[Sari Nusseibeh is a prominent advocate of the position that the  
Palestinian national movement should explicitly abandon any claim to  
a right of return to anywhere within the Green Line. Instead, he  
argues, Palestinians should focus on demanding an independent state  
with Jerusalem as its capital (shared in some way with Israel).
This is a fairly centrist Palestinian position, although Nusseibeh is  
typically more critical than most of 'symbolic' solutions to the  
problem of the right of return that involve e.g. a token number of  
people resettled within the Green Line accompanied by an Israeli  
statement 'recognizing' the right to return and appropriate  
compensation for the remainder of the refugee population. His  
reasoning is that Israelis is about as unlikely to recognize the  
right of return as Palestinians are to accept a state without  
Jerusalem as its capital.
Underlying this reasoning is the belief that Israel accepts it can  
sustain itself as a simultaneously Jewish and democratic state only  
by establishing permanent borders within which it has a secure Jewish- 
majority population. This acceptance provides Palestinians with the  
leverage to negotiate a state of their own in the remainder of the  
territory; and this logic would be undermined by trying to force  
Israel to accept the right of return.
It is therefore of considerable interest that Nusseibeh appears, in  
this article by Akiva Eldar of Ha'aretz, to be suggesting that  
Palestinians can no longer aim at an independent state, but should  
struggle for equal civil rights with Jews within a greater Israel  
that stretches from the Mediterranean sea to the Jordan river. This  
struggle could start in Jerusalem (Nusseibeh is president of Al-Quds  
University) where Palestinians are much more closely integrated into  
Israeli life than elsewhere in the illegally occupied Palestinian  
territories. He slyly hints that he might even stand for mayor of  
Jerusalem in the November elections.
The single state alternative is quite often discussed these days (see  
http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com/2008/06/chomsky-and-pappe-on- 
future-of-israel.html for an interesting exchange on this issue  
between Illan Pappe and Noam Chomsky). But that someone like  
Nusseibeh should – albeit tentatively -- advocate something like it,  
someone whose engagement with Israel is based on a pragmatic  
understanding of Israel's anxiety to remain a Jewish majority state,  
suggests that perhaps the time has come where the two state solution  
is no longer viable. It is above all the intransigent negotiating  
positions of the Israeli government and the continued creation of  
illegal Jewish enclaves in the proposed Palestinian state that are  
undermining the possibility of a two state solution to the extent of  
making even those, like Nusseibeh, who maintain friendly contacts  
with top-level Israeli figures, skeptical about its chances of  
success. Nusseibeh's comments should therefore serve as a subtle but  
strong message to the next Israeli administration that if it does not  
act soon to reach an acceptable settlement it may be faced with  
Palestinian leadership prepared only to struggle for Palestinian  
civil rights within a single state.  Alistair Welchman]
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1011859.html
'We are running out of time for a two-state solution'
By Akiva Eldar, Haaretz Correspondent
At the end of my conversation with Sari Nusseibeh at the American  
Colony Hotel in Jerusalem, the highly respected president of Al-Quds  
University - and cosignatory of "The People's Choice," a peace plan  
that he formulated with former Shin Bet chief Ami Ayalon - told me he  
wouldn't be surprised if one of the Palestinian residents of the city  
ran for mayor in the municipal elections in November. The candidate  
would not run as a representative of Jerusalem per se, Nusseibeh  
stressed. Rather, he would be running on behalf of all Palestinians  
in the occupied territories.
"Why don't you do it?" I blurt out. The 59-year-old son of Anwar  
Nusseibeh, a Jordanian government minister, does not smile. "It's  
possible," says the professor of Islamic philosophy, who briefly  
replaced Faisal Husseini a few years ago as the top Palestinian  
official in East Jerusalem. "Anything is possible," he adds without  
batting an eyelid.
Nusseibeh's previous contention that the Oslo "house of cards" had  
begun to collapse was further confirmed by this week's report in  
Haaretz regarding Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's latest peace offering  
(Israel would annex 7 percent of the West Bank and compensate the  
Palestinians with territory in the Negev, which would be equivalent  
to 5.5 percent of West Bank land; an agreement on the future of  
Jerusalem would be postponed to a later date; there would be no right  
of return for Palestinian refugees to Israel; and the entire plan  
would be implemented after Hamas is removed from power in the Gaza  
Strip).
