Thursday, August 18, 2005
Disengagement & disenchantment. posted by Richard Seymour
You must read this wonderfully bilious piece on the Gaza withdrawal by the Bionic Octopus. It has the advantage of being written by a New York Jewish woman (well, Rhode Island these days, but how is London-bound Old European to know the difference?) and also of being fiercely and wittily anti-Zionist. And the capper is this revealing little quote from a Ha'aretz interview with Dov Wiesglass, Ariel Sharon's lawyer:I still don't see how the disengagement plan helps here. What was the major importance of the plan from your point of view?
"The disengagement plan is the preservative of the sequence principle. It is the bottle of formaldehyde within which you place the president's formula so that it will be preserved for a very lengthy period. The disengagement is actually formaldehyde. It supplies the amount of formaldehyde that's necessary so that there will not be a political process with the Palestinians."
Is what you are saying, then, is that you exchanged the strategy of a long-term interim agreement for a strategy of long-term interim situation?
"The American term is to park conveniently. The disengagement plan makes it possible for Israel to park conveniently in an interim situation that distances us as far as possible from political pressure. It legitimizes our contention that there is no negotiating with the Palestinians. There is a decision here to do the minimum possible in order to maintain our political situation. The decision is proving itself. It is making it possible for the Americans to go to the seething and simmering international community and say to them, `What do you want.' It also transfers the initiative to our hands. It compels the world to deal with our idea, with the scenario we wrote. It places the Palestinians under tremendous pressure. It forces them into a corner that they hate to be in. It thrusts them into a situation in which they have to prove their seriousness.