Palestinians salute Hamas |
The news of the day is former
President Jimmy
Carter who placed the blame for the Paris jihadist massacre on—you guessed
it—Israel. That reflects the surreal world in which anti-Semites
live.
Meanwhile, the Palestinians, both
Fatah and Hamas, are running out of friends. For reasons that defy any logic and
which have no basis in fact, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is
seeking recognition of the Palestinian state from the United
Nations. He’s also applied for membership in the International Criminal
Court.
The Palestinians who have refused
every opportunity to become an independent state when it was offered by the UN
or Israel now insist that they should be recognized as one. The problem is that
they have never functioned as a state.
For example, who founded it? Answer,
no one. It has no founder unless one regards Yassir Arafat as one, but Arafat
ran Palestine entirely by himself. Then there’s the question of its borders.
Where are they? You can find Israel’s on a map, but they do not exist for
Palestine. What is the capital city of Palestine? It has none. It doesn’t have
its own currency.
There is no Palestinian
state.
What exists are people who are
identified as Palestinians by other Arab nations who have used them as pawns
since they lost their wars with Israel. Instead, they reside in “refugee” camps
from the days of Israel’s independence in 1948 or in areas the Israelis have
designated in the West Bank and Gaza. Last year, after Hamas had shelled Israel
with rockets for months, the residents of Gaza had to pay a high price when the
Israelis finally retaliated.
The Palestinians and their supporters
call it a war crime when the Israelis defend
themselves.
Abbas insists that they be allowed to
“return” to a Palestine that was never a nation-state, but rather a name applied
to the area that has for more than 3,000 years been called Israel. At this
point, two generations after Israel’s independence, few “Palestinians” have ever
lived in Israel and the Arabs that do live there enjoy full rights as
Israeli citizens and have no wish to be anything other than
Israelis.
As noted by the Middle East Forum,
“Under the 1994 Paris Protocol, adopted as one of the Oslo Accords, Israel
collects customs taxes on good shipped to the Palestinian areas, the Value Added
Tax for goods and services sold in Israel and intended for PA consumption, and
petroleum excises, and well as small amounts of income tax from PA residents
working in Israel. Under these clearance revenues are transferred monthly
directly from Israel to the PA Finance Ministry, and they are the PA’s largest
source of funds.”
Israel has cut off these funds eight
times in the past, usually in response to terrorist activity in the West Bank
and Gaza or to protest Palestinian diplomatic efforts such as its current effort
at the UN. On January 2, 2015, Israel decided to once again withhold the funds
in response to the PA’s hostile activity at the International Criminal Court
where it wants to have Israel tried for what it calls “war crimes” and the rest
of the world calls self-defense.
In the January 5 edition of The Wall
Street Journal, columnist Bret
Stephens who had spent some years working in Jerusalem and had the
opportunity to see Abbas up close, wrote of his “serial fiascos over the decade,
culminating in his failed bid last week to force a vote in the Security Council
over Palestinian statehood.”
Stephens noted that “In 2005, Israel
withdrew from the Gaza Strip, leaving Mr. Abbas in charge and giving him a
chance to make something of the territory. Gaza dissolved into a civil war
within months. In 2008, Israel offered Mr. Abbas a state covering 94% of the
West Bank, along with a compensatory 6% of Israeli territory and a land bridge
to Gaza. Mr. Abbas never took up the offer.”
Indeed, neither Arafat nor his
successor, Abbas, has ever taken up any offer of statehood, so why now? Stephens
says that, from the point of view of Abbas, “such a state is infinitely more
trivial than a Palestinian struggle. Becoming is better than being. So long as
‘Palestine’ is in the process of becoming, it matters. Once it exists, it all
but doesn’t.”
On January 6, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY)
introduced a bill that would withhold U.S. aid to the Palestinians until their
leadership withdraws its controversial bid to join the International Criminal
Court. The bill would freeze $400 million in aid that is annually sent to the
Palestinian Authority that includes Hamas, a terrorist organization, at this
point.
In 2011, David B. Rivkin Jr and Lee A
Casey, lawyers who had served in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush
administrations, spelled out why this latest effort to get the UN to declare
Palestine a state is invalid. “The Palestinian Authority, by contrast, does not
meet the basic characteristics of a state necessary for such recognition. These
requirements have been refined through centuries of custom and practice, and
were authoritatively articulated in the 1933 Montevideo Convention on the Rights
and Duties of States.”
“As that treaty provides, to be a
state an entity must have (1) a permanent population, (2) a defined territory,
(3) a government, and (4) the capacity to enter into relations with other
states.” The Palestinian Authority does not meet any of those requirements since
it is, essentially, Abbas and his staff. Abbas, who was elected to a four-year
term is now in his tenth year in office without the bother of calling any other
elections.
Even if a UN vote were taken, the
United States would veto it in the Security Council. So all of this is just one
more bizarre and stupid charade that Abbas and the Palestinians engage in from
time to time.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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