The relationship of forces in the long Israel-Palestine conflict has evolved
in such a way that it is now Israel which is effectively pursuing a
single-state strategy while the Palestinians have had to fall back on a
two-state solution - including Hamas which has also de facto had come to
terms with Israel's existence.

Below is an interesting commentary from yesterday's Financial Post showing
how this process is continuing to unfold. The writer, Henry Siegman, reports
that the influential former head of Mossad, Efraim Halevy, has upset the
Israeli and Jewish-American political establishment by describing Hamas'
refusal to formally acknowledge Israel's right to exist as "politically
consequential" only in that it serves as a pretext to justify Israeli
unilateralism and the continued expansion of its settlements. Siegman and
Halevy think the current Kadima policy of trying to isolate and overthrow
the Hamas government is unnecessary, and that the Israelis should engage
with Hamas without preconditions.

I'm not as persuaded as they seem to be that the failure to do so is
damaging Israel's vital interests, but I am sure that Siegman's obligatory
concluding appeal to the ineffectual Europeans to assert more independence
from the Americans and to act as an honest broker between the two sides
will, as always, go nowhere.

*    *    *

The issue is not whether Hamas recognises Israel
By Henry Siegman
Financial Times
June 7 2006

What hope there may still be for avoiding a complete meltdown in the
Palestinian occupied territories, not to speak of the hope of ever achieving
a two-state solution, lies not with the initiative by Mahmoud Abbas,
Palestinian Authority president, to put the two-state formula to a popular
referendum but with the ruling Hamas movement's refusal to play by Israel's
old rules. Those rules have in effect eliminated the prospect of viable
Palestinian statehood and were intended to achieve that end.

Hamas is determined that Palestinian recognition of Israel will not come
about without Israel's recognition of Palestinian national rights, and that
only an end to the occupation and Israel's acceptance of the principle that
no changes in the pre-1967 borders can occur without Palestinian agreement
(a principle enshrined in the road map that Israel pretends to have
accepted) will constitute such recognition.

The most widely respected Israeli security expert, Efraim Halevy, believes
Israeli and American efforts to overthrow the Hamas regime are  misguided. A
hawk who headed Mossad, Israel's intelligence agency, under five prime
ministers and served as Ariel Sharon's national security adviser, Mr Halevy
is convinced these efforts damage Israel's vital interests.

His view shocked members of the Conference of Presidents of Major American
Jewish Organisations when Mr Halevy addressed them recently in New York. He
has held it for some time. In September 2003, he said Israel should signal
to Hamas that if it "enter[s] the fabric of the Palestinian establishment,
we will not view that as a negative development. I think that in the end
there will be no way around Hamas being a partner in the Palestinian
government". At that time, when Hamas had the support of only a fifth of the
Palestinian population, Mr Halevy said: "Anyone who thinks it is possible to
ignore such a central element of Palestinian society is simply mistaken."
How much more so today, when Hamas enjoys majority support.

Asked last week on Israeli television how he could justify advocating
engagement with a terrorist organisation that does not recognise Israel's
right to exist, Mr Halevy ridiculed the stale assumptions that underlie that
question. Do not look at Hamas's rhetoric, he said, look at what it does:
Hamas declared a truce 18 months ago and has committed no terrorist acts
against Israel since. In spite of Hamas's refusal to change its theological
rejection of Israel, Ismail Haniyeh, prime minister in the Hamas-led
government, ordered his ministers to seek practical co-operation with their
Israeli counterparts. Mr Haniyeh also confirmed that Hamas's self-declared
truce is open-ended.

Why should Israel care whether Hamas grants it the right to exist, Mr Halevy
asked. Israel exists and Hamas's recognition or non-recognition neither adds
to nor detracts from that irrefutable fact. But 40 years after the 1967 war,
a Palestinian state does not exist. The politically consequential question,
therefore, is whether Israel recognises a Palestinian right to statehood,
not the reverse.

Using Mr Halevy's criterion of looking at what a government does, not what
it says, it is clear that - its many declarations to the contrary not
withstanding - Israel does not recognise a Palestinian right to statehood in
the West Bank and Gaza. The position of Ehud Olmert's government is that
Israel's right to annex at will any parts of Palestinian territory east of
the pre-1967 borders supersedes any Palestinian rights. This is implicit in
the Israeli government's decision that a Palestinian government that even
wishes to place on the agenda of a peace negotiation the territorial changes
made unilaterally by Israel in the West Bank, or the question of the
Palestinian refugees, cannot be a partner for peace.

Israel's "concessions", such as the withdrawal from Gaza and isolated West
Bank settlements, are intended to serve narrow Israeli interests. As noted
by Peace Now's Settlement Watch, Israel is continuing to thicken its
existing settlements and expanding the settlements' territorial boundaries
for yet further expansions. In these circumstances, what is puzzling is not
Hamas's refusal to accept Israel's dictates but the support given by the
international community - particularly by the European Union - to Israeli
efforts to isolate and overthrow Hamas.

Israel's government has left no doubt that even if Mr Abbas's promised
referendum passes by a large majority (indeed, even if Hamas were to sign up
to it), Israel will not accept it as the basis for a peace process and will
proceed to set its border with the Palestinians unilaterally. Should that
turn out to be the case, will European leaders continue their support of
Washington's incurable pandering to Israel's rightwing policies, or will
they muster the political will to re-engage with the Palestinian Authority
and provide the needed political and economic support for the Palestinians'
achievement of their national rights? The answer to that question may well
determine the future of the entire region.


The writer is a senior fellow on the Middle East at the US's Council on
Foreign Relations and a visiting professor at the School of Oriental and
African Studies, University of London. These views are his own

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