Nusseibeh says he knows full well what happens during negotiations -  
or, to be more specific, what does not happen. For over 20 years the  
Palestinian leadership has been trying to persuade their people to  
agree to a state along the June 4, 1967, lines, while Israel has been  
destroying that option, Nusseibeh explains, adding: "You cannot  
negotiate anything about final status if you don't talk about  
Jerusalem. Final status consists primarily, I believe, of Jerusalem  
and refugees. If you want to postpone Jerusalem, you postpone  
refugees. Really, you are not dealing with the problem. You have to  
discuss these issues, and that is exactly where the trade-off has to  
be made."
Is Sari Nusseibeh, the secular Palestinian, the symbol of moderation,  
Ayalon's guy, burying the two-state solution?
"I still favor a two-state solution and will continue to do so, but  
to the extent that you discover it's not practical anymore or that  
it's not going to happen, you start to think about what the  
alternatives are. I think that the feeling is there are two courses  
taking place that are opposed to one another. On one hand, there is  
what people are saying and thinking, on both sides. There is the  
sense that we are running out of time, that if we want a two-state  
solution, we need to implement it quickly.
"But on the other hand, if we are looking at what is happening on the  
ground, in Israel and the occupied territories, you see things  
happening in the opposite direction, as if they are not connected to  
reality. Thought is running in one direction, reality in the other."
Nusseibeh says the struggle for a one-state solution could take a  
form similar to some of the nonviolent struggles waged by oppressed  
ethnic groups in other places.
"We can fight for equal rights, rights of existence, return and  
equality, and we could take it slowly over the years and there could  
be a peaceful movement - like in South Africa," he notes. "I think  
one should maybe begin on the Palestinian side, to begin a debate, to  
reengage in the idea of one state."
'Jerusalem is out'
"We have failed in the last 15 years," Nusseibeh continues, "to  
create the world we wanted to create. We were supposed to be very  
clever; we convinced ourselves that we were going to be very  
democratic and clean, a model for the rest of the Arab world. And  
Jerusalem was supposed to be our capital. That's what we believed.  
But then it turned out that all of this was total rubbish. Jerusalem  
is out, all we have is Ramallah. And we lost Gaza. There is  
corruption and inefficiency. This is not what we vouched for when we  
sat back in the early 1980s and ideologized the two-state solution.
"It so happens that Fatah, in particular, the mainstream party and  
the only viable alternative to extremes on the left or on the right,  
now needs a strategy, an ideology. Because the ideology that Fatah  
has adopted over the last 15 years - a two-state solution - seems to  
be faltering, and with it, Fatah is faltering. So it is time maybe to  
rethink, to bring Fatah around to a new idea, the old-new idea, of  
one state. "
The recent "bulldozer terrorism" in Jerusalem did not highlight the  
difficulties inherent in a binational state model?
"These are isolated incidents, but they do reflect a major sickness  
in our Jerusalem Arab society. A sickness that has resulted in  
pressure, schizophrenia, the fact that these people speak Hebrew, and  
listen to Hebrew songs, go out with Israeli girlfriends while at the  
same time they live in Arab neighborhoods and under the influence of  
Muslim culture. There are contradictory forces pulling at them.
"What is the driving force behind a two-state solution? The fact that  
it seems more acceptable to a majority of people on both sides and  
therefore more applicable. The primary motivation is to minimize  
human suffering. This is what we should all be looking at. If there  
will be a one-state solution, it will not come today or tomorrow.  
It's a long, protracted thing, not the ideal solution. Unless, in an  
ideal world, people really want to be together, then it is the ideal  
solution. The best solution, the one that causes the least pain and  
that can actually be instrumental to a one-state solution, is to have  
peace now, and acceptance of one another on the basis of two states."
Is this an ultimatum?
"That's an ultimatum. Unless a major breakthrough happens by the end  
of this year, in my opinion we should start trying to strive for  
equality. Back in the 1980s, before the first intifada, I was saying  
there was schizophrenia in the body politic of the Palestinian  
people. It was like the head was going in one direction, which was  
the direction of seeking independence, national identity - but the  
body was slowly immersed in the Israeli system, and I said it can't  
last because it looks like it will snap. Either the body will join  
the head so that there will be a civil disobedience campaign, or the  
head will have to join the body, so that there will be a civil rights  
campaign, to become part of the Israeli system.
