Laila el-Haddad’s Palestinian Passover story

The talented Gaza-born journo Laila el-Haddad has been trying to go home to visit her parents, taking her two adorable– and fwiw US-born– children with her. Yousuf must be about four now, and Noor about 15 months old.
However the Egyptian Interior Security service won’t let them transit through their country, which is the only way a Gaza Palestinian can even dream of getting to her or his homeland these days.
Laila and the kids have been stuck in a holding-room in Cairo airport for the past 28 hours. (HT: The Arabist.)
She blogs:

    No one knows where my file is or what is going to happen. I have an off again on again wifi signal, and trying my best to keep updates on twitter @gazamom.

Go and follow her tweets there.
So today is Passover. Tomorrow is the commemoration of 61 years since the Deir Yassin massacre. Tomorrow is also the commemoration of the start of the 1994 Rwanda genocide.
… And Laila is stuck with her kids in Cairo airport, facing deportation. Apparently they don’t where to deport her to since her US visa has run out.
Just let her go home!!!!

Let’s Be Patient

President Obama in Iraq:

    This is going to be a critical period, these next 18 months.

Three Friedman Units.
from Wikipedia:

    The term [Friedman Unit] is in reference to a May 16, 2006 article by Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) detailing journalist Thomas Friedman’s repeated use of “the next six months” as the period in which, according to Friedman, “we’re going to find out…whether a decent outcome is possible” in the Iraq War.

President Obama also said:

    It is time for us to transition to the Iraqis. (Applause.) They need to take responsibility for their country and for their sovereignty. (Applause.)
    And in order for them to do that, they have got to make political accommodations. They’re going to have to decide that they want to resolve their differences through constitutional means and legal means. They are going to have to focus on providing government services that encourage confidence among their citizens.
    All those things they have to do. We can’t do it for them. But what we can do is make sure that we are a stalwart partner, that we are working alongside them, that we are committed to their success, that in terms of training their security forces, training their civilian forces in order to achieve a more effective government, they know that they have a steady partner with us.
    And so just as we thank you for what you’ve already accomplished, I want to say thank you because you will be critical in terms of us being able to make sure that Iraq is stable, that it is not a safe haven for terrorists, that it is a good neighbor and a good ally, and we can start bringing our folks home.

“We can start bringing our folks home.” When? Silly me, I thought that was going to happen right away. (Obama also said the Iraq war “is an extraordinary achievement,” but we’ll let that go, not without noting the million deaths and the four million displaced.)

Continue reading “Let’s Be Patient”

Obama’s rockin’ first world tour– and call for action

He’s been doing so well, and it’s churlish of me not to have mentioned it before. (I’ve been busy.)
But oh man, it really feels great no longer to have a president who makes you cringe every time he opens his mouth!
There are still several areas of Obama’s policy that cause me great concern:

    1. He is being ways too slow in doing anything concrete to lay out clear and principled markers for Israel’s behavior toward the Palestinians. (Repeating the mantra about the strength of the US’s support for a two-state solution is completely not enough! Let’s have some consequences out there!)
    2. He’s terrifyingly– and actually, quite unrealistically– warlike in his policies in Afghanistan.
    3. On the whole economic crisis he has surrounded himself far too much with the bankerist types who got us into this whole darn mess in the first place. Larry Summers??? Send him and the rest of the bankerists packing!
    4. Why is he so supportive of the provocative “missile defense shield” in Central Europe?

