A Palestinian boy rides his bike in front of concrete segments
blocking a road between East Jerusalem and the West Bank town of Abu
Dis. Photograph : Reinhard Krause/Corbis
**
The Palestinian finance minister recently warned that the two-state
solution would be in crisis unless the Palestinian Authority (PA)
immediately received more funds.
"The two state solution is in jeopardy if the PA is not able to continue to function," Nabeel Kassis said.
But Kassis was talking about an imaginary state, one largely funded
by international donors. The World Bank announced last week that
"sustainable economic growth" was impossible while Israel continued to
control vast swathes of the West Bank.
Large protests against the PA by Palestinians indicates growing
unrest over rising prices and the failure to realise any tangible
political moves towards independence. This is why growing numbers of
Palestinians under occupation are talking about adopting the one-state
solution and pressuring their leaders to follow.
"The idea of one state is about … breaking apart the system of
privilege that exists and being able to live as an equal," says Diana
Buttu, a former legal adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team and
contributor to a book I have just co-edited, After Zionism.
During a recent visit, I heard many Palestinians say that the
two-state solution was barely discussed seriously in Palestinian
circles, but that the PA, currently too reliant on western support not
to continue the fiction of state-building, as yet persists in believing
in its inevitability. The status quo is beginning to crumble, though,
with senior PA officials now talking about abandoning the two-state idea
and pushing for a one-state equation. Hamas concurs. This will only
grow.
The real issue in the Israel/Palestine conflict is barely mentioned
in this American election cycle ; the obsession with Iran has seen to
that. Yet, it is increasingly addressed in public debates, opinion
pieces and among both the Jewish and Arab communities that it is time to
end the two-state industry. Nearly 20 years after the Oslo process,
there are now up to 700,000 Jewish colonists living illegally in the
West Bank. A just partition of the land, with a Palestinian right of
return, is impossible. It is for this reason, among others, that a
one-state solution is gaining traction, even within conservative
circles.
Liberal Jews in the United States, firm believers in justice and
human rights, are especially conflicted. The controversy surrounding
writer Peter Beinart’s recent book, The Crisis of Zionism, encapsulated
their growing unease with blindly supporting the Jewish state, the
occupation and a two-state solution – all once an article of faith. As
Yousef Munayyer, a Palestinian American, recently wrote, to blogger
Jerome Slater :
"If the two-state outcome is exposed for fantasy, and Palestinians en
masse demand civil rights, it is hard to see a sustained, western
objection."
And among the "non-objection" camp would be many American Jews.
Demographically, the two US groups most committed to maintaining the
occupation are Christian evangelicals and Orthodox Jews. If a
significant number of American Jews start peeling away from the US
pro-Israel lobby, breaking with the tradition of pressuring the US
Congress to back every Israeli policy, the Jewish state would
potentially face economic crisis.
The challenges are profound – not least unwinding two decades of Oslo
propaganda that dictates the two-state solution as the sole answer –
but there are growing calls to imagine what a democratic, secular state
in the Middle East might look like.
The effect of the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movements
in the US, Europe and around the world, combined with a rise in Jewish
fundamentalism in Israel, which is animated against both Palestinians
and Africans, the logic of a democratic, one-state solution seems more
desirable and less utopian by the day. A plan for its implementation – a
state promising justice for all of its citizens : Jews, Muslims,
Christians or atheists – is already being mapped out.
The US political establishment largely backs the perpetuation of the
two-state charade – witness former State Department official Aaron David
Miller writing a few months ago that this outcome is the "only game in
town" – but the unpredictability of today’s Arab world means that
alternative ideas have a chance to gain traction. Israel’s ability to
control events on the ground in the West Bank and Gaza is shifting, not
least due to Egypt’s new-found assertiveness.
There has never been serious international pressure to implement a
two-state solution ; instead, Israeli settlement has been indulged. But
moving the one-state idea from the fringes to the mainstream obliges
defenders of the current situation to explain their reasoning behind
endorsing a so-called solution that entrenches discrimination against
Arabs. Now is the time to break open the debate.
Antony Loewenstein
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 26 September 2012
Lancé le 19 décembre 2011, "Si Proche Orient" est un blog d'information internationale. Sa mission est de couvrir l’actualité du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord avec un certain regard et de véhiculer partout dans le monde un point de vue pouvant amener au débat. "Si Proche Orient" porte sur l’actualité internationale de cette région un regard fait de diversité des opinions, de débats contradictoires et de confrontation des points de vue.Il propose un décryptage approfondi de l’actualité .
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