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Douglas Carpenter

(20,226 posts)
168. The Myth of the Generous Offer - Distorting the Camp David negotiations By Seth Ackerman
Sat Dec 1, 2012, 04:28 AM
Dec 2012
for FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting)

http://fair.org/extra-online-articles/the-myth-of-the-generous-offer/

The seemingly endless volleys of attack and retaliation in the Middle East leave many people wondering why the two sides can't reach an agreement. The answer is simple, according to numerous commentators: At the Camp David meeting in July 2000, Israel "offered extraordinary concessions" (Michael Kelly, Washington Post, 3/13/02), "far-reaching concessions" (Boston Globe, 12/30/01), "unprecedented concessions" (E.J. Dionne, Washington Post, 12/4/01). Israel’s "generous peace terms" (L.A. Times editorial, 3/15/02) constituted "the most far-reaching offer ever" (Chicago Tribune editorial, 6/6/01) to create a Palestinian state. In short, Camp David was "an unprecedented concession" to the Palestinians (Time, 12/25/00).

But due to "Arafat's recalcitrance" (L.A. Times editorial, 4/9/02) and "Palestinian rejectionism" (Mortimer Zuckerman, U.S. News & World Report, 3/22/02), "Arafat walked away from generous Israeli peacemaking proposals without even making a counteroffer" (Salon, 3/8/01). Yes, Arafat "walked away without making a counteroffer" (Samuel G. Freedman, USA Today, 6/18/01). Israel "offered peace terms more generous than ever before and Arafat did not even make a counteroffer" (Chicago Sun-Times editorial, 11/10/00). In case the point isn't clear: "At Camp David, Ehud Barak offered the Palestinians an astonishingly generous peace with dignity and statehood. Arafat not only turned it down, he refused to make a counteroffer!" (Charles Krauthammer, Seattle Times, 10/16/00).

This account is one of the most tenacious myths of the conflict. Its implications are obvious: There is nothing Israel can do to make peace with its Palestinian neighbors. The Israeli army’s increasingly deadly attacks, in this version, can be seen purely as self-defense against Palestinian aggression that is motivated by little more than blind hatred.

Locking in occupation

To understand what actually happened at Camp David, it's necessary to know that for many years the PLO has officially called for a two-state solution in which Israel would keep the 78 percent of the Palestine Mandate (as Britain's protectorate was called) that it has controlled since 1948, and a Palestinian state would be formed on the remaining 22 percent that Israel has occupied since the 1967 war (the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem). Israel would withdraw completely from those lands, return to the pre-1967 borders and a resolution to the problem of the Palestinian refugees who were forced to flee their homes in 1948 would be negotiated between the two sides. Then, in exchange, the Palestinians would agree to recognize Israel (PLO Declaration, 12/7/88; PLO Negotiations Department).

Although some people describe Israel's Camp David proposal as practically a return to the 1967 borders, it was far from that. Under the plan, Israel would have withdrawn completely from the small Gaza Strip. But it would annex strategically important and highly valuable sections of the West Bank--while retaining "security control" over other parts--that would have made it impossible for the Palestinians to travel or trade freely within their own state without the permission of the Israeli government (Political Science Quarterly, 6/22/01; New York Times, 7/26/01; Report on Israeli Settlement in the Occupied Territories, 9-10/00; Robert Malley, New York Review of Books, 8/9/01).

The annexations and security arrangements would divide the West Bank into three disconnected cantons. In exchange for taking fertile West Bank lands that happen to contain most of the region's scarce water aquifers, Israel offered to give up a piece of its own territory in the Negev Desert--about one-tenth the size of the land it would annex--including a former toxic waste dump.

Because of the geographic placement of Israel’s proposed West Bank annexations, Palestinians living in their new "independent state" would be forced to cross Israeli territory every time they traveled or shipped goods from one section of the West Bank to another, and Israel could close those routes at will. Israel would also retain a network of so-called "bypass roads" that would crisscross the Palestinian state while remaining sovereign Israeli territory, further dividing the West Bank.

Israel was also to have kept "security control" for an indefinite period of time over the Jordan Valley, the strip of territory that forms the border between the West Bank and neighboring Jordan. Palestine would not have free access to its own international borders with Jordan and Egypt--putting Palestinian trade, and therefore its economy, at the mercy of the Israeli military.

