.
by Mitchell Plitnick
Bibi has seen better days.
Election dramas, victories for Fatah
and Hamas, and a diplomatic
backlash have kept Netanyahu busy. “E-1,” the name of the thin strip of land
that connects Jerusalem with the eastern settlement of Ma’ale Adumim has once
again become a prominent phrase after he announced that Israel would move
forward with construction plans there.
In understanding the controversy over E-1, we need to look at it from two
perspectives. The first is the obvious one, the issue everyone is raising:
building up E-1 renders a Palestinian state in the West Bank unviable, as it
largely bisects the territory, something that would be upsetting to most of the
world as it would seem to imply that there is no solution to this destabilizing
conflict. The other view has the potential to demonstrate that the whole
two-state process has been a charade to begin with: that bisecting the West Bank
has been Israel’s plan for decades, and foreign leaders who looked at a map even
once had to know this. In that case, the support for a peace process has always
been about supporting a process, not about supporting peace.
To begin with, there’s no doubt that Israeli settlements in E-1 moot any real
possibility of a viable Palestinian state in the West Bank. Ma’ale Adumim sits
far out to the east, close to the Jordan River and forces anyone trying to drive
from one side of E-1 to the other to go a long way around to avoid crossing into
Israeli territory, if it should become fully part of Israel. Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas called construction in E-1 a “red line” and
you can see why.
Without a diplomatic option to the two-state solution, and without the
ability to think of that solution in any way other than the formulation that
evolved from the Oslo process, the international community must see E-1
construction as the
death knell it is for that beleaguered formulation. The difficulties of
simple travel for commerce and community that exist under occupation would
become entrenched in the very physical nature of a Palestinian state.
World leaders, whether they’re in Washington, Berlin, London, Moscow,
Beijing, Riyadh, Amman or Doha know very well that if the established framework
of a two-state solution becomes so mooted by Israeli settlement construction
that the world has to give up on it, the regional pressure cooker that is the
Palestinian issue starts to move toward an explosion. No doubt, in that case,
the Palestinian movement will move to demand its rights within the Israeli
state, but that new framework will take years, perhaps decades, to garner
diplomatic support from the West and the Arab states that cannot afford to break
with the US and Europe. But those governments have no one but themselves to
blame. This problem has been there form the beginning—before it, in fact.
In a 2009 report, Israeli human rights groups
Bimkom and
B’Tselem sum up the threat of building in E-1 to any hopes Palestinians have
for a capital in East Jerusalem: “In addition to thwarting the prospects for the
establishment of a viable Palestinian state, construction of residential
neighborhoods in E1 will augment the physical and functional disconnection
between East Jerusalem and Palestinian communities of the rest of the West Bank.
Residential construction in E1 will result in East Jerusalem being surrounded
from the north, south, east, and west by Jewish neighborhoods. Thus the
separation of East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank – a process that has
been going on for decades, and which has greatly accelerated with the
construction of the Separation Barrier around the city – will be finalized.”
On that level, it’s easy to understand the consternation at Israel’s move.
But if we examine some other arguments, we start to see that there might be
another, more subtle level to this issue. And that examination starts with
Netanyahu himself.
Ha’aretz paraphrased Bibi’s very correct assertion “…that every Israeli
government has approved expansion of Jewish neighborhoods in Jerusalem, and what
can be called peripheral neighborhoods of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Netanyahu also
said that the E-1
corridor between Ma’ale Adumim and Jerusalem would be included in Israeli
territory as part of any final peace agreement.” Of course it would be—how else
would Ma’ale Adumim be connected to Israel? And Ma’ale Adumim is one of the
settlement blocs that “everybody
knows” would be part of Israel in any final status agreement.
I recall a day when I was standing with an Israeli colleague just outside of
Ma’ale Adumim, on its eastern side, where Israel has already made plans for
extensive building. Jericho loomed behind us. And I wondered aloud how Israel
believed there could be a viable Palestinian state with Ma’ale Adumim sitting in
the middle of it. My colleague started spinning ideas about various bridges and
tunnels, all of which sounded like clutching at straws. Just standing there, it
was obvious that a Palestinian state on the West Bank and the continued Israeli
presence at Ma’ale Adumim were not compatible realities.
