March 26, 2013
make their way from a joint press conference following a bilateral meeting at the Prime Minister's residence in Jerusalem on March 20, 2013.
(Image credit: AFP/Getty
Images via @daylife)
With the completion of Barack Obama‘s first Presidential visit to Israel, as expected there was a great deal of symbolism reinforcing the bond between the two allies.
Yet still, doves on both sides acknowledge that peace is hardly around the corner.
This is underscored in a recent telling statement made by Hamas leader Mahmoud Al-Zahar on the Ezzedeen Al-Qassam Brigade’s website.
He said that that Israel’s attempts to end the UN classification of the Palestinian refugees is doomed to fail because of how Palestinian identity is linked to the Right of Return for eternity.
This is a quasi-religious belief that crosses
all sectors of Palestinian society, and which is endlessly reproduced in
Palestinian media, education and culture, and which is endorsed by
UNRWA, the UN organ charged with
maintaining health, welfare and education services for those it has deemed
Palestinian refugees.
Recent Israeli governments have been forthright in stating that there is no "right of return" and increasingly they point to it as one of the most formidable obstacles to making peace between the Israeli and Palestinian states, as well as peoples.
But there have been no official Israeli efforts to end or even curtail UNRWA.
Only recently has former Member of Knesset Einat Wilf called attention to UNRWA’s administrative decisions to extend refugee status to additional generations of Palestinians, creating more "refugees" and extending its own mandate. Wilf notes correctly that UNRWA’s endorsement of the "right of return" lies at the root of the Arab-Israeli conflict and not co-incidentally UNRWA’s continued existence.
Important legislation to reform UNRWA has also
come from U.S. Senator Mark Kirk but has not yet succeeded in passing
through the Congress.
From his perspective, of course, it is therefore necessary to put the onus entirely on Israel for the "Nakba," the "catastrophe" of 1948 and Israel’s creation, as opposed to seeing any Palestinian and Arab responsibility or agency in the matter.
If this is the core of Palestinian identity,
that can be satisfied only by exercising the Palestinian "right of return"
and the destruction of Israel, then there is no room for compromise.
Abbas’s statement is as important as Al-Zahar’s
since he was forced by Palestinian and Arab outrage to clarify an earlier
comment where he had appeared to waver on the "right of return."
In fact, UNRWA’s former general counsel James Lindsay has observed that,
Understanding how a UN agency is an integral ingredient of a long-term Arab strategy to perpetuate the misery of the Palestinians, and to keep this humanitarian burden at the center of the Arab-Israeli conflict is another key for President Obama to keep in mind as he visits Israel, and perhaps the West Bank.
This has been the Arab world’s biggest success against Israel, only at the expense of the Palestinians.
If Obama truly wants to move the peace process forward it would behoove him to look at what our taxpayer dollars are buying in UNRWA, and at those who are truly being served.
Until he understands that the "right of return"
is the essence of the conflict, and that we need to start changing this core
Palestinian belief, President Obama should not expect any change in the near
future.
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