… But despite those caveats, which are not trivial, I think that over all he’s doing an excellent job.
I just read the speeches he gave in Prague yesterday, and in Ankara today.
In Prague he spelled out his unequivocal support for the goal of a nuclear-weapons free world, set out some generally good first steps toward that goal, and promised to take them. So now, we can hold him to those steps.
In Ankara, first of all it is good he went there, to the giant, majority-Muslim nation at the eastern end of NATO. Second, it’s excellent that the Turkish government had invited him, even after knowing the comments he’d made earlier about the Armenian genocide.
I thought he dealt with the Armenian question and just about all the other issues he spoke about in his speech very deftly, honestly, and compassionately.
On Arab-Israeli issues he said this:

    In the Middle East, we share the goal of a lasting peace between Israel and its neighbors. Let me be clear: The United States strongly supports the goal of two states, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in peace and security. That is a goal shared by Palestinians, Israelis and people of goodwill around the world. That is a goal that the parties agreed to in the road map and at Annapolis. That is a goal that I will actively pursue as president of the United States.
    We know the road ahead will be difficult. Both Israelis and Palestinians must take steps that are necessary to build confidence and trust. Both Israelis and Palestinians, both must live up to the commitments they have made. Both must overcome long-standing passions and the politics of the moment to make progress towards a secure and lasting peace.
    The United States and Turkey can help the Palestinians and Israelis make this journey. Like the United States, Turkey has been a friend and partner in Israel’s quest for security. And like the United States, you seek a future of opportunity and statehood for the Palestinians. So now, working together, we must not give into pessimism and mistrust. We must pursue every opportunity for progress, as you’ve done by supporting negotiations between Syria and Israel. We must extend a hand to those Palestinians who are in need, while helping them strengthen their own institutions. We must reject the use of terror, and recognize that Israel’s security concerns are legitimate.

So okay, now let’s have some actual accountability for the Israeli government– as well as, as usual, for the Palestinians– regarding their actions in the occupied territories.
We need to flood the White House and the offices of our congressional representatives with urgent requests that the US do these things:

    1. Require Israel to open the crossings into Gaza for the passage of construction materials, humanitarian goods, and all goods needed to rebuild a normally functioning economy. This is Israel’s responsibility as occupying power under the Fourth Geneva Convention, which requires a lot more than “just” humanitarian aid for Gaza, as for the West Bank. It requires a normally functioning economy. The US should push for no less than that.
    2. Cease all construction work in the settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, forthwith, and all work on infrastructure projects that support the settlement: “Not one brick.”
    3. Push for the immediate release of from Israeli jails of all the elected Palestinian legislators.
    4. Fully support all international efforts to investigate alleged grave rights abuses committed during the recent war in Gaza.

A Turning Point?

from President Obama‘s press conference on the results of the recently concluded G20 Summit Meeting in London:

    Earlier today, we finished a very productive summit that will be, I believe, a turning point in our pursuit of global economic recovery. By any measure, the London summit was historic. It was historic because of the size and the scope of the challenges that we face, and because of the timeliness and magnitude of our response.

The G-20 is made up of the finance ministers and central bank governors of 19 countries plus a representative of the European Union, established in 1999 “to bring together systemically important industrialized and developing economies to discuss key issues in the global economy”. The G20 had high hopes for its recent summit meeting in London.

    The G-20 will need to send a strong signal that it is prepared to take whatever further actions are necessary to stabilise the financial system and to provide further macroeconomic support.

What happened? Was it really a turning point? Here are comments on the major G20 promises from me and others.

Continue reading “A Turning Point?”

T. Strouse report from Damascus

    I am happy to publish here a report that Thomas Strouse penned from Damascus on March 31. I thought it gave some useful background flavor to recent developments in the Syrian capital, and at the Arab summit.
    Strouse is working on his Masters degree in Middle East Studies at George Washington University and took the current semester off to study Arabic in Damascus for five months. He also works at Foreign Reports, an oil consulting firm in Washington that primarily reports on political developments in the Middle East relevant to oil markets. He has been writing weekly reports from Damascus. If you’d like to receive them, please drop him a line directly.

