|
After
Yasser Arafat finally lost his battle against the Grim Reaper in
a Paris hospital last month, there was certainly a lot of grief
in the Palestinian territories and among the diaspora, but in most
cases the sense of personal loss was compounded by a heightened
level of angst. Behind the tears lay the vacant looks associated
with freshly orphaned children compelled to contend with not just
the sorrow of being permanently parted from a beloved parent but
also the uncertainty that lies ahead.
All Palestinians are, of course, accustomed to uncertainty: they
have known nothing else all their lives. But Arafat - or Abu Ammar,
the nom de guerre favoured by his compatriots - provided an anchor
to which they could cling. He devoted his life to conjuring up a
ship of state to which that anchor could be attached. The quest
was foiled at every step by designated foes and counterfeit friends.
The
enemies are now saying that, with Arafat out of the way, chances
of Palestinian statehood have brightened. Ariel Sharon designated
Arafat an obstacle to peace, and that stance became an excuse for
suspending all negotiations. The Bush administration, peppered as
it is with Likudites, takes it cues from the Israeli regime. It
too refused to have anything to do with Arafat, insisting that all
Palestinian attacks on Israelis must stop before any talks could
take place. There was no comparable pressure on Sharon: even when
the systematic violence unleashed by his forces on defenceless Arabs
went so far that the State Department was compelled to describe
it as "regrettable", it diluted that timid critique by
saying that it was nonetheless "understandable". Any criticism
of Israel at the UN Security Council automatically prompted an American
veto.
Arafat
unquestionably personified the Palestinian cause to an extent that
has few parallels in other 20th-century national liberation movements.
He was one of the movement's most important assets, but perhaps
also one of its major liabilities. Chances are that the cause would
have evolved even without him - although such has been his role
that it is impossible to say what shape it would have taken. By
the same token, the cause hasn't been buried alongside Abu Ammar
in Ramallah. But it's not in the best of health. And the barely
restrained glee of Israeli and American leaders at Arafat's departure
suggests they expect to benefit from it.
Arafat's
existence made it impossible for those two countries to pick a Palestinian
leader who would accede to their wishes. Arafat came a long way,
but from the US-Israeli point of view, he wasn't prepared to go
far enough. Washington and Tel Aviv wanted someone even more pliable,
but as long as Abu Ammar was a candidate, no rival seriously stood
a chance in any election. Now they are counting on Mahmoud Abbas,
Arafat's successor as leader of the Palestine Liberation Organisation,
to win the election for president of the Palestinian Authority scheduled
for next month - and, subsequently, to sign away some of the Palestinian
rights that his predecessor refused to compromise on.
There is no guarantee that Abbas will triumph in any electoral
exercise, but even if Abbas is victorious and thereafter willing
to accommodate most US-Israeli wishes, what are the chances he will
be able to convince his people that he has done the right thing?
When,
back in 1988, Arafat spearheaded the Palestinian National Council's
recognition of Israel and acceptance of a two-state solution, he
threw himself open to a great deal of criticism - but by then he
had managed to persuade the majority of Palestinians that this was
the best they could hope for. He had recognised as early as the
1973 Yom Kippur war that Israel could not be defeated militarily,
and that the PLO's demand for the restitution of a Palestine in
which Jews, Christians and Muslims could live side by side was an
impossible dream. It took him 15 years to gain the confidence that
he could carry the movement with him.
The Oslo Accords also occasioned a great deal of flak, with Arafat
accused once more of betraying the cause. It was a big risk, and
gaining statehood in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip - barely 22
percent of historical Palestine - would barely have provided adequate
post-hoc justification for taking it. In that Arafat failed, and
the US-Israeli line is that it was foolish and perhaps even unforgivable
for him to have turned down the proposal placed before him at Camp
David by Ehud Barak, under the auspices of Bill Clinton, in 2000.
That view bears little relation to the facts. Under the
terms of that proposal, not only would Arafat have had to sign away
the right of four million Palestinian refugees to return to their
homes, but also sell to the residents of the occupied territories
the idea that the West Bank would be divided into cantons by Israeli
corridors, and that most of the Jewish settlements built in the
territories in defiance of UN resolutions would stay - with Israel
taking care of the security arrangements.
