SAT 27 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Sep 5, 2014
Source: The Daily Star
Mahmoud Abbas should exploit Palestinian unity more
Rami G. Khouri

Credible press reports and recent hints by Palestine Authority President Mahmoud Abbas indicate that Abbas will soon unveil a diplomatic initiative aimed at achieving Palestinian statehood and the end of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. As is usually the case with this kind of political development by the Palestinian leadership, it includes very sensible and very foolish elements, diminishing its chances of success.
 
The reports suggest that the initiative comprises three elements: First, the United States would be asked to resume its diplomatic mediation in order to reach an Israeli-Palestinian agreement on defining the borders of a future Palestinian state. The U.S. reportedly will be asked to do this within a time period of four months. The second phase would see the Palestinians go to the U.N. Security Council to seek implementation of their case for statehood and ending their occupation by Israel. The third phase would have the Palestinian nonstate member of the U.N. raise cases against Israel in arenas such as the International Criminal Court or other international forums.
 
The good news about this process is that it is multifaceted. This kind of ambitious, dynamic initiative is a welcome move by the Palestinian leadership because it is precisely what a leadership should do for its people – lead them toward the goal they all share, using all available and legitimate means. Its three elements are logical means for achieving the goal of credible Palestinian statehood, especially if coordinated with other means of direct political action with Israel or global popular mobilization and political or legal moves.
 
The bad news is equally significant and multifaceted. The most serious flaw about this initiative is that it does not seem to build on the single most critical imperative for the Palestinians today, which is to cement the national unity that was so visible during the recent Gaza war. To work effectively in international forums, Palestinians need above all strong national unity in leadership and among citizens. This means that Hamas, Fatah, Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and half a dozen other smaller factions must operate on the basis of a single national political program, while drawing on the cohesion and support of thousands of civil society and popular organizations across the region and the world.
 
Abbas’ initiative shows no signs of being based on any such consensus, and there are absolutely no indications that any of these ideas have been discussed among, or ratified by, the millions of Palestinians whom Abbas is supposed to represent. Abbas also does not seem willing to draw on the many good ideas and valuable mobilizing potential that Palestinian activists and professionals all over the region and the world can offer in the service of their national cause. This lack of popular consultation is the second major flaw in Abbas’ initiative, which perpetuates a personalized, paternalistic style of governance among Palestinians that has always been a reason for failure.
 
Abbas had been indicating for weeks that he was going to produce a diplomatic “surprise” of some sort after the Gaza fighting stopped. This kind of unilateral, secretive, father-knows-best style of governance is an insult to the Palestinian people, along with being a recipe for continued diplomatic failure. We went through this a few years ago when Abbas held the world and his people in suspense about whether the Palestinians would seek nonstate membership in the U.N. That option was finally activated, but with little impact so far.
 
Retrospectively, I would suggest, the lack of impact in becoming a U.N. member largely reflects the fact that the decision to do this was taken surreptitiously, without any strategic thinking, and fully devoid of the power that should have come from massive popular support for it. Now we see the same process playing out in whether the Palestinian leadership will take its case to the ICC.
 
Abbas is behaving more like a parent who promises his or her children a birthday surprise than a responsible leader who has been handed responsibility for the fate of some 8 million Palestinians entering their fourth generation of exile, occupation and refugee status. The Gaza war’s many negative aspects were offset by the positive display of national unity that clearly was an asset for the Palestinian negotiators in Cairo. It would be a shame for this promise to be dissipated by the political incompetence of a few aging Palestinian men in the twilight of their leadership years – some having spent 40 years in power with little to show for it – who have never understood that their weakness and failure have been due mainly to their refusal to make the effort needed to harness the power of a unified national citizenry.
 
Rami G. Khouri is published twice weekly by THE DAILY STAR. He can be followed on Twitter @RamiKhouri.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on September 03, 2014, on page 7.


The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
 
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