Had Arafat agreed to these arrangements, the Palestinians would have permanently locked in place many of the worst aspects of the very occupation they were trying to bring to an end. For at Camp David, Israel also demanded that Arafat sign an "end-of-conflict" agreement stating that the decades-old war between Israel and the Palestinians was over and waiving all further claims against Israel.

Violence or negotiation?

The Camp David meeting ended without agreement on July 25, 2000. At this point, according to conventional wisdom, the Palestinian leader's "response to the Camp David proposals was not a counteroffer but an assault" (Oregonian editorial, 8/15/01). "Arafat figured he could push one more time to get one more batch of concessions. The talks collapsed. Violence erupted again" (E.J. Dionne, Washington Post, 12/4/01). He "used the uprising to obtain through violence...what he couldn't get at the Camp David bargaining table" (Chicago Sun-Times, 12/21/00).

But the Intifada actually did not start for another two months. In the meantime, there was relative calm in the occupied territories. During this period of quiet, the two sides continued negotiating behind closed doors. Meanwhile, life for the Palestinian population under Israeli occupation went on as usual. On July 28, Prime Minister Barak announced that Israel had no plans to withdraw from the town of Abu Dis, as it had pledged to do in the 1995 Oslo II agreement (Israel Wire, 7/28/00). In August and early September, Israel announced new construction on Jewish-only settlements in Efrat and Har Adar, while the Israeli statistics bureau reported that settlement building had increased 81 percent in the first quarter of 2000. Two Palestinian houses were demolished in East Jerusalem, and Arab residents of Sur Bahir and Suwahara received expropriation notices; their houses lay in the path of a planned Jewish-only highway (Report on Israeli Settlement in the Occupied Territories, 11-12/00).

The Intifada began on September 29, 2000, when Israeli troops opened fire on unarmed Palestinian rock-throwers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, killing four and wounding over 200 (State Department human rights report for Israel, 2/01). Demonstrations spread throughout the territories. Barak and Arafat, having both staked their domestic reputations on their ability to win a negotiated peace from the other side, now felt politically threatened by the violence. In January 2001, they resumed formal negotiations at Taba, Egypt.

The Taba talks are one of the most significant and least remembered events of the "peace process." While so far in 2002 (1/1/02-5/31/02), Camp David has been mentioned in conjunction with Israel 35 times on broadcast network news shows, Taba has come up only four times--never on any of the nightly newscasts. In February 2002, Israel's leading newspaper, Ha'aretz (2/14/02), published for the first time the text of the European Union's official notes of the Taba talks, which were confirmed in their essential points by negotiators from both sides.

"Anyone who reads the European Union account of the Taba talks," Ha'aretz noted in its introduction, "will find it hard to believe that only 13 months ago, Israel and the Palestinians were so close to a peace agreement." At Taba, Israel dropped its demand to control Palestine's borders and the Jordan Valley. The Palestinians, for the first time, made detailed counterproposals--in other words, counteroffers--showing which changes to the 1967 borders they would be willing to accept. The Israeli map that has emerged from the talks shows a fully contiguous West Bank, though with a very narrow middle and a strange gerrymandered western border to accommodate annexed settlements.

In the end, however, all this proved too much for Israel's Labor prime minister. On January 28, Barak unilaterally broke off the negotiations. "The pressure of Israeli public opinion against the talks could not be resisted," Ben-Ami said (New York Times, 7/26/01).

Settlements off the table

In February 2001, Ariel Sharon was elected prime minister of Israel. Sharon has made his position on the negotiations crystal clear. "You know, it's not by accident that the settlements are located where they are," he said in an interview a few months after his election (Ha'aretz, 4/12/01).

They safeguard the cradle of the Jewish people's birth and also provide strategic depth which is vital to our existence.The settlements were established according to the conception that, come what may, we have to hold the western security area [of the West Bank], which is adjacent to the Green Line, and the eastern security area along the Jordan River and the roads linking the two. And Jerusalem, of course. And the hill aquifer. Nothing has changed with respect to any of those things. The importance of the security areas has not diminished, it may even have increased. So I see no reason for evacuating any settlements.

Meanwhile, Ehud Barak has repudiated his own positions at Taba, and now speaks pointedly of the need for a negotiated settlement "based on the principles presented at Camp David" (New York Times op-ed, 4/14/02).

In April 2002, the countries of the Arab League--from moderate Jordan to hardline Iraq--unanimously agreed on a Saudi peace plan centering around full peace, recognition and normalization of relations with Israel in exchange for a complete Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 borders as well as a "just resolution" to the refugee issue. Palestinian negotiator Nabil Sha'ath declared himself "delighted" with the plan. "The proposal constitutes the best terms of reference for our political struggle," he told the Jordan Times (3/28/02).

