DIALOGUE NEEDED, BEFORE WE TURN INTO A LEPER STATE
Informe de Sharon Sadeh en "HaŽa retz" del 21-8-02
BRUSSELS - Apart from a few visits to a limited number of capitals and
preciously few calls to brief continental leaders, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
has not paid much attention to Europe. Nor do ministers in his government walk
the extra mile to get close to Israel's largest trade partner. "Such
neglect will cost us dearly in the future," warns Harry Kney-Tal, Israel's
ambassador to the European Community.
Kney-Tal, 58, who held senior diplomatic posts in the U.S. and elsewhere as an
Israeli diplomat, completes his term in Brussels in a few weeks. Preparing to
return home, he's worried and frustrated. The political and intellectual gap
between Israel and Europe is widening he says. Without corrective steps, Israel
is liable to end up boycotted as a pariah state, like South Africa in the days
of apartheid. As he sees it, Israel has done little, if anything, to forestall
this eventuality.
European Union states, and Belgium in particular, have in recent years turned
into trouble spots for Israeli diplomats. Anti-Semitic attacks against Jewish
targets, coupled with vocal, strident support for the Palestinian Authority and
vehement criticism of Israel's military activity - such trends, and others,
appear to reflect a one-sided, hostile viewpoint. Tendentious, negative
treatment of Israel in the media reinforces this impression. Commentators,
particularly on Israel's right, often argued that Europeans criticize Israel in
the name of lofty moral principles which veil what is little more than resurgent
anti-Semitism. This view is backed by some U.S. officials.
A few months ago, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell was quoted saying that
anti-Semitic phenomena in Europe are "manifestations of repressed emotions,
ones which were always present in Europe, but which were concealed in the
aftermath of World War II." Such views are superficial and one-sided,
Kney-Tal believes. They lead to a faulty understanding of European Union
dynamics and goals.
Kney-Tal adds that relations between Europe and Israel have also worsened
because the EU leadership "recoils from information which contradicts its
value systems and perceptions, some of which are based on stereotypes"
regarding Israel, the dispute and the Middle East.
Perceptual gap
A clear illustration of the perceptual gap between Israel and the EU involves
the connection between Palestinian incitement and suicide attacks. "Both
Israel and the Europeans denounce incitement," Kney-Tal explains. "But
when it comes to the meaning of the phenomenon, the sides express differing
interpretations. In Israel, a close link is made between the school texts, media
reports, official statements, mosque sermons - and suicide attacks. In Europe,
this interpretation is totally rejected. We recognize that there is terror, the
Europeans tell us, but their reference is to terror attacks like those of the
Catholic underground in Northern Ireland, or the Basque underground in Spain:
these were aimed mostly at political figures or symbols of government, and were
not designed to kill indiscriminately, as happens in our case." Often
terrorists in Western Europe give advance warning about where explosives have
been put, in order to limit casualties.
"Up to September 11," Kney-Tal says, "the Europeans would use the
term `cycle of violence' in the Israeli-Palestinian context. In their view, it
wasn't clear which side initiated violence; nor was this issue of who started it
very important. There is an attack and then a response, which inevitably leads
to another attack and so on. They didn't attribute special import to suicide
attacks; they viewed them as a local Israeli problem.
"We, of course, saw things differently: there is a process of incitement,
which causes terror attacks and, then, escalation of violence. There were also
differences of opinion regarding incitement in Palestinian schoolbooks. We
warned about the phenomenon; they promised to look into it. Their findings
differed from ours. They wanted to show that incitement in Palestinian school
texts was disappearing. We said: take a closer look, that's not the case. But
they're not conscious of nuances which are very sensitive issues for us. That's
not because they are anti-Israel; it's because they relate to the issue on an
emotional plane which differs entirely from our own."
The Europeans, says Kney-Tal, after having reached a rational decision in favor
of reconciliation, and having lived for six decades under peace and economic
prosperity, have a problem in grasping Israel's difficult plight. "After
the Second World War, Europe decided to abandon the use of force as a means to
resolve disputes, and to set up the European Union, which operates on the basis
of shared interests.... What drives them [the Europeans] crazy is states in the
world like the U.S. and Israel, which don't recognize purely rational-legal
rules of the game, and which believe that there are situations which require
them to exercise their right of self-defense by resorting to the use of massive
military force. The Europeans don't believe in a zero-sum game; instead, they
try to cultivate interests shared by all the sides, while trying to create the
widest possible common denominator."
After two devastating world wars, Kney-Tal says, Europe doesn't want to believe
that there are situations in which arrangements can't be forged by negotiations.
It has succumbed to cognitive dissonance: were the Europeans to indicate
agreement with the claim that the Palestinian Authority uses incitement, and
that such incitement leads to irrational actions such as suicide attacks, such
agreement would contradict the manner in which the situation has been analyzed
up to now, and the way they have wanted to view matters.
"They simply cannot accept this turn of logic - incitement leads to suicide
attacks. Such acceptance would entail rejection of the creature they've created,
the Palestinian Authority, an entity established largely through European
assistance and funding," Kney-Tal says.
The European Union is proud that it enabled the Palestinian Authority to survive
in recent years, in a period when Israel enforced severe economic sanctions
against it.
"Their claim is that they haven't done so because they are especially
altruistic, but instead because they've understood - unlike Israel, and now
unlike the U.S - that the legal Palestinian framework needs to be preserved in
the long term, and that this system is headed by a leader, Arafat, who was
elected legitimately, in order to guarantee negotiations, and progress in the
diplomatic process," Kney-Tal says. "In other words, the Europeans are
basically telling us we know better than you, because we're not so involved
emotionally in this story, and we can look at the situation in a sober,
detached, neutral way, relating to the two sides equally. Thus, they are
extremely critical of the American position, which is so supportive of Sharon
and Israel's government."
