Mahmoud Abbas's High-Stakes UN Gamble 
Graham Usher 

United Nations
 
It’s easy to see who won the great debate that captivated the United 
Nations last week. Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas made an 
eloquent case that after twenty years of a futile “peace process,” the 
time had come to end Israel’s occupation and for the UN to admit his 
country as a full member state.
Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu called for peace talks “without 
preconditions”—only to inject such preconditions (like the PA 
recognizing Israel’s “Jewish character”) that would make talks a 
nonstarter. Abbas was received rapturously; Netanyahu, coolly.
But the villain was Barack Obama, at least for those peoples in a 
region where Israel’s occupation is becoming the permafrost on the Arab 
Spring. The United States had long made it clear it would veto any 
Palestinian bid for full membership. But President Obama didn’t just 
rehearse Israeli arguments against the move; he adopted Israel’s 
narrative on the conflict. “Let’s be honest: Israel is surrounded by 
neighbors that have waged repeated wars against it,” he said.
Obama made no mention of the occupation, Jewish settlements or even 
that, since 2002, those neighbors have offered Israel a full peace in 
return for a full withdrawal from occupied Arab land. It was the most 
pro-Israeli speech ever made by a US president at the UN, said a veteran Jewish 
American commentator. It’s “the reason we are going to the UN,” 
seethed Palestinian delegate Hanan Ashrawi.
The task there is herculean. The PA faces obstruction not only from 
Washington but from supposed allies like the European Union, the UN and 
even Russia, the three other members of the so-called Quartet. No sooner had 
Abbas submitted his bid to the Security Council than all four 
united to contain it, alarmed that a US veto would inflame anti-Western 
passions across the Middle East. The Quartet called for the two sides to resume 
negotiations in a month and reach a peace agreement in a year.
That proposal has been tried in the past. It will tank this time too. Abbas 
says there can be no return to talks unless they are accompanied 
by a freeze on settlement-building and are based on the 1967 armistice 
lines as the border between Israel and a future Palestinian state. The 
Quartet statement specifies neither.
As of now, six of the Security Council’s fifteen members are backing 
the PA’s bid. It needs nine to force a vote. If it fails to get a vote, 
that would suit the United States and, it seems, the Quartet.
Abbas’s dilemma is acute. If he accepts the Quartet’s terms, he would undo all 
the kudos he has gained for his refusal to bend under US 
pressure. But if he rejects them, he risks alienating the EU, the UN and 
Russia, the powers he thinks are needed as a counterweight to 
Washington’s pro-Israel bias. This dilemma exposes the weakness at the 
heart of the UN gambit.
There have been two camps behind the UN bid in the PA leadership. 
Both agreed that for domestic reasons, the Obama administration will not be 
able to broker even partially fair negotiations this side of the 
2012 presidential elections. But one camp, led by Abbas, believes the US 
abdication could be offset by upgrading Palestine’s status at the UN 
and internationalizing the negotiations to include the EU, the UN and 
Russia. The aim was never to end Oslo’s model of bilateralism per se but to 
freight it with more favorable conditions.
The other camp says Oslo is dead, and argues that an upgrade in UN 
status—either as a full member or the lesser non-member observer 
state—would strengthen the PA legally and politically as a “state under 
occupation.” It may even allow for prosecution of Israel at the 
International Criminal Court.
The problem is that both camps are reliant on others to further their 
diplomacy. And currently they are up against a US-EU bloc with two 
aims. The main one is to spare the United States the shame of a veto at 
the Security Council. But another is to slow Palestine’s becoming a 
non-member observer state at the General Assembly, a move the Quartet 
believes could end all hope of negotiations and trigger Israeli-US 
sanctions against the PA.
There are other flaws in the PA’s strategy. Abbas received a rousing 
welcome when he returned to Ramallah. But the largely stage-managed 
rallies there contrasted poorly with the minuscule gatherings in support of the 
UN bid in occupied East Jerusalem, among Palestinian citizens of Israel and in 
the diaspora, let alone the zero demonstrations in 
Hamas-ruled Gaza. This is testimony of the PA’s failure to ground its UN 
strategy in a genuine national consensus.
Abbas also said the UN bid was “the Palestinian spring.” Yet in New 
York he paid only lip service to those democratic movements and states 
most associated with the Arab uprisings. When Turkish Prime Minister 
Recep Tayyip Erdogan addressed the UN, not a single Palestinian delegate was 
present.
Erdogan has been the regional leader who has made Palestinian 
independence a cornerstone of a new Middle East. Used correctly—by 
inscribing the Palestinian narrative of self-determination in the Arab 
narrative of freedom—the Arab uprisings could be marshaled by the PA as a 
powerful counterweight to the forces facing them at the UN, especially 
since the only reason the Quartet has become engaged, admitted one EU 
diplomat, is out of fear that “the Israel-Palestine conflict could 
become an issue on the Arab street.”
Time will tell whether Abbas turns to the region to bolster the UN 
bid or remains ensnared by it. By temperament he prefers diplomacy to 
revolutionary change. Last week’s defiance of US power may have been his finest 
hour in the eyes of his people, but it also marked the failure 
of an Oslo model he owned for more than eighteen years. “I don’t know 
what to do when I return,” he confided to a friend in New York.
Another Palestinian official was even blunter about the absence of a 
Palestinian strategy. What comes after September, he was asked. 
“October,” he said.

http://www.thenation.com/article/163677/mahmoud-abbas-high-stakes-un-gamble


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to