Ariel Sharon responded by declaring that "a return to the 1967 borders will destroy Israel" (New York Times, 5/4/02). In a commentary on the Arab plan, Ha'aretz's Bradley Burston (2/27/02) noted that the offer was "forcing Israel to confront peace terms it has quietly feared for decades."

http://fair.org/extra-online-articles/the-myth-of-the-generous-offer/

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Tough for those who don't like it dipsydoodle Nov 2012 #1
Yeah, if you're watching the UN still, Susan Rice is SHRIEKING right now! Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #2
I'd literally just walked in door dipsydoodle Nov 2012 #5
But the US didn't veto it BainsBane Nov 2012 #50
It wasn't subject to a veto - that's why. dipsydoodle Nov 2012 #60
We have no veto in the UNGA, we voted against it. nt bemildred Nov 2012 #61
Thanks BainsBane Nov 2012 #62
There is no veto of a General Assembly vote. JackRiddler Nov 2012 #72
No kidding, she was literally SHRIEKING. Men can shriek. Women can shriek. She was SHRIEKING. Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #73
This I assume which is already up on Youtube for posterity. dipsydoodle Nov 2012 #86
speaking into a microphone, but still had to yell.. that takes talent Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #96
Nobody who has ever been the target of shrieking would call this shrieking. ieoeja Nov 2012 #138
didn't score many points on that one PatrynXX Nov 2012 #71
K&R & Next step? nt patrice Nov 2012 #3
Haul both their asses back to the negotiating table with the newly-added stick that... Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #4
Netanyahu wish it, to "beat off the extremely right-wing elements"? LOL, I seriously doubt it. nt MH1 Nov 2012 #84
LOL, I know. Just enunciating that he's got a choice. Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #139
he is those elements. yurbud Nov 2012 #136
To stop the apartheid Dont call me Shirley Nov 2012 #6
Apartheid to Some USMCMustang Nov 2012 #19
I know it's not what you meant...but ironically yes, that is the precise definition of apartheid.. Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #22
Apartheid to anyone who knows what Apartheid is. Ash_F Nov 2012 #37
Because the Apartheid South African Government Samjm Nov 2012 #101
Pretty sure that's not it Ash_F Nov 2012 #130
Yes, I clearly remember when being a bigot went out of fashion in the very early 1990's, hughee99 Nov 2012 #135
If I take you implication to be correct, that is literally as a bad as the "states rights" people... Ash_F Nov 2012 #137
A pretty gross argument to make? hughee99 Nov 2012 #142
That argument does not line up with the timeline of events. Ash_F Nov 2012 #150
What??? hughee99 Nov 2012 #151
Yes, I agree with you 100% Samjm Nov 2012 #155
It's Aparthied libodem Nov 2012 #83
+1000 DeSwiss Nov 2012 #38
this move shakes up the status quo, slightly Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #13
Bibi "moderate"??? Hell Hath No Fury Nov 2012 #21
you missed my point Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #25
Good question atreides1 Nov 2012 #17
maybe the Arab states could increase funding dlwickham Nov 2012 #64
Arab states provide more funding? That is funny. former9thward Nov 2012 #78
+1 n/t JudyM Nov 2012 #115
"The Arab states treat the Palestinians like shit." - But they don't bomb them or steal their stuff Scootaloo Nov 2012 #118
No its not Jordan and Lebanon. former9thward Nov 2012 #134
Didn't Egypt and Jordan occupy Palestine before Israel took over the occupation? ieoeja Nov 2012 #144
All good points. former9thward Nov 2012 #147
Well, considering the 2000 "offer" forbade any right of return to the Palestinian "state..." Scootaloo Nov 2012 #156
I'll trust Bill Clinton on the subject more than you. former9thward Nov 2012 #157
I'd suggest some research Scootaloo Nov 2012 #159
Unconditional right of return will never happen hack89 Dec 2012 #174
The Myth of the Generous Offer - Distorting the Camp David negotiations By Seth Ackerman Douglas Carpenter Dec 2012 #168
The Chief Israeli negotiator and Israeli Foreign Minister Shlomo ben-Ami said that he would have Douglas Carpenter Dec 2012 #169
+2 madrchsod Dec 2012 #177
israel has internal problems that will have to be dealt with. madrchsod Dec 2012 #178