"Fifty, 100, 200 years down the road there will be some kind of  
conclusion. Sometime in the future - however far away this future is  
- I believe we'll be living at peace with one another, in some way or  
another. I am not sure how, whether in one state or two states, or in  
a confederation of states, but people finally will come to live at  
peace. In the meantime, we will simply cause pain to one another.  
It's tragic. It is very tragic, because we know we can do it now.  
That today it is possible with some guts, leadership, vision, we can  
make it happen today, we can reach a peaceful solution today. [The  
Arab Peace Initiative proposed in 2002] is a fantastic chance. The  
Palestinians have adopted it, they'll go with it all the way. It is a  
perfect chance. It doesn't even mention right of return. It is even  
better than the Ayalon- Nusseibeh plan, but I am willing to accept it."
'Dead money'
Asked why he - who realizes so well how complicated it will be to  
reach a fair and logical solution regarding Jerusalem - is opposed to  
Olmert's idea of postponing discussion on that issue, Nusseibeh says  
he hopes that the prime minister is not repeating the same mistake  
made by Ehud Barak at Camp David, and that the idea of postponement  
was broached strictly for public relations purposes.
"Because for Israel, however important Jerusalem may be, the primary  
factor is the Jewish character [of the state]. And however important  
the refugees might be, what is more important for the Palestinians  
and Muslims is Jerusalem. It is the issue over which the most  
extremist of refugees will be willing to make a sacrifice. Let's hope  
this is not where [Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas]  
are disagreeing. If that is what they're disagreeing about, then  
there's no hope. We have to do everything now, we have to put  
everything on the table.
"The facts on the ground are making [the situation] irreversible,"  
Nusseibeh warns. "Take the Clinton parameters - Palestinian  
neighborhoods are Palestinian sovereignty, Jewish neighborhoods are  
Jewish sovereignty. They are acceptable in principle, but with  
realities on the ground, like the expulsion of Arab families from  
their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood, and the inhabitation  
of those areas by Jewish settlers, it's going to be unacceptable on a  
practical level. That's why we don't have time."
You ruffled some feathers among the Palestinian leadership when you  
recently asked the Europeans to halt financial aid to the Palestinian  
Authority. Someone even wondered whether you would be willing to give  
up the aid provided for Al-Quds University.
"Ramallah's reaction was a bit worried. They called me a few times, a  
bit worried."
Nusseibeh adds that the PA is still dogged by corruption - different  
from the corruption of which Olmert is accused - whereby donor states  
subsidize thousands of salaried employees at nonprofit organizations.  
This creates what he sees as an unhealthy dependency on foreign  
entities.
"We have a terrible situation. Our political bible, our platform, our  
moral values - we need to be brought together again. If not for  
creating a state, then for our own sanity and for own values as a  
people. Apart from in Ramallah, everybody is living under very bad  
conditions. The occupation is terrible. The siege is everywhere.  
Pressure. As it is, the Europeans are financing the occupation. And  
the Europeans are happy, because they feel they're doing something,  
it cleans their conscience. And the Israelis are happy because  
they're not paying for it. And the Palestinians are happy because  
they are getting their wages paid. It keeps the economy going, and  
people are getting complacent about it. It's dead money [going] after  
dead money."
Nusseibeh mentions the recent meeting he had with British Prime  
Minister Gordon Brown at the British consulate in Jerusalem, together  
with four other Palestinians, during which the premier stated he  
would like to assume a role in the peace process more central than  
that of a cash register. "I said, I want to tell you what you can do  
to transform yourself from a payer into a player: Make your money  
payments conditional on tangible progress in the peace process."
Not long ago, the professor continues, "I was in Brussels. I gave a  
talk and I said to the Europeans: If you want to pass on money, do it  
only on the condition we build a state, in which case it makes sense  
for you to spend money to build us an international airport. But if  
in the end there isn't going to be an independent Palestinian state,  
why waste your money? Waste your money, if you need to, on  
integrating us into Israeli society. Makes more sense. Pay the money  
for us to become part of Israel, to have equal rights. Raise our  
level of education, bring our standards of living up. But to have the  
PA taking all this money, creating all this debt, makes no sense.  
