A Change Without A
Change
Friday, January 14, 2005
By: Tashbih Sayyed
There are plenty of reasons for the Arabs who claim to be Palestinians
to be happy; Yasser Arafat's corrupt control is gone but everything
else that he stood for – his determination to destroy the Jewish
State, his resolve to see the return of Arabs to their "ancestral
homes" in Israel, his mission to make East Jerusalem the capital
of the second Palestinian Arab state, remains in tact. They now have
a President who calls Israel a Zionist enemy and declares his intentions, "the
little jihad (holy war) has ended, and now the big jihad's beginning." He
promises to reform the chaotic, corrupt and ineffective Palestinian
Authority created by Arafat, bring order to the unruly security forces
and rein in the armed militias that the Arabs themselves were disgusted
with, but remains unyielding on issues like, Israeli withdrawal from
all the West Bank and Gaza Strip, equating to 22% of Palestine before
the creation of Israel in 1948, East Jerusalem to be the capital
of the new Palestinian state and Palestinian refugees right of return
to their "ancestral" homes in Israel.
Arab Street greeted Abbas with a promise, "We will give you
our blood and our soul." Arabs in Palestine are happy and prepared
to offer, "A Million Shaheeds (martyrs-suicide bombers) marching
to Jerusalem."
What has made Mahmoud Abbas a more effective and useful leader
is his ability to make the world forget his past and embrace him
as a moderate. The world ignored the fact that in a thesis for
his Ph.D. Mahmoud Abbas denied the Holocaust and only extremists
and hatefilled minds can deny such a horrible truth. But his victory
is complete as today, even Israel's Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon
considers him a moderate. He has achieved this victory by playing
his cards very intelligently and cunningly. He convinced the world
that he is willing to talk peace with Israel and is against Intifada – the
Arab uprising - without rejecting terror as a tool or condemning
terrorists like HAMAS, Hezbollah, Yasser Arafat's Martyr's Brigade
and without accepting that before any meaningful peace talks can
even start, a total and permanent change of heart as regards to
the acceptance of the Jewish state is a must.
The quarters that consider Mahmoud Abbas, a moderate forget that
he has never disapproved terrorism against Israelis. He has only
said that under the present circumstances, terrorism is counterproductive.
He has repeatedly said he would never crackdown on terrorists.
Abbas's attitude toward terrorist groups is no secret. Just one
day after the State Department transferred $23.5 million on December
30, to the Palestinian Authority to underline, according to assistant
Secretary of State William Burns, American "confidence in
the direction of the PA's reform program," Mahmoud Abbas was
seen riding on the shoulders of Zakaria Zubeidi - a notorious terrorist
and campaigning with the al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade in Jenin. Terrorist
groups know that he will never dismantle their outfits. That's
why they only boycotted the elections but did not oppose Abbas.
They realize that in Mahmoud Abbas they have a person who can
keep the world attention away from them. They are sure that under
Abbas's government, they will remain a controlling force in the
Arab community in Palestine. According to a close Abbas aide, Nabil
Sha'ath, "there are no differences over the objectives," between
the Palestinian Authority and the other groups.
Being a great believer in a principal that entering into a peace
agreement, when weak and breaking them when strong, Mahmoud Abbas
does not want the terrorist groups to give up their war against
Israel; he only wants a Hudna a temporary cease fire. He wants
the terrorists to recognize that by postponing their attacks on
Israelis for some time, they will encourage the US to increase
its pressure on Israel. Bush has already said, "It is essential
that Israel keep a vision of two states living side by side in
peace; and that, as the Palestinians begin to develop the institutions
of a state, that the Israel government support the development
of those institutions and recognize that it is essential that there
be a viable economy, that there be a viable health care system,
that people be allowed to start building a society that meets their
hopes and needs."
Mahmoud Abbas has not deviated from Arafat's mission to destroy
Israel, he has merely changed the tactics. He betrayed his real
self when he promised Palestinian refugees they'll be able to return
home one day, knowing very well that such comment has derailed
peace talks in the past. According to Associated Press, after embracing
militant leaders in refugee camps and pledging to stand by the
gunmen in their struggle to avoid capture by Israel, Abbas took
an uncompromising stance on the refugee issue.
Addressing a rally in Gaza City, Abbas said Palestinian refugees
and their descendants from the two-year war that followed Israel's
creation in 1948 have the right to return to their original homes. "We
will never forget the rights of the refugees, and we will never
forget their suffering. They will eventually gain their rights,
and the day will come when the refugees return home," Abbas
told the cheering crowd.
Abbas's intentions are so obvious that for a great number of realists
nothing has changed. They are not deceived by Mahmoud Abbas's promises
to reform the chaotic, corrupt and ineffective Palestinian Authority
created by Arafat, to bring order to the unruly security forces
and rein in the armed militias; Arab Street's frustration with
Arafat's corrupt ways and their desire to destroy the Jewish State
are two separate things. A desire to get rid of internal corruption
does not translate into a willingness to accept the Jewish state.
For anyone who knows the true ethos of Arab Street, the election
results have confirmed that Arabs in Palestine have total faith
in Mahmoud Abbas's ability to complete the unfinished agenda of
Yasser Arafat. They know that within his heart, he is no moderate.
His record is impressive; as an important Fatah leader for more
than forty years, he was the architect of numerous mass-murder
terrorist attacks against Jews.
According to a report, Abbas told Alsharq Al-Awsat on March 3,
2003 that when he met with Hamas terror leaders, "We didn't
talk about a break in the armed struggle ... It is our right to
resist. The Intifada must continue and it is the right of the Palestinian
People to resist and use all possible means in order to defend
its presence and existence." Abbas said in Cairo on July 23,
2003, that "cracking down on Hamas, Jihad, and the Palestinian
organizations is not an option at all"; offered cabinet positions
to leaders of Hamas and Islamic Jihad (N. Y. Times, March 31, 2003,
Israel Radio, March 31, 2003); praised the Arab terrorists imprisoned
by Israel as "political prisoners" and "heroes";
and authored a book denying that the Nazis murdered six million
Jews.
The important fact that has to be kept in sight is that the terrorist
group Hamas, which represents large swathes of the Arab population,
boycotted the vote and remains a force to be reckoned with. HAMAS
will continue to control the direction of Arab politics in Palestine.
Hamas is convinced that armed struggle is the only way to deal
with Israel. The civilized world must demand a complete and absolute
end to HAMAS violence as a precondition for peace. If such a precondition
is set then the world will find out that Mahmoud Abbas has no desire
to set the peace talks with Israel in motion.
To achieve a total end to HAMAS violence, Abbas will have to persuade
the terrorists to change their views - and he cannot do it as there
is no difference between his objectives and HAMAS goals. After
the election results were announced, he told hundreds of his supporters, "We
dedicate this victory to the memory of our martyred leader Yasser
Arafat, as well as all the other martyrs, those who have been wounded
as well the 11,000 prisoners behind bars in Israeli jails." He
promised, "I will work to put an end to the suffering of the
Palestinian people for they are a people who deserve our esteem,
our respect and our loyalty."
Arab leaders have convinced the Arabs that so long as Israel exists,
there sufferings will never end. Only a moderate leader can undo
the decades old poisoning of minds. Lets see if Mahmoud Abbas convince
his brothers otherwise?
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