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The Palestinian Vision of Peace

Sun Feb 3 04:35:35 2002
68.3.132.0

"Peter S. Lopez de Sacra" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

February 3, 2002

The Palestinian Vision of Peace
By YASIR ARAFAT

RAMALLAH — For the past 16 months, Israelis and
Palestinians have been locked in a catastrophic cycle
of violence, a cycle which only promises more
bloodshed and fear. The cycle has led many to conclude
that peace is impossible, a myth borne out of
ignorance of the Palestinian position. Now is the time
for the Palestinians to state clearly, and for the
world to hear clearly, the Palestinian vision.

But first, let me be very clear. I condemn the attacks
carried out by terrorist groups against Israeli
civilians. These groups do not represent the
Palestinian people or their legitimate aspirations for
freedom. They are terrorist organizations, and I am
determined to put an end to their activities.

The Palestinian vision of peace is an independent and
viable Palestinian state on the territories occupied
by Israel in 1967, living as an equal neighbor
alongside Israel with peace and security for both the
Israeli and Palestinian peoples. In 1988, the
Palestine National Council adopted a historic
resolution calling for the implementation of
applicable United Nations resolutions, particularly,
Resolutions 242 and 338. The Palestinians recognized
Israel's right to exist on 78 percent of historical
Palestine with the understanding that we would be
allowed to live in freedom on the remaining 22
percent, which has been under Israeli occupation since
1967. Our commitment to that two-state solution
remains unchanged, but unfortunately, also remains
unreciprocated.

We seek true independence and full sovereignty: the
right to control our own airspace, water resources and
borders; to develop our own economy, to have normal
commercial relations with our neighbors, and to travel
freely. In short, we seek only what the free world now
enjoys and only what Israel insists on for itself: the
right to control our own destiny and to take our place
among free nations.

In addition, we seek a fair and just solution to the
plight of Palestinian refugees who for 54 years have
not been permitted to return to their homes. We
understand Israel's demographic concerns and
understand that the right of return of Palestinian
refugees, a right guaranteed under international law
and United Nations Resolution 194, must be implemented
in a way that takes into account such concerns.
However, just as we Palestinians must be realistic
with respect to Israel's demographic desires, Israelis
too must be realistic in understanding that there can
be no solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict if
the legitimate rights of these innocent civilians
continue to be ignored. Left unresolved, the refugee
issue has the potential to undermine any permanent
peace agreement between Palestinians and Israelis. How
is a Palestinian refugee to understand that his or her
right of return will not be honored but those of
Kosovar Albanians, Afghans and East Timorese have
been?

There are those who claim that I am not a partner in
peace. In response, I say Israel's peace partner is,
and always has been, the Palestinian people. Peace is
not a signed agreement between individuals — it is
reconciliation between peoples. Two peoples cannot
reconcile when one demands control over the other,
when one refuses to treat the other as a partner in
peace, when one uses the logic of power rather than
the power of logic. Israel has yet to understand that
it cannot have peace while denying justice. As long as
the occupation of Palestinian lands continues, as long
as Palestinians are denied freedom, then the path to
the "peace of the brave" that I embarked upon with my
late partner Yitzhak Rabin, will be littered with
obstacles.

The Palestinian people have been denied their freedom
for far too long and are the only people in the world
still living under foreign occupation. How is it
possible that the entire world can tolerate this
oppression, discrimination and humiliation? The 1993
Oslo Accord, signed on the White House lawn, promised
the Palestinians freedom by May 1999. Instead, since
1993, the Palestinian people have endured a doubling
of Israeli settlers, expansion of illegal Israeli
settlements on Palestinian land and increased
restrictions on freedom of movement. How do I convince
my people that Israel is serious about peace while
over the past decade Israel intensified the
colonization of Palestinian land from which it was
ostensibly negotiating a withdrawal?

But no degree of oppression and no level of
desperation can ever justify the killing of innocent
civilians. I condemn terrorism. I condemn the killing
of innocent civilians, whether they are Israeli,
American or Palestinian; whether they are killed by
Palestinian extremists, Israeli settlers, or by the
Israeli government. But condemnations do not stop
terrorism. To stop terrorism, we must understand that
terrorism is simply the symptom, not the disease.

The personal attacks on me currently in vogue may be
highly effective in giving Israelis an excuse to
ignore their own role in creating the current
situation. But these attacks do little to move the
peace process forward and, in fact, are not designed
to. Many believe that Ariel Sharon, Israel's prime
minister, given his opposition to every peace treaty
Israel has ever signed, is fanning the flames of
unrest in an effort to delay indefinitely a return to
negotiations. Regrettably, he has done little to prove
them wrong. Israeli government practices of settlement
construction, home demolitions, political
assassinations, closures and shameful silence in the
face of Israeli settler violence and other daily
humiliations are clearly not aimed at calming the
situation.

The Palestinians have a vision of peace: it is a peace
based on the complete end of the occupation and a
return to Israel's 1967 borders, the sharing of all
Jerusalem as one open city and as the capital of two
states, Palestine and Israel. It is a warm peace
between two equals enjoying mutually beneficial
economic and social cooperation. Despite the brutal
repression of Palestinians over the last four decades,
I believe when Israel sees Palestinians as equals, and
not as a subjugated people upon whom it can impose its
will, such a vision can come true. Indeed it must.

Palestinians are ready to end the conflict. We are
ready to sit down now with any Israeli leader,
regardless of his history, to negotiate freedom for
the Palestinians, a complete end of the occupation,
security for Israel and creative solutions to the
plight of the refugees while respecting Israel's
demographic concerns. But we will only sit down as
equals, not as supplicants; as partners, not as
subjects; as seekers of a just and peaceful solution,
not as a defeated nation grateful for whatever scraps
are thrown our way. For despite Israel's overwhelming
military advantage, we possess something even greater:
the power of justice.

Yasir Arafat was elected president of the Palestinian
Authority in 1996 and is also chairman of the
Palestine Liberation Organization.

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