Maybe the Europeans should link the aid they are giving us to real  
progress in peace talks, so that both the Israelis and the  
Palestinians will be shocked out of their complacency, or lack of  
commitment."
What do you make of the growing support among Palestinians for the  
dismantlement of the PA?
"The PA has no use. If we fail to reach a peace agreement by the end  
of this year, I believe it would be best to go back to the period  
when we were living happily under occupation. We had a small civil  
administration, they were paying back some $20 million a year to the  
Israeli treasury, so they were making money off us. Today, we are  
creating, year after year, bigger deficits. We are spending billions,  
we have 160,000 employees, half of them are security personnel, who  
give us no security whatsoever, we are spending masses of money on  
guns, which we only use against each other and which provide us no  
security. The whole thing is a mess."
Nusseibeh says that to this day, the Palestinians have opposed taking  
part in the Jerusalem municipal elections because they feared doing  
so would sever the link between Jerusalem's Arabs and the  
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. Now, given the diminishing  
likelihood of a two-state solution, perhaps it is time for the  
Palestinians to reconsider.
"People in Jerusalem - why should they attach themselves to the  
Muqata, to Ramallah? There is no reason. There's nothing. The  
municipal election in Jerusalem [could serve as a launching point for  
seeking equal rights in a binational state]. We begin with Jerusalem,  
not as a separate part, but as a spearhead of the entire Palestinian  
body. Why not? Why not turn the weakness into a strength?
Are you disappointed by the Israeli peace camp? Did your partner, Ami  
Ayalon, who joined the same government you now accuse of distancing  
itself from your proposal, betray you?
"I respect Ami Ayalon. He is a very honest person, that is something  
that has always attracted me to him. It is not a betrayal of me  
personally. I look upon it as the ultimate submission by the  
individual to the wheels of history. You reach the point where you  
feel no longer able to do what you want, to steer the wheels in the  
direction you want them to go. And you submit, and become a part of  
the machine. So it's not really a betrayal. It's rather an expression  
of weakness. I am sad more than surprised. I recognize it as part of  
human weakness.
"I was still hoping because, before he went to the Labor Party, he  
came and spoke to me. I like this about him. I knew what he was  
doing. People were pushing him for a long time, trying to get him  
into the system, and he resisted. But then at one stage, I think he  
made up his mind: 'Maybe I can lead the Labor Party, and then this is  
the best place for me to be.' I said, fine, do it. I was unhappy  
that ... he became marginalized as minister without portfolio."
Nusseibeh says he lost touch with Ayalon since the latter became a  
minister.
Asked if Abbas would be able to muster Palestinian support for an  
agreement like "The People's Choice," Nusseibeh says both the  
Palestinian president and Olmert need to courageously take on their  
respective opposition camps. For instance, if Abbas "would come to  
the Palestinian people and say, 'I initialed such a document. I want  
to dissolve the legislative council and run for election and this is  
going to be my political platform. Not only for me as a president,  
but also as leader of Fatah.' Let us assume that he does this and  
then he creates a debate in our society. It will be a very far- 
reaching, democratic debate, in which he will be looked upon as  
presenting his project. [This would] mark the beginning of a process,  
of a struggle.
"I believe that on Israeli side, Olmert could do the same. We don't  
know whether both leaders will be reelected, but it's worth doing,  
even if they're not, because at least we know we've given this peace  
agreement a chance."
Ami Ayalon says, in response: "I agree with Sari Nusseibeh that time  
is running out for the two-state solution. He voices the frustration  
and desperation of the Palestinians, and we have to consider that. If  
a man like him, a son of a Palestinian refugee who relinquished his  
right of return and was bodily attacked because of it, comes to the  
conclusion that the two-state solution is no longer an option, it  
means that the whole pragmatic Palestinian approach is crumbling.
"I share his view that Olmert missed a chance to get an agreement due  
to efforts to insure his own political survival. The Labor Party will  
not succeed in getting back in power by attacking the other parties,  
but only by raising the common banner of security and political  
agreements."
................................................................
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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Judith Norman
Lincoln Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
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