For
Israel, Land or Peace
By
Jimmy Carter
Dear friends and
community activists,
This article by
President Jimmy Carter deserves publicity. His name, his integrity,
fairness, expertise and credibility on this subject are unquestionable.
The average American is more willing to accept the facts stated in this
article about the legality of 242 and the illegality of settlements from
"unbiased" Carter than any "regarded as biased" Arab or Arab American
leader.
May be we should ask
local papers in every city to publish his article. I am only
brainstorming. Please reply with your thoughts regarding this matter.
Toufic Al-Ashkar
For
Israel, Land or Peace
By
Jimmy Carter
Sunday, November 26,
2000 ; Page B07
An underlying reason
that years of U.S. diplomacy have failed and violence in the Middle East
persists is that some Israeli leaders continue to "create facts" by
building settlements in occupied territory. Their deliberate placement
as islands or fortresses within Palestinian areas makes the settlers
vulnerable to attack without massive military protection, frustrates
Israelis who seek peace and at the same time prevents any Palestinian
government from enjoying effective territorial integrity.
At Camp David in
September 1978, President Anwar Sadat, Prime Minister Menachem Begin and
I spent most of our time debating this issue before we finally agreed on
terms for peace between Egypt and Israel and for the resolution of
issues concerning the Palestinian people. The bilateral provisions led
to a comprehensive and lasting treaty between Egypt and Israel, made
possible at the last minute by Israel's agreement to remove its settlers
from the Sinai. But similar constraints concerning the status of the
West Bank and Gaza have not been honored, and have led to continuing
confrontation and violence.
The foundation for all
my proposals to the two leaders was the official position of the
government of the United States, based on international law that was
mutually accepted by the United States, Egypt, Israel and other nations,
and encapsulated in United Nations Security Council Resolution 242. Our
government's legal commitment to support this well-balanced resolution
has not changed.
Although the
acceptance of Resolution 242 was a contentious issue at Camp David,
Prime Minister Begin ultimately acknowledged its applicability, "in all
its parts." The text emphasizes "the inadmissibility of the acquisition
of territory by war and the need to work for a just and lasting peace in
which every State in the area can live in security." It requires the
"withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories occupied in the
recent [1967] conflict" and the right of every state in the area "to
live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries free from threats
or acts of force."
It was clear that
Israeli settlements in the occupied territories were a direct violation
of this agreement and were, according to the long-stated American
position, both "illegal and an obstacle to peace." Accordingly, Prime
Minister Begin pledged that there would be no establishment of new
settlements until after the final peace negotiations were completed. But
later, under Likud pressure, he declined to honor this commitment,
explaining that his presumption had been that all peace talks would be
concluded within three months.
There were some
notable provisions in the Camp David Accords that related to Palestinian
autonomy and the occupation of land. A key element was that "the Israeli
military government and its civilian administration will be withdrawn as
soon as a self-governing authority has been freely elected by the
inhabitants of these areas to replace the existing military government."
This transition period was triggered by an election in the occupied
territories in January 1996, approved by the Palestinians and the
government of Israel and monitored by the Carter Center. Eighty-eight
Palestinian Council members were elected, with Yasser Arafat as
president, and this self-governing authority, with limited autonomy,
convened for the first time in March 1996.
It was also agreed
that once the powers and responsibilities of the self-governing
authority were established, "A withdrawal of Israeli armed forces will
take place and there will be a redeployment of the remaining Israeli
forces into specified security locations."
We decided early
during the Camp David talks that it would be impossible to resolve the
question of sovereignty over East Jerusalem, but proposed the following
paragraph concerning the city, on which we reached full agreement:
"Jerusalem, the city
of peace, is holy to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and all peoples
must have free access to it and enjoy the free exercise of worship and
the right to visit and transit to the holy places without distinction or
discrimination. The holy places of each faith will be under the
administration and control of their representatives. A municipal council
representative of the inhabitants of the city shall supervise essential
functions in the city such as public utilities, public transportation,
and tourism and shall ensure that each community can maintain its own
cultural and educational institutions."
At the last minute,
however, after several days of unanimous acceptance, both Sadat and
Begin agreed that there were already enough controversial elements in
the accords and requested that this paragraph, although still supported
by both sides, be deleted from the final text. Instead, the two leaders
exchanged letters, expressing the legal positions of their respective
governments regarding the status of East Jerusalem. They disagreed about
sovereignty, of course, but affirmed that the city should be undivided.
As agreed, I informed
them that "the position of the United States on Jerusalem remains as
stated by Ambassador Arthur Goldberg in the United Nations General
Assembly on July 14, 1967, and subsequently by Ambassador Charles Yost
in the United Nations Security Council on July 1, 1969." In effect,
these statements considered East Jerusalem to be part of the occupied
territories, along with the West Bank and Gaza.
The Camp David Accord
was signed by all three of us leaders with great fanfare and enthusiasm.
President Sadat and Prime Minister Begin embraced warmly at the White
House ceremony, and the final document was overwhelmingly ratified by
their respective parliaments.
With the inauguration
of President Ronald Reagan, there was a period of relative inactivity in
the Middle East, except for the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and the
subsequent expulsion of PLO forces from Beirut. President Reagan used
the announcement of this event on Sept. 1, 1982, to address the nation
on the subject of the West Bank and the Palestinians. He stated clearly
that "the Camp David agreement remains the foundation of our policy,"
and his speech
included the following
declarations:
"The Palestinian
inhabitants of the West Bank and Gaza will have full autonomy over their
own affairs."
"The United States
will not support the use of any additional land for the purpose of
settlements during the transition period. Indeed, the immediate adoption
of a settlement freeze by Israel, more than any other action, could
create the confidence needed for wider participation in these talks.
Further settlement activity is in no way necessary for the security of
Israel and only diminishes the confidence of the Arabs that a final
outcome can be freely and fairly negotiated."
In 1991 there was a
major confrontation between the governments of Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir and President George Bush concerning Israeli settlements in the
West Bank, with U.S. threats of withholding financial aid if settlement
activity continued. A conference was convened that year in Madrid with
participants of the United States, Syria, other Arab nations and some
Palestinians who did not officially represent the PLO. At a press
conference on
Nov. 1, Secretary of
State James Baker said, "When we negotiated with Israel, we negotiated
on the basis of land for peace, on the basis of total withdrawal from
territory in exchange for peaceful relations. . . . This is exactly our
position, and we wish it to be applied also in the negotiations between
Israelis and Syrians, Israelis and Palestinians. We have not changed our
position at all."
Norwegian mediators
forged an agreement in September 1993 between Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin and Arafat committing both sides to a staged peace
process. Although U.S. officials were not involved in this effort, our
government commemorated the Oslo Accords in a ceremony at the White
House, and built subsequent peace talks on its terms and those of the
Camp David Accords. So far, these efforts have not succeeded, and this
year there has been
a resurgence of
violence and animosity between Israelis and Arabs unequaled in more than
a quarter of a century.
The major issues still
to be resolved remain unchanged: the final boundaries of the state of
Israel, the return of, or compensation for, Palestinians dislodged from
their previous homes and the status of Jerusalem. It seems almost
inevitable that the United States will initiate new peace efforts, but
it is unlikely that real progress can be made on any of these issues as
long as Israel insists on its settlement policy, illegal under
international laws that are supported by the
United States and all
other nations.
There are many
questions as we continue to seek an end to violence in the Middle East,
but there is no way to escape the vital one: Land or peace?
Former president
Carter is chairman of the Carter Center in Atlanta.
© 2000 The Washington Post
|