I don't see peace on the horizon with current Israeli attitudes cpwm17 Dec 2012 #179
"the Arab states" are in no position to act independent of US policy.. Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #102
Congratulations! Hell Hath No Fury Nov 2012 #7
Rice is embarrassing herself LittleBlue Nov 2012 #8
Her true colors are shining through. Not just about this issue, but about who she is as a person.nt Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #11
so are yours, pal. MjolnirTime Nov 2012 #34
LOL, my NINE years of posts here versus your...LOL...your, what again? Flimsy quip? Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #36
Are you kidding? Just because Rice is under attack by the Repubs doesn't mean Chemisse Nov 2012 #75
They were apparent a long time ago. I was amazed to see how few remembered the polarizing sabrina 1 Nov 2012 #42
If you think this is about Rice BainsBane Nov 2012 #52
Rice is just holding the policy line, actually Scootaloo Nov 2012 #119
I really liked Susan Rice during the first Obama campaign... bunnies Nov 2012 #12
You might as well say you don't like Obama BainsBane Nov 2012 #53
I can't imagine what the Republicans have against her, she articulates business-as-usual just fine.. Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #18
The Rs are just 2naSalit Nov 2012 #30
I can't tell the difference between her speech and those of Bush's cronies LittleBlue Nov 2012 #33
This is her, she was always like this. I wonder why so few remembered why the Left always had sabrina 1 Nov 2012 #45
This is US policy BainsBane Nov 2012 #55
This is the best morality litmus test I know cpwm17 Nov 2012 #70
The Republicans hate her King_David Nov 2012 #47
Just another reason to not consider her as SOS, IMO. MessiahRp Nov 2012 #48
And what Ambassador to the UN would do anything different? BainsBane Nov 2012 #58
You're right, her ancestors ARE.... ReRe Nov 2012 #76
A question quakerboy Nov 2012 #153
Good. They deserve to have access to the ICC. bunnies Nov 2012 #9
expected but still excellent news stupidicus Nov 2012 #10
Caught this beautiful picture on Haaretz just a few minutes ago: Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #14
Omg thats so awesome!! darkangel218 Nov 2012 #23
Yes Jewish people want all that , however that pictured misguided Jew from King_David Nov 2012 #49
Maybe they just want to make peace? darkangel218 Nov 2012 #54
Who are you to label and value or devalue Jews? Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #57
Should be obvious shouldn't it? He is da KING! :P nt Bodhi BloodWave Nov 2012 #68
That group , The Naturei Karta King_David Nov 2012 #82
He's right leftynyc Nov 2012 #127
...Where their leader spoke AGAINST holocaust denial. Scootaloo Nov 2012 #120
I'm not a religious Jew, but who are to discount them? Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #161
Who am I ? King_David Dec 2012 #163
Great photo! Spazito Nov 2012 #24
Awesome, good for him. Ash_F Nov 2012 #40
I don't see a link on YouTube yet. You HAVE to see the video. She's like shriek-growling. Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #41
Here it is (video of Rice) subsuelo Nov 2012 #79
That is beautiful! I wish them peace, both the people of Palestine and the people of Israel. sabrina 1 Nov 2012 #59
He has nothing to do with the people of Israel, King_David Dec 2012 #160
Good for him! Marrah_G Nov 2012 #65
He is not Israeli, King_David Dec 2012 #162
I wanna shake that guy's hand! Harry_Scrote Nov 2012 #141
This person is from Neturei Karta harrose Nov 2012 #152
sigh... Marrah_G Dec 2012 #176
K & R Scurrilous Nov 2012 #15
It's a start. AzDar Nov 2012 #16
See also: Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #20
and so it begins K&R azurnoir Nov 2012 #26
this is a good day....a very, very good day Douglas Carpenter Nov 2012 #27
yes it is indeed n/t azurnoir Nov 2012 #28
+1 darkangel218 Nov 2012 #31
In my lifetime...literally...since my birth year. I'm very proud of the UN. libdem4life Nov 2012 #29
just an eversoslight 2naSalit Nov 2012 #35
Hopefully also in my lifetime, in spite of our so-called leaders. libdem4life Nov 2012 #39
This message was self-deleted by its author darkangel218 Nov 2012 #44
Indeed. 2naSalit Nov 2012 #63