Report From Damascus (March 31, 2009)
The flurry of regional diplomatic movement over the past month finally culminated in the Arab Summit which opened in Doha, Qatar on Monday. Key Arab states have all been preparing and maneuvering for the summit for much of the past month. There were several tracks to this pre-summit diplomacy, but Syria was certainly at the center of one of them.
Syria has been receiving special attention from the U.S., as well as from some Arab states that it has not had the best of ties with over recent years. As many have put it, Syria is “coming in from the cold.”
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad made landmark visits to both Saudi Arabia and Jordan in March. In Riyadh, he met with Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, and Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah. This meeting was dubbed an Arab “mini-summit.”

Continue reading “T. Strouse report from Damascus”

More on Hamas and the PA

In the presentation I gave at the Georgetown conference Friday afternoon, one of the main issues I was exploring was the notable shift the Hamas leadership had made, sometime between the 1996 PA legislative elections, which they boycotted, and the 2006 elections, in which they participated– as it turned out, extremely successfully.
The context for them taking the decision to participate was, I think, that of the Sharon government’s 2004-05 decision-and-implementation of the plan to undertake a unilateral (i.e. un-negotiated) pullout of all settlers and troops from Gaza. Also, the horrendous wave of decapitation attacks to which Hamas was subjected in early 2004: Yassin, Rantisi, etc…
The un-negotiated nature of the Israeli pullout was viewed by Hamas people as a great victory for the Hamas strategy of multi-faceted resistance to Israeli occupation as opposed to the strategy Fateh has adopted for many years now, of just about total reliance on negotiations while dismantling all the instruments of resistance, whether mass-popular or military.
In 2005, in addition, Hamas participated along with Fateh and most of the other much smaller Palestinian movements in a joint “unilateral” cessation of hostilities in the Gaza theater, that was designed above all to allow Sharon to implement his pullout plan without the IDF troops being subjected to Palestinian fire as they exited.
The 2005 unilateral ceasefire was also an essential precondition for the holding of orderly PA legislative elections in January 2006, since it’s just about impossible to hold elections that have any political legitimacy in a situation where there are ongoing hostilities.
Anyway, one of the issues I was probing in my Georgetown presentation, and that I’m reflecting on a lot more right now, was the “depth” if you like of the commitment that Hamas has displayed from 2005 on to the PA project. And that commitment continues until now, despite the huge suffering that Israel, the US, and all the US’s hangers-on in the world inflicted on Hamas, its supporters, and the Palestinian people as a whole as a result of Hamas’s victory in the 2006 elections.
The depth of that continuing commitment is what is remarkable to me. (Though it has seldom if ever been remarked upon by most people in the west.)
The PA project, remember, is the child of the Oslo Accord, which was an agreement between Yasser Arafat’s PLO and the Government of Israel. “Buying in” to the PA project in any way therefore implies strong buy-in to the legitimacy of the existence of the State of Israel. It involves strong buy-in to the goal of a two-state outcome, which has always been the most that any Palestinian could expect to achieve from the Oslo process.
Participating in the 2006 PA legislative elections therefore signified an evident break with Hamas’s longstanding refusal to buy in to the two-state project in any meaningful way.
But now, the PA project looks increasingly, to Palestinians both inside and outside the OPTs, as much worse than a failure: a catastrophe. Yet Hamas’s people continue to express their commitment to it.
My judgment is that Hamas, unlike Fateh, has a still-intact Plan B to fall back on once they judge that the whole PA project has irrevocably failed. Not that it is an easy Plan B. But as we have seen, religious people find it easier to bear suffering on earth than most people who do not have that strong faith as their guiding light and their help in times of distress.
But the continuing commitment they have to the PA– and, also, by clear implication, to the survival of Israel– is still something worth a lot more exploring.

My recent talk at the Palestine Center

… is now up on their website, here.
I’ve watched the first one-third of it, and noticed that at about 9m50s I mis-spoke, saying “counter-intelligence” instead of “counter-insurgency” when describing the security doctrine under which Israel has quadrillaged the whole of the occupied West Bank.
Apart from that, it looked like a good representation of what I wanted to say at the event, which was held March 31.
My big thanks, again, to the Palestine Center for hosting me there, and also for shooting and webhosting the video record of it.

