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Jonathan Cook considers the significance of a
video that has surfaced showing Israeli Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu boasting about his ability to manipulate
the United States and his success in destroying the Oslo
accords with the Palestinians.
There is one video Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime
minister, must be praying never gets posted on YouTube with
English subtitles. To date, the 10-minute segment has been
broadcast only in Hebrew on Israel’s Channel 10.
[Editor’s note: A version of the Natanyahu video with
English subtitles is now available and can be viewed,
together with the translated English transcripy,
here.]
Its contents, however, threaten to gravely embarrass not
only Mr Netanyahu but also the US administration of Barack
Obama.
The film was shot, apparently without Mr Netanyahu’s
knowledge, nine years ago, when the government of Ariel
Sharon had started reinvading the main cities of the West
Bank to crush Palestinian resistance in the early stages of
the second intifada.
At the time Mr Netanyahu had taken a short
break from politics but was soon to join Mr Sharon’s
government as finance minister.
On a visit to a home in the settlement of
Ofra in the West Bank to pay condolences to the family of a
man killed in a Palestinian shooting attack, he makes a
series of unguarded admissions about his first period as
prime minister, from 1996 to 1999.
Seated on a sofa in the house, he tells the
family that he deceived the US president of the time, Bill
Clinton, into believing he was helping implement the Oslo
accords, the US-sponsored peace process between Israel and
the Palestinians, by making minor withdrawals from the West
Bank while actually entrenching the occupation. He boasts
that he thereby destroyed the Oslo process.
He dismisses the US as “easily moved to the
right direction” and calls high levels of popular American
support for Israel “absurd”.
He also suggests that, far from being defensive, Israel’s
harsh military repression of the Palestinian uprising was
designed chiefly to crush the Palestinian Authority led by
Yasser Arafat so that it could be made more pliable for
Israeli diktats.
All of these claims have obvious parallels
with the current situation, when Mr Netanyahu is again
Israel’s prime minister facing off with a White House trying
to draw him into a peace process that runs counter to his
political agenda.
As before, he has ostensibly made public
concessions to the US administration – chiefly by agreeing
in principle to the creation of a Palestinian state,
consenting to indirect talks with the Palestinian leadership
in Ramallah, and implementing a temporary freeze on
settlement building.
But he has also enlisted the powerful pro-Israel lobby to
exert pressure on the White House, which appears to have
relented on its most important stipulations. tbody>
The contemptuous view of Washington Mr
Netanyahu demonstrates in the film will confirm the
suspicions of many observers – including Palestinian leaders
– that his current professions of good faith should not be
taken seriously.
Critics have already pointed out that his
gestures have been extracted only after heavy arm-twisting
from the US administration.
More significantly, he has so far avoided engaging
meaningfully in the limited talks the White House is
promoting with the Palestinians while the pace of settlement
building in the West Bank has been barely affected by the
10-month freeze, due to end in September.
In the meantime, planning officials have repeatedly approved
large new housing projects in East Jerusalem and the West
Bank that have undercut the negotiations and will make the
establishment of a Palestinian state – viable or otherwise –
far less likely.
Writing in the liberal Israeli newspaper
Ha’aretz, the columnist Gideon Levy called the video
“outrageous”. He said it proved that Mr Netanyahu was a “con
artist … who thinks that Washington is in his pocket and
that he can pull the wool over its eyes”. He added that the
prime minister had not reformed in the intervening period:
“Such a crooked way of thinking does not change over the
years.”
In the film, Mr Netanyahu says Israel must
inflict “blows [on the Palestinians] that are so painful the
price will be too heavy to be borne … A broad attack on the
Palestinian Authority, to bring them to the point of being
afraid that everything is collapsing”.
When asked if the US will object, he responds: “America is
something that can be easily moved. Moved to the right
direction… They won’t get in our way … Eighty per cent of
the Americans support us. It’s absurd.”
He then recounts how he dealt with President Clinton, whom
he refers to as “extremely pro-Palestinian”. “I wasn’t
afraid to manoeuvre there. I was not afraid to clash with
Clinton.”
His approach to White House demands to withdraw from
Palestinian territory under the Oslo accords, he says, drew
on his grandfather’s philosophy: “It would be better to give
two per cent than to give 100 per cent.”
He therefore signed the 1997 agreement to pull the Israeli
army back from much of Hebron, the last Palestinian city
under direct occupation, as a way to avoid conceding more
territory.
“The trick,” he says, “is not to be there [in
the occupied territories] and be broken; the trick is to be
there and pay a minimal price.”
The “trick” that stopped further withdrawals,
Mr Netanyahu adds, was to redefine what parts of the
occupied territories counted as a “specified military site”
under the Oslo accords. He wanted the White House to approve
in writing the classification of the Jordan Valley, a large
area of the West Bank, as such a military site.
“Now, they did not want to give me that letter, so I did not
give [them] the Hebron agreement. I stopped the government
meeting, I said: ‘I’m not signing.’ Only when the letter
came … did I sign the Hebron agreement. Why does this
matter? Because at that moment I actually stopped the Oslo
accords.”
Last week, after meeting Mr Obama in Washington, the Israeli
prime minister gave an interview to Fox News in which he
appeared to be in no hurry to make concessions: “Can we have
a negotiated peace? Yes. Can it be implemented by 2012? I
think it’s going to take longer than that,” he said.
There must be at least a very
strong suspicion that Mr Netanyahu is as firmly committed
today as he was then to destroying any chance of peace with
the Palestinians.
Jonathan
Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel.
His latest books are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations:
Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto
Press) and “Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in
Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.
A version of this article originally appeared in
The
National published in Abu Dhab
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