It was an image for the  history books. At least that's what the five world leaders would like to  have thought as they strutted down the red carpeted hall of the White  House recently with their heads held high. Forming a well-choreographed  and symbolic flying "V," the US president led the way, flanked by his  counterparts representing Israel, Palestine, Jordan and Egypt. These men  in suits wanted to show the world that they're ready to plow through  any and all obstacles that stand in the way of peace in the Middle East.
It's a picture that bears a striking resemblance to one taken a decade  and a half earlier when then US President Bill Clinton led the same  nations' representatives down the the same red-carpeted hall at the  White House. All one needs to do is replace those leaders with their  successors, save the Egyptian president who was present in both. Another  historic image -- although one most have probably forgotten -- that  also sought to send the message that peace is on its way.
And yet here we are, 16 years later, with the highly anticipated peace  still on its way, or so we're told. A closer look at the five  representatives in the picture should help explain why it's yet to  arrive.
Spearheading the group is Barack Obama. Despite running a campaign built  around the slogan of "change," the US president has shown that when it  comes to the Middle East his policies barely differ, if at all, from  those of his predecessors. Not only has he continued the occupations of  Iraq and Afghanistan while arming and supporting the most brutal and  undemocratic autocracies around the region, but he has also been sure to  maintain the US' "special friendship" with Israel regardless of the  ongoing injustices the latter commits on a daily basis.
Next to him is Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister. As leader  of the country who receives the most aid from the US, Netanyahu has not  only continued the occupation and the siege of Gaza, but he refuses to  slow down -- not to mention end -- the ongoing colonization of  Palestinian land in the West Bank through settlement construction and  land theft. If left unchecked, Netanyahu's aggressive rhetoric and  actions toward nearby nations will most likely spark another regional  Israeli-led conflict before he leaves office.
But more importantly than understanding these two nations whose roles in  the Middle East should come as no surprise to anyone by now, is  understanding the "other" side represented in Washington: the Arab  governments.
At the forefront is the supposed representative of the Palestinian  people, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. In recent years,  the PA's most notable governing role has been its repression of an  already oppressed people in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. To  quell any popular protest by Palestinians against the Israeli occupier,  the PA has used its American-supplied and Israeli-approved weaponry and  riot gear, and arrested and beaten Palestinians who voice their dissent.  This was most clear during Israel's brutal assault on Gaza in the  winter of 2008-09 and after the more recent attack on the Gaza Freedom  Flotilla when Palestinian protestors in Ramallah and elsewhere were  prevented from taking to the streets. Only two weeks ago, after a car  full of Israeli settlers were killed in the occupied West Bank, the PA  waged an arrest campaign rounding up hundreds of Palestinians in the  occupied territory in a move that has been condemned by numerous  Palestinian human rights organizations.
More importantly than the above, is the question of the Abbas government's legitimacy. Recently, the Israeli daily Haaretz  quoted Abbas' spokesperson Nabil Abu Rudaineh as saying: "President  Mahmoud Abbas came to power through free, democratic and authentic  elections supervised by more than two thousand international and Arab  monitors."
One has to first wonder how "free" and "democratic" elections can be  when held in a territory under foreign military occupation. Moreover,  the majority of Palestinians are living in a forced state of exile and  were not invited to cast their ballots. But for the sake of argument,  let's take Abu Rudaineh at his word.
Abu Rudaineh seems to contend that those elections, held in January  2005, somehow granted the PA president with an unlimited mandate.  However, the term was limited, and Mahmoud Abbas was elected by voters  to serve four years in office, meaning that his elected mandate as  president of the PA expired more than a year and a half ago.
In a move out of the autocratic ruler playbook, Abbas' term was extended  by the PA's "emergency powers" out of fear that he would be replaced by  someone from a rival party -- most likely from the more popular Hamas  movement -- should new elections be held. Ironically, the most recent  "free" and "democratic" elections held in Palestine were in 2006, when  Hamas defeated Fatah, taking the majority of seats in parliamentary  elections. It's no surprise that Abu Rudaineh made no mention of this  event in his statement.
Despite being elected by the Palestinian people living under occupation,  Hamas has been subjected to boycott by the US and the PA and the area  of governance it has been confined to laid siege to by Israel and Egypt.  While Hamas hasn't been ideally democratic in its governing of the  besieged Gaza Strip, its continued ostracism by Washington, Israel and  the PA sends the message that when it comes to peace talks, democracy  need not apply.
This message was reinforced through the presence of the two other Arab leaders at Abbas' side.
On one end is Hosni Mubarak who has ruled Egypt under suffocating  "emergency laws" (sound familiar?) since 1981 when he became president.  Although friendly with the US and Israel, Mubarak runs one of the most  brutal and corrupt dictatorships in the region. With a leadership  dependent on -- and one of the main beneficiaries of -- US aid,  Mubarak's mukhabarat (intelligence service) tolerates no  dissent. Many of those who have tried to challenge his rule have joined  the tens of thousands of political prisoners in Egypt's jails, where  torture and abuse are well-documented and commonplace.
Pictured opposite Mubarak is Jordan's King Abdullah II bin al-Hussein.  Although Jordan is often hailed in the US as a "modern" and "moderate"  state, there is little democracy to speak of there. Parliament, which  has very little power, was dissolved last year half way through its term  without any explanation, and elections delayed until this November will  be held under a law widely criticized by opponents and passed by  cabinet decree under "emergency provisions." Draconian laws on the press  and nongovernmental organizations severely limit freedom of speech and  association, and political activists carry out their work in the  ubiquitous shadow of the country's security services.
It's no coincidence that both of these men are considered two of the US'  strongest allies in the Middle East. Both continue a US-backed policy  of "peace" with Israel despite that policy having little to no support  from their populations.
That said, the image of the five men at the White House can easily be  dissected as the following: a dictator, a monarch, a puppet and two  heads of government responsible for the region's only military  occupations -- not the best ingredients for making world peace.
Although not invited to the White House, the numerous grassroots  movements across the Middle East present the best hope for bringing  peace and justice to this region. And it's those increasingly popular  movements that people around the world concerned with the fate of the  Middle East should support. In the meantime, let the puppets and their  masters walk on red carpets in Washington while the real change is made  by those with their feet on the ground.
Matthew Cassel is based in Beirut, Lebanon and is Assistant Editor of The Electronic Intifada. His website is http://justimage.org.2 + 2 = Middle East Peace? Ctd
        
Wednesday, 15 September 2010
Washington peace talks: democracy need not apply
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