Khaled Hroub
Director of Media
Programme, Gulf Research Centre-Cambridge
In a quick and
angry response to UNESCO's decision to admit Palestine as a full member, the US
administration stopped its $60 million annual contribution to the organisation's
budget. Almost immediately, a flurry of condemnations of the American reaction
erupted in the pan-Arab media. Once the news was broadcast, hundreds of
frustrated viewers posted angry comments on Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya websites,
both based in the Gulf and considered to be the leading news websites in Arabic.
Particularly since the UNESCO step is more symbolic than anything else, the US
reaction is seen to be way out of proportion.
General Arab
frustration at the blindly pro-Israeli policies of the US has become compounded
especially after Washington's (over)reaction to the Palestinian call for full
statehood status at the UN in September. At that time, American pressure on the
Palestinian leadership to withdraw their application ranged across the whole
spectrum and continued to the very last minute. Not only were threats made
including cutting annual aid to the Palestinian Authority, but President Barack
Obama was reported to have held the Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
personally responsible for any drop of American blood that might be shed in
connection with the American veto against the Palestinian request. Some
lawmakers in the US Congress have already started drafting measures to punish
the Palestinians by effecting financial cuts. It could be said that the strong
overall American reaction across the political spectrum in Washington has taken
a harder line against the Palestinian petition than that taken in Tel Aviv.
Palestinian and
other Arab commentators criticise the Americans for becoming plus royaliste que
le roi, pointing to the many voices inside Israel that have been calling upon
the government not only to accept the Palestinian move, but to support it. When
the Palestinians started seriously considering this strategy over the past year,
a prominent group of Israeli intellectuals and politicians, many of them holding
prestigious Israeli awards, issued a statement, in April, in support of the
declaration of a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders. This new Palestinian
strategy of pursuing higher diplomatic status at the UN is bound within
international law and creates no contradiction with any of the previous UN
resolutions. In fact it is a harmless step which conforms to the parameters of
the long-conducted peace process which has made the establishment of a
Palestinian state within the 1967 boundaries its ultimate goal.
The short-sighted
American reaction to Palestine's UN bid can only be understood as a means of
appeasing the strong Jewish-American lobbies in light of the coming elections.
Such electioneering tactics, in blockheadedly showing imagined support for
Israel against the almost universal support to legitimate Palestinian rights
acknowledged by the US itself, will cost the Americans a high and unwarranted
price. Israel is not under any existential threat that could justify the
hysterical American reaction. Neither is the US even in full consensual
agreement with the hard line populist politics of Israel's current government.
There has recently been a need for even more rational and balanced American
positioning vis-a-vis the Palestinian effort rather than the head-to-head
clashes in the context of which Obama's speech at the UN will be noted in
history as the most Zionist speech delivered by an American president
ever.
But what is really
new about all this when American policies have always sided with Israel in good
times and bad? Well, actually, there are two new developments that would render
an American continuation of old policies in this respect more damaging than
before: the recent Arab revolutions along with what the US has invested in
supporting them; and the more assertive Gulf positions supporting the
Palestinians.
By adopting such a
blindly over-blown line of support to the current right-wing Israeli government,
the US is simply losing all the gains that it might have garnered from the Arab
Spring. Starting with revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt back in January,
Washington faced the dilemma of either moving along with the rising sentiment in
the Arab street which would change pro-Western regimes, or support their ailing
and corrupt governments. The carefully calculated positions and neatly worded
statements that Washington made in response to the speedy success of these
revolutions had been meant to keep a balanced stance: to side with the wave of
change, but to keep other allies in the Arab region assured of American support.
In the end, the official American position was read by their allies in the
region as tilting towards these revolutions even if they led to the toppling of
the old regimes. At the level of Arab public perception, the American stance in
ditching the Tunisian and Egyptian presidents had shaken the long-lived and
deep-seated anti-American sentiment in the region. One could argue that for the
first time in the past two decades parts of Arab public opinion were nudged out
of their strong black anti-American feeling into a decidedly lighter 'grey'
area.
This move from a
black and white perception of the US to a 'grey' area in a span of a mere few
months should have been considered a massive strategic achievement. All previous
efforts over the past decade and longer, and investments in 'Public Diplomacy'
and other fruitless projects, had yielded very little. Winning the 'hearts and
minds' of the Arabs required real change in politics, and many Arabs had started
to see the beginning of such a change in the Arab Spring. This beginning seemed
to have redressed for a while the frustration and loss of hope in President
Obama, especially after the high expectations he managed to raise in his
Istanbul and Cairo speeches in April and June 2009, respectively.
Yet, all efforts
that the US has made, or the little achievements that it has been gaining on the
Arab/Muslim public opinion front, have been continuously whittled away because
of the way it has dealt with the Palestine/Israel issue. The credibility that
Obama had projected in the first year of his presidency, which rapidly changed
much of the negative image of the US among Arabs and Muslims, would later fail
because of the stubborn Israeli position on settlements. As a condition set by
the international community and by the US itself in the Roadmap for Peace, Obama
pressed the Israelis to freeze building settlements prior to the resumption of
negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. The Israelis rejected his
demand and have continued right up to the very present to construct new
settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Obama did nothing, or, being
unable to do anything, lost his face and credibility in the Arab and Muslim
world, one may even add humiliatingly! A common metaphor that was frequently
used in the Arab press depicted the US bowing on its knees before Israel.
The other new and
noticeable development which would further expose America's pro-Israel policies
is the new foreign policy of the Gulf countries, individually or as a GCC bloc.
The Arab Spring has given the GCC an unprecedented role in leading collective
Arab action, in Libya, Yemen and Syria. Egypt, Iraq and Syria, the countries
that until recently would claim Arab leadership or enjoyed great influence on
other Arab countries, have all taken the back seat each for obvious reasons.
Within the framework of the Arab League or even outside it, the GCC bloc seems
to remain, and perhaps despite many internal shortcomings, the only coherent
Arab bloc that is able to function collectively and show leadership. On the
Palestine front, this has been exhibited in the challenging remarks made by the
Saudi prince Turki Al-Faisal in the American press, stating boldly that his
country will support the Palestinian UN move without reservation. It was the
concrete GCC support for the Palestinian president at the UN, according to many
accounts, which had strengthened his position. There is some serious talk within
the GCC that it (along with Turkey) should step in if the American threats of
cutting the annual half a billion dollar or so support to the Palestinian
Authority were to materialise. However, Washington is fully aware that a cut in
aid would mean a cut in leverage, thus such an extreme measure would actually be
very unlikely.
In the moving sands
of the post-revolutions Arab region, the usual American policies towards the
Israeli/Palestinian conflict have become out of date. What Washington attempts
to build and invest with certain policies is destroyed and divested by other
policies. Unless a radical change and a major shift in Washington's policies on
Palestine is pursued, winning the hearts and minds of the Arabs seems likely to
be a futile exercise - as the old Arab proverb most accurately describes, the
Americans pointlessly 'are ploughing the sea'!
Khaled Hroub is
Director of the Media Programme at the Gulf Research
Centre-Cambridge