Highlights from the Georgetown Univ. conference on Palestine

I was extremely privileged to be one of the speakers in the conference the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies held Thursday and Friday on “Palestine and the Palestinians Today.” (If I haven’t blogged much the past couple of days, that is why, especially as I was trying to take good notes. Also, I got a big migraine along the way there…. C’est la vie.)
Anyway, just quickly I want to share some highlights.
Yesterday, there was a really good exchange between Ali Abunimeh of Electronic Intifada and Amjad Atallah, a Palestinian-American who’s working with Daniel Levy at New America. (He’s replaced the viciously anti-Hamas Jordanian person Ghaith al-Omari in that slot, which is something of an improvement, though imho not enough of one.)
Amjad was trying to argue that Palestinians should do a lot more to organize at the grassroots, and that Palestinian-Americans in particular should “start” reaching trying to reach out explain their case to people inside and outside government in the US, and that there’s a real chance the US government can become a main ally for the Palestinians once some relatively small misunderstandings have been cleared up. That brought forth howls of protest from Ali and several others at the conference who have actually been doing such organizing and outreach work for many years already (much more than Amjad), and who seemed generally less optimistic than him that it would be easy to swing the weight of the US corporate and decisionmaking elite behind the Palestinians’ cause.
Amjad did make a couple of good points, though. He said that Fateh and Hamas seem to be arguing right now over “who gets to run which parts of the PA administration on behalf of the Israelis” He noted that this was very similar to what happens, in fact, inside the Israeli jails as well. (Or, as I would call them, the Israeli “small jails”, as opposed to the Israeli “big jails” which are what Gaza and all the tiny enclaves in the West Bank have become.
Ali made a strong pitch for stepping up the BDS work (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions); and said it has been starting to have some small victories in this country already– more so, in Europe.
His best throw-away line was to decsribe the title of Martin Indyk’s recent book Innocent Abroad as “the most dishonest book title in the history of writing.” Couldn’t have put it better myself.
Anyway, that was a good exchange.
Another highlight was a panel, also yesterday, with the anti-Zionist Jewish Israelis Gabi Piterberg and Oren Yiftachel. You may recall that i blogged here recently about the review Gabi had in the LRB on some of the recently translated works of the Hebrew-language novelist S. Yizhar. So I was really pleased to meet him. He’s a historian, and his paper was on the history of the concept of “settler colonialism” as a discrete form of colonialism that has been largely under-studied, for reasons he explained; and on why he believes that concept is the one most applicable to the history of the Zionist settlement project in the Middle East.
He had some really powerful historical examples, including looking at the shift from what he called the “French style” of (labor-exploiting) colonialism that was applied during the “First Aliyah”, under the “Rothschild model”, and how that was then dropped in favor of “pure settler colonialism” under Ruppin and Oppenheimer during the Second Aliyah…
The difference being whether you want to keep a large body of indigenes whose labor you plan to exploit, or whether you just seek to uproot, expel, and if necessary genocide them.
Anyway, he looked at various periods in the history of Zionist colonization projects both within and outside the Green Line– and continuing on both sides of the line until today.
Yiftachel is a geographer at Ben Gurion University, in Beersheva/B’ir Sab’a, whom I had met once before– a long time ago. He’s been working on the situation of the Bedouin Palestinians of southern Israel, a group that, despite being citizens of the State of Israel, are subject to nearly continuous attempts to uproot them from their ancestral lands.
He said he had documented 77 ways in which the state claims it can “legally” expropriate the lands of the Bedouin Palestinians– and that in some cases, four or five of these might be applied simultaneously to the same plot of land.
