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حلم
شارون بقلم:
اكيفا إيلدار هاآرتز
- 18/6/2007 قبل سنتين فقط حذر وزير
الخارجية المصري أحمد أبو الغيط
شمعون بيريز بأن أي محادثات لا
تقدم حلاً
لقطاع غزة فان القطاع "سينفجر"
في أي لحظة Sharon's
dream By
Akiva Eldar If
Ariel Sharon were able to hear the news from the Gaza
Strip and West Bank, he would call his loyal aide, Dov
Weissglas, and say with a big laugh: "We did it,
Dubi." Sharon is in a coma, but his plan is alive
and kicking. Everyone is now talking about the state of
Hamastan. In his house, they called it a bantustan,
after the South African protectorates designed to
perpetuate apartheid. Just
as in the Palestinian territories, blacks and colored
people in South Africa were given limited autonomy in
the country's least fertile areas. Those who remained
outside these isolated enclaves, which were disconnected
from each other, received the status of foreign workers,
without civil rights. A few years ago, Italian Foreign
Minister Massimo D'Alema told Israeli friends that
shortly before he was elected prime minister, Sharon
told him that the bantustan plan was the most suitable
solution to our conflict. The
right and the settlers feared that the disengagement
from the entire Gaza Strip was no more than a down
payment on a withdrawal from most of the West Bank. The
left and the international community similarly believed
that if the evacuation of Israeli soldiers and civilians
from Gaza went well, the way would be paved for a
two-state solution; but there were also some who feared
that Sharon did not intend merely to sever Gaza from
Israel, thereby erasing 1.4 million Arabs from the
demographic balance, but also to drive a wedge between
Gaza and the West Bank. Exactly
two years ago, in June 2005, Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ahmed Aboul Gheit warned Shimon Peres during a visit to
Israel that if the disengagement were not accompanied by
progress toward a solution in the West Bank, the Gaza
Strip "would explode," in his words. The then
vice premier told his guest that he agreed with every
word, but took care to point out that his statements did
not necessarily reflect the views of prime minister
Sharon. Israel's
violation of the Agreement on Movement and Access, which
was signed by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
strengthened suspicions that Sharon was plotting to
sever Gaza from the West Bank. The order that the dogs
could bark, but the caravans would not move between the
Palestinian Authority's two sections had already been
quietly issued by the end of 2005. That was a few months
before Hamas' victory in the PA parliamentary elections
provided the winning excuse for sealing off Gaza.
Following the political upset in the territories, the
severance policy became official. Israel imposed a
sweeping ban on Gaza residents entering the West Bank,
which even applied to students with no record of
security offenses. Even as it was protesting the Hamas
government's refusal to commit itself to previous
agreements, Israel was disavowing the interim agreement
(Oslo II) that it signed in Washington in September
1995, under which the West Bank and Gaza constitute a
"single territorial unit." Alongside
the severance of Gaza from the West Bank, a policy now
called "isolation," the Sharon-Peres
government and the Olmert-Peres government that
succeeded it carried out the bantustan program in the
West Bank. The Jordan Valley was separated from the rest
of the West Bank; the south was severed from the north;
and all three areas were severed from East Jerusalem.
The "two states for two peoples" plan gave way
to a "five states for two peoples" plan: one
contiguous state, surrounded by settlement blocs, for
Israel, and four isolated enclaves for the Palestinians.
This plan was implemented on the ground via the
intrusive route of the separation fence, a network of
roadblocks deep inside the West Bank, settlement
expansion and arbitrary orders by military commanders.
The cantonized map that these dictated left no chance
for the road map or the "gestures" that Israel
promised to PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and the Americans.
But
the hope that Hamas' thugs and Fatah's good-for-nothings
will finish the work of that well-known righteous man,
Sharon, and his flunkies in the government and army is
no more than a warped delusion. Eight years of rioting
and terror ended in the liquidation of South Africa's
bantustans and their inclusion in a unified state
governed by the black majority. This dream of
Palestinian protectorates - Hamastan in Gaza and the
Fatahland enclaves in the West Bank - is similarly the
end of any solution based on dividing the land: Israel
in agreed-upon borders based on the Green Line and
Palestine on the other side. If we do not quickly wake
up from this dream and rescue what remains of the
two-state vision, we will truly be left with a choice
between the plague - an apartheid regime - and the
cholera: the Jewish state's replacement with a
binational state between the Jordan River and the sea.
Including the Gaza Strip. http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/871983.html ----------------- نشرنا
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