UN Official Says Time for Two-State Solution Has Passed

by Philip Weiss on February 16, 2008 · 5 comments

On Thursday night, the Arab Students Association of Columbia U. held a discussion of Gaza, describing it as a prison. 150 people jammed into a classroom to hear the panel, with another 60 or so turned away. Panelist Andrew Whitley, a rep for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for the Palestinian refugees, described the Israeli treatment of Gaza as "immoral, illegal and counterproductive," and was asked about the prospects for a two-state solution.

Whitley said that he was not supposed to express his own views on the subject, as there was an "official stance of the U.N." in favor of the two-state solution, but then he did not stop himself. "I personally think, having followed the issue for 25 years, the prospect is rapidly disappearing….The moment it could have been reached was some time ago." The effect of the Oslo accords was to push the prospect "into the long grass." Because Oslo allowed the creation of the Palestinian Authority and Israeli disengagement from Palestinian governance–the effect was to "postpone a Palestinian state forever."

In a sense Whitley is echoing Olmert, who said that Israel was finished if it does not achieve a two-state solution now. A desperation I heard at the IPF conference in December.

Yesterday a friend sent me a letter that the head of AIPAC wrote to the New York Times in 1984. In the letter, Thomas Dine attacked the great Anthony Lewis, a former columnist for the paper, for characterizing the scholar Walid Khalidi as a "moderate."

This may be true, if the standard of comparison is Abu Nidal and Abu Musa. But Khalidi demands that there be an armed P.L.O. West Bank state, [emphasis Weiss's] with 250 tanks, that Jerusalem be turned over to Arafat and that Moscow be a party to the arrangements. Nor can we find a place where he calls on the P.L.O. to renounce terrorism.

I bring up Dine’s letter in connection with Whitley’s comments for a number of reasons. First, there was a time when the Israel lobby was dead set against a Palestinian state. Dine’s letter is evidence of the ferocity of that opposition. You will see that the Soviet threat is offered as a reason not to allow the Palestinians a state. Israel was our client in the cold war in ‘84; as now it is our oasis of democracy in the Middle East in the war against terror. So the American public is manipulated on one warlike ground, then another. And since the end of the British mandate in ‘48, the Palestinians have had no state to call their own. And young Jews in the U.S. are now questioning the idea of a two-state solution, with its arbitrary separation of peoples and inequitable division of land and water.

Note that Dine’s target in this letter is Walid Khalidi. Khalidi is said to be a leading scholar. In his landmark book of ‘06, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, the Israeli historian Ilan Pappe credits Khalidi’s book, All That Remains: The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 as a seminal moral work of documentation. The history of the Nakba was of course cleansed from the American mind. And now even young Jews are hungry to learn it.  But for the Israel lobby in ‘84, these ideas were a form of terror.

Related posts:

  1. Barring 2-State Solution, Israel Becomes South Africa–Without South Africa’s ‘Solution’, Israeli Minister Warns
  2. At AIPAC, Wieseltier Seems Sad, Admitting the ‘Harsh’ Responsibility of Standing Up for Zionism as Intellectuals Flock to One-State Solution
  3. Unending myth of two-state solution has helped to destroy two-state-solution
  4. American Jewish ‘Influence’ Is Now Behind the 2-State Solution
  5. Americans must begin making plans for the death of the 2-state solution

{ 5 comments }

1 Tzali February 16, 2008 at 2:48 pm

Philip, you aging clown, why are the only Jews who matter your mythical 'young liberal Jews in America, anti-Zionist and pro-Nakba commemoration"?
Why do the millions of working-class Jews in Israel not matter? Could it be that, as trust-fund (through marriage) unemployed elitist you cannot idnetify with the working poor?

2 Richard Witty February 16, 2008 at 2:48 pm

Thanks for the Khalidi reference.

Did you read Kimmerling's work?

1984 was 23 years ago. The cold war was still in high gear. Israel had functionally annexed the West Bank, creating a functional single state, as Sari Nusseibeh referred ironically in an NPR interview about six months ago. (Social services provided, nearly free movement within Israel).

After MUCH work and conflict, the concept that a sovereign Palestine is needed, is accepted among nearly all Israelis.

I was disappointed that Israel did not GRAB the Arab states proposal, and move firmly towards Palestinian sovereignty at the green line.

Personally, I think it was probably good to delay, as it was dependant on the United States to bridge some large chasms, which the current American administration is incompetent to accomplish.

Better to delay than destroy.

But, also better not to drag one's feet on what is possible now.

3 Charles Keating February 16, 2008 at 7:44 pm

No peace arrangement that involves the Palestinians and does not address the refugee issue is not worth the paper it’s printed on. All Middle East governments involved can only go so far on this issue or they would quickly get kicked out government by their own masses. The plan posits a real peace with normal relations by all involved, with the refugee problem to be agreed on. Even if both Israel and the USA's next administration are less aggressive and arrogant, how far can the players go with their language thrust? Some jobs for the wordsmiths since they will at least have to say something more about the refugee problem than "to be agreed on."

4 syvanen February 16, 2008 at 11:30 pm

Tzali's comments are quite relevant to this thread, not the clown part, but pointing out the importance of working class and other less well off Israeli Jews. I have seen the polling numbers. These people do not accept the two state solution and they create a political situation that may very well make it impossible for any Israeli government to agree to one. They along with the 400,000 west bank settlers are a coalition that can subvert any efforts at a two state solution.

If this is so then it leaves only two possibilities — the apartheid solution or one state with civil rights for all.

5 Richard Silverstein February 17, 2008 at 4:15 am

I'm assuming that Walid Khalidi is Rashid Khalidi's father. If so, he has good yichus.

BTW, Tom Dine, no longer affiliated w. AIPAC, now fanices himself a dove & has been involved w. some of the efforts to create a unified national Jewish peace group.

So maybe there's hope for the rest of those clowns at AIPAC…

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