that's giving credit where it's squarely not due--most of Europe abstained Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #113
You are correct as to voting meaning Western Europe. The abstentions beat Nays. libdem4life Nov 2012 #114
I wish them well, and I hope it works out. hrmjustin Nov 2012 #32
Excellent news..... AnOhioan Nov 2012 #43
K&R DeSwiss Nov 2012 #46
+1! darkangel218 Nov 2012 #56
Countries who voted no... shaayecanaan Nov 2012 #51
I love it! polly7 Nov 2012 #66
White Phosphorus KimonoGirl Nov 2012 #67
Well it's about time magical thyme Nov 2012 #69
I sincerely hope that this is the light at the end of the tunnel LadyHawkAZ Nov 2012 #74
woo hoo libodem Nov 2012 #77
What a shame. unreadierLizard Nov 2012 #80
Blah, blah, blaaaaah KimonoGirl Nov 2012 #85
Clever riposte. unreadierLizard Nov 2012 #88
Um, bottle rockets vs the US nuclear arsenal. It's wearing thin. libdem4life Nov 2012 #89
Have you gone through the looking glass? Comrade Grumpy Nov 2012 #92
Not everyone who disagrees with you is a RW shill. unreadierLizard Nov 2012 #93
It's time you realize leftynyc Nov 2012 #129
Was it useless during partition? Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #165
I don't really care if it's a minority position. Comrade Grumpy Dec 2012 #175
You're beautifully and stunningly full of shit; here's why Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #106
thank you - brilliant response Douglas Carpenter Nov 2012 #112
+1. nt bemildred Nov 2012 #132
Could you maybe shoe a few more blather-points into your Gish Gallop? Scootaloo Nov 2012 #121
It changes nothing leftynyc Nov 2012 #128
"Israel just can't win." Ash_F Nov 2012 #131
I disagree booley Nov 2012 #154
What an incredibly stupid post. Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #164
The 9 'no' votes godai Nov 2012 #81
Wasn't that the coalition of the willing? AldoLeopold Nov 2012 #94
K&R ReRe Nov 2012 #87
Hope for two states....PRICELESS. From Abbas: Jefferson23 Nov 2012 #90
I'm going to get banned for this and I don't care AldoLeopold Nov 2012 #91
Woa! darkangel218 Nov 2012 #95
Combined with this horse manure from our nation AldoLeopold Nov 2012 #98
Also AldoLeopold Nov 2012 #105
Please don't generalize. It's unproductive. Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #166
Look at my post #105 AldoLeopold Dec 2012 #170
Got it. Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #171
You were dead on though AldoLeopold Dec 2012 #172
We've all been there. We're human. Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #173
lol@Susan Rice trying to attract GOP'ers by seeming super-pissed off Welcome_hubby Nov 2012 #97
I'm trying to find video of her about this AldoLeopold Nov 2012 #99
look above to dipsydoodle's post #86.. Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #103
Many thanks! AldoLeopold Nov 2012 #104
no problem Alamuti Lotus Nov 2012 #107
Such Good News NeoBergie Nov 2012 #100
Welcome to DU! hrmjustin Nov 2012 #108
Can Palastinians have their country back now? nt and-justice-for-all Nov 2012 #109
Well, I'm glad that's settled. Now we finally know the borders! Pterodactyl Nov 2012 #110
Now Israel cant stop humanitarian aid to Palestine anymore darkangel218 Nov 2012 #111
what new priviliges? Blackhawk44 Nov 2012 #116
Yes, now they could join the ICC ( International Criminal Court ) if they wanted to darkangel218 Nov 2012 #124
knr again Douglas Carpenter Nov 2012 #117
it's about time nydem14499rsgx Nov 2012 #122
138 + 9 + 41 + 3 = 191 Hosnon Nov 2012 #123
Largely symbolic? CrawlingChaos Nov 2012 #125
I saw the same thing (probably the same interview) with him on... Poll_Blind Nov 2012 #140
Palestinian National Initiative Fantastic Anarchist Dec 2012 #167
Since it is impossible to get to an actual "two-state solution" from here cpwm17 Nov 2012 #126
Good. Direct negotiations have failed for years. UN involvement has been sorely needed. n/t Pryderi Nov 2012 #133
Waiting for the angry chorus Harry_Scrote Nov 2012 #143
"The Czech Republic was unique in Europe, joining the United States, Israel, Canada, Panama..." Fearless Nov 2012 #145
Brownie points? dipsydoodle Nov 2012 #148
Now that pun Israel. Fearless Nov 2012 #149
There are 2 types of people in Israel. Great Caesars Ghost Nov 2012 #146
I think it's a step forward adieu Nov 2012 #158
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