In the Naqab/Negev area of southern Israel some 55,000-60,000 homes of Bedouin Palestinians have been declared “illegal” and are subject to demolition at the whim of the authorities. Therefore– this is my comment here– their situation as a community is very similar to that of East Jerusalem Palestinians, where the very present threat of home demolitions that may be carried out at any point, at the whim of the authorities, serves as a potent factor that keeps the whole community in a state of constant dread.
The Bedouin Palestinians are citizens, which gives them a few more rights than the EJ Palestinians.
One of the most potent parts of Yiftachel’s presentation was a short series of photos he showed, of the high glass towers of “modern” downtown Beersheva gleaming in the mid-background, while in the foreground were the rude makeshift shacks of Bedouin villagers previously dispossessed but intent on hanging on to their lands.
His description of the situation was “creeping apartheid.”
Sarah Roy gave a very hard critique of the role the “international community” has played in aiding, abetting, and underwriting the costs of all of the strategies of de-development, dispossession, humiliation, and control that Israel has pursued in both Gaza and the West Bank. She ended with a few heartbreaking comments she had heard from friends in Gaza… “People have no sense of protection, no sense of safety, or of rules… We have lost all sense of the ordinary and have no way of thinking how we can regain it.”
She also noted that the old argument that Israeli peaceniks used to make, that Israel cannot have both peace and occupation, now seems to have been disproven for the Jewish-Israeli public. They live in peace, they maintain the occupation– and indeed, the costs of maintaining the occupation, which used to be a constraining factor for Israel, have all now, since Oslo, been lifted from Israel, and are borne by the US and its allies.
She talked about Israel’s “engineering of the Palestinians into becoming perpetual beggars, in both the West bank and Gaza”, and how the international donors have shifted their focus from an emphasis on building up Palestinian capacities for self-determination to focusing just on keeping them alive while controlling them. (She aptly described the procedures whereby aid is delivered into Gaza as being like delivering food to animals in a corral.)
Oh my, there were so many excellent panels! I wish i could write about all of them. I did see that the organizers were videotaping everything, so I hope the tapes of the individual seessions will be made available as soon as possible.
I was on the very last panel, along with Daniel Levy and Saree Makdisi (son of Jean said Makdisi). Saree gave an excellent presentation of his critique of the ethnonationalist underpinnings of the two-state concept, and his arguments for the one-state concept. I wish we’d had a lot more time to brainstorm on exactly how people might get from the present situation to building a powerful and inclusive movement for the one-state outcome.
Daniel surprised me a bit, since I’d always previously heard him as a very articulate advocate of the two-state solution; but he sounded a lot more nuanced and realistic than I’d expected.
His main argument, I think, was for what he called a “Godfather option”: that the US should, after broad consultations, put its own plan on the table and “Make Israel and everyone else an offer they can’t refuse.” He said this need not– and probably would not– look exactly like any of the plans that have previously been discussed, at Camp David 2, Taba, Geneva, or wherever. That was interesting, given that he played a big role in the Geneva back-channel “shadow talks.”
He was much more critical of the traditional Israeli peace movement than I’ve ever heard him before, describing Liebermanism as the bastard child of the fact that so much of the Israeli peace movement used the ‘demographic’ argument to try to make its case.”
He said, I think, that there remains a clear possibility of further ethnic cleansing. (I didn’t gather whether that was from inside or outside the Green Line… should have asked.)
I spoke a bit about my recent trip to the Middle East, with some observations on the main Palestinian political movements, and also on the geographic shifts in the balance of power inside the Palestinian movement.
Oh, I just saw that the video of the talk I gave at the Palestine Center Tuesday, which covers some of the same material, is up on the PC’s website.
Good for them.
Now, I wonder if I can bear to watch myself.
(My own impresssion is that, just in terms of presentational and time-management skills, I did better at the Palestine Center that at the GU event. At the GU event, yesterday, I tried to cram too much in.)

