical militants.
In this instance the outlines of a
final settlement are by now familiar: a sovereign and nonmilitarized
Palestinian state whose borders would be based on 1967 lines, with land
swaps of equal size to accommodate demographic realities; Jewish
neighborhoods of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and Arab
neighborhoods as the capital of Palestine; a robust international force
to provide security and monitor implementation of the agreement; and a
solution to the refugee issue that does not threaten Israel's
demographic balance.
Second, the goal should be to
restore the Palestinian Authority's capacity to operate not to replace
self government, but to support it. What smacks of external imposition
of control is likely to be treated as such. Finally, the opportunity
should not be lost to lay the foundation for a truly modern Palestinian
state. In the past decade, Palestinian governance has proved to be a
sorry tale of graft, economic mismanagement and human rights
violations. A broad-based international involvement can help introduce
more accountability and the rule of law. It can also help turn the
Palestinian security forces from a multitude of competing fiefdoms into
a more streamlined, professional police force.The 20 months of fighting
since the start of the second intifada may well have slowed down the
process of Palestinian nation-building. But Israel's recent military
actions will almost certainly accelerate the process of
internationalization that Israelis have so far resisted and
Palestinians have so often called for. If done right, the introduction
of an international presence can benefit both sides. It can help
increase security for Israelis and Palestinians, rebuild Palestinian
self-government and provide Israel with assurances regarding
Palestinian performance. Most important, it may begin to set in motion
the process that should lead to the emergence of a viable state of
Palestine living side by side with Israel.
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These articles and opinions of
the authors do not constitute the endorsement of Nonviolent Change nor
its publisher, Organization Development Institute, or any of its staff.
©2002, 2003, 2004,2005. All rights reserve. The Nonviolent
Change Journal is published by the Research/ActionTeam on
Nonviolent Large Systems Change - an interorganizational and
international project of The Organization Development Institute.
Permissions: Reposting and reprints are encouraged, as
long as proper source acknowledgement is given. As a courtesy, please
let us know that you are reprinting or electronically reposting. It
helps us know of the interest level. Thank you.
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