
THE END OF THE CONFLICT? the official Palestinean view.
editorial (22.8.2000)www.pna.net
The demand of the Israeli Prime minister Ehud Barak, that any final status agreement signed with the
PLO should include a clause announcing the "end of the conflict" between the two peoples is a unique
request, certainly a rare occurrence in international relations. The insistence on this point, however, is
significant, and reflects some specific features of this particular conflict.
It is indeed, at first sight, a strange demand. Why can't the Israelis be satisfied with the end of
belligerency, the end of war, the end of violence, as had been the case with Egypt more than two
decades ago? Why ask for a solemn reference to something as legally abstract as "the conflict", as
though treaties and leaders had the power to commit history? What particular blindness to the very
nature of the way history moves could inspire such an unreasonable claim ?
Historically, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has involved peoples, and not only institutional machines. Its
fall into progressive oblivion (and probably not its sudden, magic-like disappearance) depends wholly on
the future relations between these peoples, and certainly not some administrative or diplomatic decision,
treaty or decree.
First of all, the end of the conflict depends on a just and mutually acceptable solution to its core-issues:
it is linked to the issue of Jerusalem, and to the restoration of Palestinian Arab sovereignty on the Holy
City. It is linked to the exercise, by the Palestinian people, of its inalienable right to self-determination,
and it is linked to the right of Return of Palestinian refugees. These are the basic elements of the
conflict, and international legality provides the basic components of its solution.
But most of all, the end of the conflict is linked to historical reconciliation, which implies, if not absolute
justice (unfortunately not the rule in history), at least the acknowledgement of what happened: the truth.
This is something we have learnt from our South-African brothers after the downfall of apartheid, and
that we ascertain daily, whether in South America, in Rwanda, in the Balkans or wherever war or
oppression give way to peace and democracy. For Israelis, this means recognizing that the State of
Israel was created through a military campaign of ethnic cleansing which inflicted a gross and massive
injustice upon the Palestinian people. Without facing this fact, Israelis cannot achieve real peace, cannot
achieve reconciliation, and therefore no "end of the conflict". Even more so: without a change in the
whole system of Jewish-Arab relations, including the system of representations, the use of symbols and
the production of images, within the state of Israel itself, as well as in its relations to others, there can
be no definitive end to the conflict. The recent anti-Arab racist utterances of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, and
the lack of official reaction in Israel are a good negative example of what has to stop and change in
order for the conflict to come to an end. And without a genuine reconciliation with the peoples of the
area, which cannot depend upon a momentary imbalance of material power, there can be no stable and
durable Israeli-Palestinian peace. In short, this is a long-term, protracted process, which will result from
the effective achievement of peace, and not from a declaration. The end of the historical conflict which
has opposed the Israeli and the Arab peoples, and first and foremost the Palestinian Arab people, can in
no way be put as a prerequisite to the signing of an agreement. Unless of course the intention is to
prepare for the undoing of the agreement under the pretext that the said article has been violated by
history !
What the Israeli Prime minister has in mind, in fact, is to put an end to all Palestinian claims: that's a
different story. But the outcome is the same: Palestinian claims can only end when Palestinian rights are
recognized, and rights, by definition, are neither negotiable nor exchangeable. There is no shortcut, and
no discount price on peace. It is the genuine interest of the Israeli people to achieve a just and durable
peace with the Palestinian and the other Arab peoples. But this demands the moral courage to face the
truth, redress injustice, and turn a new page, Not the skill to organize pressure upon a weaker partner
in the vain hope of extracting from him some gratuitous statement and a blank check on the future.
August 22nd 2000
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