"The dispute with Europe," explains Kney-Tal, "worsened in tandem
with the degenerating crisis with the Palestinians... For us, it became clear
that the rational negotiation framework, which was constructed in the Oslo
process and which featured gradual progress for both sides toward the
establishment of two states for two peoples, went awry, and collapsed. The
Europeans have a different view."
The EU has refused, and continues to refuse, to play any part in a process that
might lead to a collapse of the Palestinian side. Such a process, the EU
believes, would paralyze the diplomatic process, and create a situation of
absolute terror and anarchy.
"Such a state of chaos is the exact opposite of what Europe wants right
now," says Kney-Tal. "Europe assumes that if the Palestinians will, in
the end, have a state, then they would be involved in building their nation; and
that is why the PA has to be preserved at all costs, if the Palestinians are to
have such a role. For years, they [the Europeans] were apathetic both to our
appeals calling for reforms in the PA, and to our claims that incitement leads
to attacks and that EU assistance allows Arafat to divert money to terror. The
challenge, as they see it, is to prove that these claims are unfounded, and that
we are basically exploiting such charges manipulatively in order to force them
to sever their assistance, and turn their backs on the PA."
For the Europeans, "the rational negotiating process comes before
everything else. It has to continue, come what may, because once we make it to
the end of the process, and a solution is forged, then a new era of healing will
arise, and the time will be ripe for really dealing with incitement. In other
words, [Europe's view] is that fundamental, root problems must be dealt with
first, and then their symptoms can be addressed. And, as they see it, the root
cause of the dispute is the occupation. Take care of the occupation, they say,
finish it, and then one of two things will happen: either there will be quiet,
or we will understand that there's no quiet because the Palestinians have wider
goals. We say the opposite: We can't deal with the root problems without first
taking care of their symptoms. In this respect, the difference [in
interpretations] is vast."
Europe remained adamant, Kney-Tal explains, even when the Camp David and Taba
talks broke down. "This was a rational process; the sides sat around a
negotiating table. But then it became clear that this [the talks] doesn't work;
but they refused to accept this could be so. In a way, they were in a state of
denial. At first, they had to be satisfied with versions offered by Ehud Barak
and Shlomo Ben-Ami. A year later, a counter version propounded by former Clinton
adviser Robert Malley came out, refuting Israel's claims. The French loved it.
His articles were translated instantly and circulated in the media. They
accorded with the world view which held that there are two sides, and
responsibility for the failure rests equally with both. Once again, this
European view reflected a rationalist approach to conflict resolution."
As Kney-Tal sees it, those in Israel who present themselves as belonging to the
peace camp have helped the Europeans abide by their refusal to draw a logical
connection between incitement, funding and suicide terror attacks. These
Israelis say claims about incitement leading to terror belong to the right-wing,
which wants to topple the PA. The European Union relates to the peace camp as a
potential partner for the continuation of dialogue with the Palestinians,
Kney-Tal says.
Attitude change
During the last year, after the September 11 attacks in the U.S. and the steep
rise in the number of suicide attacks in Israel, the European Union's tone and
approach have changed. "There has been some progress in the EU's
position," Kney-Tal says. "They are talking now explicitly about
taking action against Palestinian terror...They are more balanced, and even
express solidarity with Israel. The list of terror organizations deemed illegal
by the EU has grown, and now includes Hamas' military wing, and Islamic Jihad.
Recently, they added eight Palestinian and Arab organizations, including the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade. Of course, in order to maintain balance, they added the
[Jewish] Kahane Hai and Kach groups. They also toughened up terms for the
conferral of money to the Palestinians, and tightened supervision of this
funding."
Kney-Tal is worried about a new generation of Western European leaders who grew
up on on the Palestinian-Arab narrative. "That narrative, which is
reinforced by Israeli or former Israeli researchers, has nearly totally taken
over the academic, polticial and media discussion of the issues," he says.
"It is appropriate to the popular world view in Europe nowadays, which is
pacifist and post-modernist, full of guilt toward the former colonies and full
of sympathy for oppressed nations demanding self-determnation. It also serves
electoral interests as well as the traditional interests of realpolitik, which
takes up a large part of EU policy.
At the same time, he fears, there is a an accelerating process of
delegitimization of Israel, which is gradually being perceived - though at this
stage only in intellectual circles, but the trend will grow - as a crude,
brutal, and racist country that tramples on civil rights.
"I'm worried about the fact that Israel and Europe have not been able to
build a framework which enables and facilitates Jewish-Christian dialogue,"
says Kney-Tal. "The Europeans are building frameworks for deep and profound
discussion only with those Israelis whose viewpoints are close to their own,
with Israelis who justify the EU line and thereby provide moral validity to the
European position. They [Europeans] understand neither Israel's reality, nor
Israel's rich cultural diversity.
"The second problem is the absence of an intellectual dialogue. Academics
in Israel are keeping mum, and I'm worried that the intellectual elite [in
Israel] still hasn't grasped that its in the same boat: should Israel be
engulfed by the waves, it, too, will go down. I remain flabbergasted that some
academics from Israel signed a European petition calling for the severance of
scientific and cultural connections with Israel."
As Kney-Tal sees it, Israel has no choice but to "draw Europe into a
serious, genuine dialogue, one which will deal not only with ongoing events, but
also with deeper levels. That's what is really lacking. Our relations with
Europe are asymmetrical, due to our small size and their large one. This
asymmetry has to be converted into a different sort of cooperation, one unlike
what we have had up to now. We must initiate this; we need to sharpen the
messages, and reach understandings based on shared interests in security and
democracy."