My IPS analysis on the Lieberman bombshell

… is here. Also here.
On a related note, we have this from the Hamas-affiliated Palestinian Information center:

    Dr. Salah Al-Bardaweel, the spokesman of Hamas’s parliamentary bloc in the PLC, reacted to the statements of the new Israeli foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman, who publicly disavowed the Annapolis understandings, saying, “We [in Hamas] weren’t surprised by Lieberman’s statements; however, we consider that such thing should push Fatah faction to review all the feeble agreements it had signed with the Israeli occupation government without bringing any good to the Palestinian people”.
    Hamas and the democratically elected PA government have opposed the Annapolis conference from the first moment, and considered it as a “waste of time”, and a stab in the back of the Palestinian resistance, he underscored.
    “Today, the moment of truth came, and thus, we need a serious and national stand [from Fatah faction] by halting all forms of security coordination with the Israeli occupation, and to reject all security agreements that tore the unity of our Palestinian people”, Bardaweel emphasized.
    On Wednesday, Lieberman underlined that his government won’t be bound by the obligations of the Annapolis conference because it wasn’t ratified by any Israeli cabinet.

Lieberman: No more ‘Israbluff’

Anyone who expected that his appointment as Foreign Minister would somehow ‘tame’ Avigdor Lieberman got a rude shock yesterday when he bluntly told a foreign ministry gathering that Israel was no longer bound by the undertakings reached at the November 2007 Annapolis conference.
He also told Haaretz’s Barak Ravid, “You won’t get any ‘Israbluff’ with me.”
He said he considered Israel was still bound by the Road Map provisions from 2003– but stated very clearly that the Palestinians must fulfill their side of the Road Map before Israel needed to do anything.
Regarding Syria, he told Ravid: “we have already said that we will not agree to withdraw from the Golan Heights. Peace will only be in exchange for peace.”
The positions articulated by Lieberman are very familiar– they are in line not only with his own previous rhetoric but also with the positions articulated and pursued by B. Netanyahu’s earlier government in Israel, 1996-99. No-one should be surprised, therefore, that Netanyahu has done nothing so far to disavow Lieberman’s most recent statements.
The foreign ministry statements were made at a ceremony in which Lieberman took over power from Tzipi Livni, who as head of Kadima will now be in opposition to the Netanyahu government. Many senior members of Israel’s diplomatic corps were there. Some were reported as visibly shaken when they heard the new line they will have to go out to the world to sell.
I have to say it does clarify matters to have Lieberman speaking with such apparent frankness about what Israel’s real policy towards it neighbors will be. In one of the news reports–I forget which– he was quoted as saying that actually his policy will be the same as that followed on the ground by the preceding government, despite its formal adherence to Annapolis. “How many settlements did they dismantle? How many roadblocks?” he asked.
Very good questions.
So now, what he is promising is a change from the policy of “pursue the colonization and control project on the ground while hiding it by participating in all kinds of meaningless negotiations”, by ripping off all the camouflage of the ‘negotiations’.
“No more ‘Israbluff'”, indeed.
Western governments, that have been very happy to connive in the whole “Israbluff” project for 16 years now and have even helped construct the various structures– Oslo, Annapolis, and so on– through which it was exercised, have so far been in apparent shock, and have been unable to say anything to stick up for their “endless negotiations” approach in the face of the demolition job Lieberman has now done on it.
AP reported that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, now in London with Obama, called Lieberman early today. According to Lieberman spokeswoman Irena Etinger, “the conversation was conducted in a ‘good atmosphere,’ and the two agreed to meet as soon as possible.”
But nothing public from Clinton– or anyone else in the Obama administration– that expressed any criticism or concern about what Lieberman had said.
… I think I’m with Lieberman now– in this way: No more Israbluff, and no more Ameribluff or Eurobluff either.
Let each nation and group of nations pursue its own interests calmly and in a focused way and without participating any more in the mendacious edifice that the “peace process” has become ever since the solid principles of Madrid were transformed into the hocus-pocus of Oslo.