The issue is not E-1, it is Ma’ale Adumim, and this was the intention all
along. Consider the also perfectly accurate words
of Ha’aretz’s resident settler, Israel Harel: “The decision to link Maaleh
Adumim to Jerusalem was taken many decades ago. Avraham Ofer, who was Building
and Housing Minister on behalf of the Alignment, saw its future as a suburb of
Jerusalem and not a separate town.” This isn’t a “recent development” which
pragmatism dictates must be accounted for. No, this was an obstruction planned
by Israel from the very first.
Of course, Ma’ale Adumim was not set up to block a Palestinian state. In the
mid-1970s, there was no thought of such an outcome, except among radicals and
dreamers. But Israel was still concerned that it would have to withdraw from the
West Bank and return it to Jordanian rule, as, at that time, Jordan still
claimed that land. As had been the case since 1967 Israel wanted a contingency
plan that ensured that it would keep Jerusalem, in case it was forced to make
major concessions on the West Bank. The strategy to do so was based in the
creation of “Greater Jerusalem,” an integrated metropolitan area that Israel
would develop. Ma’ale Adumim was to be the border of that Greater Jerusalem.
This is the notion to which Harel refers.
Indeed, the Bimkom/B’Tselem report conclusively supports this argument. The
report’s summary states: “Already in late 1974, the government decided to
build Jerusalem’s new industrial zone in Mishor Adumim, as well as a workers
camp nearby. A few months later, in 1975, Israel expropriated 3,000 hectares to
build Ma’ale Adumim. More land was subsequently expropriated to enable the
settlement’s expansion, to pave roads, and to develop other public
infrastructure in the city…It appears that in Ma’ale Adumim, the government
decided to permanently expropriate the land because it viewed the area as an
integral part of Jerusalem that would forever remain under Israeli control.”
This is years before Oslo, years before the Clinton Parameters, and years
before the 2004 letter from George W. Bush to Ariel Sharon where Bush assured
Sharon that Israel would not have to relinquish the major settlement blocs. The
monkey wrench in the works of the two-state solution was in place more than a
decade and a half before a two-state solution was even a serious consideration.
Is this something the international community, which has been peddling the
notion that a viable Palestinian state was a real possibility, wants its various
citizens to know?
This is what Bibi is blowing the top off of, and it is at least as much the
source of the anger being directed at him as the very real potential
consequences of building in E-1. Those consequences are serious; they include
greatly magnifying disruption of Palestinians traffic, the complete isolation of
East Jerusalem from the West Bank, the mooting of the two-state solution and the
forced displacement of some 1200-1300 Bedouin who live in the area. By no
means should we think that the current flap over E-1 is not a real concern.
But we need to also be mindful that it isn’t something that
Netanyahu is just popping up with all of a sudden. When the current plans
were first moved forward, the Bush Administration voiced concern, and since
2005, those plans have been frozen. All Bibi is doing now is expressing an
intention to reactivate them. It has not actually happened yet, so it can be
stopped, and stopping it does matter.
But it is important to recognize, once and for all, what Ma’ale Adumim is,
and what the controversy over E-1 actually reveals. There has never been a
realistic chance at a two-state solution and there can’t be one as long as it is
based on a vision where Ma’ale Adumim is still an Israeli “neighborhood.” It is
a colony, and one that was built for a specific purpose: to make sure, at first,
that Israel would maintain control of all of Jerusalem and, later, that a viable
Palestinian state on the West Bank was not a serious possibility.
Any two-state solution that includes Gaza (as any such solution that will be
acceptable to any significant number of Palestinians must do) already has a
contiguity problem that is quite challenging. The West Bank, though, must be a
viable unit, and this realization has been rhetorically acknowledged by every
government involved in any way in the “peace process.” Yet the presence of
Ma’ale Adumim has never been acknowledged as an obstacle; on the contrary, it
was virtually given to Israel on a guaranteed platter.
The E-1 controversy shines a light on what a sham the peace process has been
for two decades. Earlier today, I began reading a new book by former US
Ambassador Daniel Kurtzer,
Pathways to Peace: America and the Arab-Israeli Conflict. In the first
essay,
William Quandt, a member of the National Security Council in the Richard
Nixon and Jimmy Carter administrations, wrote that the two-state solution had
never been given a real chance. He’s right, and Ma’ale Adumim shows just how
unrealistic and phony the efforts have been.
http://souciant.com/2012/12/the-two-state-scam/