The bantustans option, Arafat knew, would lead to a protectorate
rather than a viable independent state. The US and the Israelis
decried him as an unreasonable spoiler who had squandered the best
chance for peace in the Middle East, but he received a hero's reception
on his return to the territories. Arafat was never in any doubt
about where his obligations lay. Criticism of his ineptness at the
helm of an administration riddled with corruption and cronyism isn't
inapt, but it's worth keeping in mind that he laboured under impossible
conditions, and the Palestine Authority has never amounted to much
more than a glorified municipality, which has consistently been
under enormous pressure to crack down against secular as well as
Islamist radicals.
If Israeli-Palestinian negotiations resume, chances are
that the offers on the table will be even less generous than Barak's.
Not long ago, a top Sharon aide confessed that the plan for a unilateral
Gaza pullout was intended to halt rather than accelerate the peace
process. The powers that be now hope to bully Arafat's successor
into effectively signing away the Palestinian right to meaningful
independence. Colin Powell lost little time in heading for Israel
after Arafat was gone (although the US was represented at a considerably
lower level at the Palestinian leader's people-free funeral in Cairo),
followed by Jack Straw, and Tony Blair is expected in the Middle
East before Christmas.
Blair
was relatively less ungracious than Sharon, George W. Bush and their
pathetic little Australian acolyte John Howard in their comments
on Arafat's demise, and a substantial portion of the British Labour
Party is inclined towards Europe's more reasonable stance on the
Palestinian issue, but the UK is unlikely to defy the US, where
Likudites hold sway. Which means that Palestinians, including those
who felt let down by Arafat, may soon have cause to miss Abu Ammar
more than ever.
Arafat's legacy extends far beyond the frustrating last decade
of his life. The iconic keffiyeh and three-day stubble were an affectation
that dated back to his youth, and he described himself as Mr Palestine
long before he led the defence of the Jordanian town of Karameh
in 1968 and instantly acquired the status of a legend. Two years
later, the PLO - founded by Gamal Abdel Nasser as a means of controlling
rather than bolstering the Palestinian cause, and taken over by
Arafat's Fatah faction only after a lengthy power struggle - found
itself besieged by the Jordanian army, which was assisted by a Pakistani
contingent led by a certain Major Zia-ul-Haq.
Arafat lived to fight another day when Israel invaded his
next base, Lebanon, in 1982, and again when Israeli terrorists wiped
out much of the PLO's leadership in an unprovoked attack on Tunis
a few years later. If his foes were never convinced by his conversion
into a peacemaker, that's largely because they never stopped subscribing
to the idea of a Greater Israel. They wanted to believe what Golda
Meir had told them: that there's no such thing as Palestinians.
Arafat proved them wrong, and they never forgave him for it.
What endeared Arafat to the Palestinians, more than anything
else, was that he had suffered alongside them every step of the
way. Of course he had his flaws, but that didn't prevent at least
some Israelis from recognising his worth. And the respect was reciprocal.
Shortly before he was assassinated by a Jewish fanatic, Yitzhak
Rabin described Arafat as "my partner". An American diplomat
recalls that Arafat cried like a baby when he heard of Rabin's murder.
In death Arafat has attracted worthy tributes from across
the world; Jacques Chirac offered an eloquent eulogy, and the UN
flag flew at half mast. Perhaps some of the most heartfelt comments
came from those who knew only too well what it felt like to be denigrated
as a terrorist: Nelson Mandela and Gerry Adams. But the tribute
that might have mattered most to Arafat came from an Israeli who
understood Arafat's passion, who respected his soul. "I respected
him as a Palestinian patriot," wrote Uri Avnery. "I admired
him for his courage. I understood the constraints he was working
under. I saw in him the partner for building a new future for our
two peoples. I was his friend ... As Hamlet said about his father:
'He was a man, take him for all in all. I shall not look upon his
like again.'" 
|