Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, October 2004, pages
42-43
Delegation Trip
U.S. Diplomatic Delegation Shocked by Oppression and Devastation
in Palestine
All photos by Michael J. Keating
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A man sells
his wares amid the rubble at the Kalandiya checkpoint, where
Israeli soldiers control entry to and from Ramallah. |
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IN MAY OF this year, 82 former American diplomats wrote
President George W. Bush to express their firm belief that his
April 14 endorsement of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s
unilateral “disengagement plan” was not in the best
interests of the U.S., or Israel, or the Palestinians. Through
his endorsement Bush had closed the door to negotiations with Palestinians
and the possibility of a Palestinian state. His acceptance of the
Israeli prime minister’s plan to reject the rights of three
million Palestinians, to deny the right of refugees to return to
their homeland, and to retain five large illegal settlement blocs
in the occupied West Bank severely damaged longstanding U.S. Middle
East policy. Even Israel’s Knesset refused to accept the
plan that our president so quickly embraced.
Retired American diplomats—Republicans and Democrats alike—who
care deeply about their country and its foreign policy continue
to add their names to this letter (visit <www.wrmea.com> for
the complete text and list of signatures).
Our initiative attracted a fair amount of attention in Europe
and the Middle East, but little coverage at home. Nor did the White
House or State Department ever reply to our requests for a meeting
to discuss our concerns. Palestinians both here in the United States
and in the occupied territories did respond to our letter, however.
The Palestinian American Congress invited a delegation of diplomats
and journalists from the Washington Report to visit Palestine
and meet with President Yasser Arafat, who remains isolated and
besieged in his demolished Ramallah compound.
From July 16 to July 23, we traversed the West Bank from Hebron
in the south to Jenin in the north, wandering freely in Ramallah
and elsewhere. The Gaza portion of our trip was canceled due to
the unstable situation which developed after we arrived.
All the participants have extensive experience living in and
working on the Middle East, and considerable familiarity with the
issues generated by 37 years of occupation. Three retired U.S.
ambassadors—Carleton Coon, Andrew Killgore and Edward Peck—led
the delegation. Other former diplomats included Richard H. Curtiss,
former chief inspector of the U.S. Information Agency; J. Brady
Kiesling, who resigned from the U.S. foreign service on the eve
of the war on Iraq in protest of President Bush’s foreign
policy; and Eugene Bird of the Council for the National Interest. Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs editors Janet McMahon and Delinda
Hanley and photographer Michael Keating accompanied the diplomats.
Palestinian Americans Said Hamad, his daughter Alia, and Nabil
Zneid of the PLO office in Washington, DC, showed us sights we
will never forget.
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| Israel’s apartheid wall encircles
Palestinian towns, separating them from each other, Jerusalem
from its suburbs and farmers from their fields, as seen from
Al Quds University. |
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The delegation met with Palestinian citizens, educational, religious
and municipal government officials, journalists, a U.S. consular
officer and a member of the Knesset, and senior members of the
Palestinian Authority, including President Arafat.
We also met with a staff member from the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem
for an off-the-record discussion that seemed to focus on Palestinian
failure to protect Israelis, as well as corruption and upheaval
in Palestine’s government. The American official ignored
Israel’s illegal occupation, failure to live up to its obligations
and corruption woes—subjects readily discussed in Israel’s
mainstream media. This was an officer from Jerusalem, moreover,
charged with reporting information from Palestine, not an officer
from Tel Aviv.
We tried to meet with Israelis, including a rabbi, a refusenik
and others working for peace. We did meet with Israeli Knesset
member Azmi Bishara. Due to horrendous communication and travel
difficulties that both Americans and Palestinians living in the
occupied territories take in their stride, our only face-to-face
discussions with other Israelis were with soldiers and settlers,
and an Israeli peace activist who works with Jeff Halper’s
organization, the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions,
and monitors border crossings. But we probably met a greater number
of Israelis than Americans on Israeli-sponsored trips meet Palestinians.
Delegates had many opportunities to observe portions of the wall,
planned to enclose the entire Palestinian population in the world’s
largest outdoor prisons, and the shattering effect it already has
had on people’s lives. They also passed through, or were
turned back from, several of the many checkpoints which surround
every West Bank city, seriously impeding commerce as well as everyday
existence.
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Leaving Ramallah, cars
and trucks can spend hours waiting in line at the Kalandiya
crossing. For some, the wait is in vain, when Israeli soldiers
turn them back. |
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It was an extremely chilling, deeply disturbing visit, made more
compelling by the realization that even Americans reasonably confident
of their knowledge of the situation have no idea of the grim, threatening
reality of what is happening—and the inevitable results.
It was a shock to see the extent of land seizures, tight travel
restrictions and endless humiliation which Palestinians are forced
to endure.
In this special report from Palestine we’ll try to share
with our readers some of the many stories we heard and sights we
saw. Nonetheless, one of the most sobering lessons of our visit
was the awareness that words, and even photographs, cannot convey
the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Palestine today.
Without touching Israel’s wall, it’s hard to grasp
its size and horror. Words cannot describe the humiliation and
fear you feel at a checkpoint as you stumble in the dark past rifle-toting
soldiers and try to avoid razor wire and the broken pavement. You
have to smell the garbage and see the piles of twisted cars and
debris from demolished homes in the wall’s path that Palestinians
are forbidden to clean up. You also need to lurch along Palestinian
streets marred by potholes left by Israeli tanks or trenches perversely
created by Israeli back hoes.
We challenge every American journalist, politician, teacher,
religious leader and taxpayer to visit the occupied territories,
talk with Palestinians, look into their eyes, and see what Israel
is doing to its neighbor with our support. Find out the facts for
yourself. It’s your responsibility to do so, since Israel
is using your taxes to pay for the occupation and the wall.
What struck us was the urgency of the situation. Palestinians
are in crisis, and many have reached the end of their rope. Their
society and economy are disintegrating with every new section Israel
adds to the wall and every new acre of prime agricultural land
it steals.
Palestinian families, lands, jobs, educations, and futures are
in jeopardy. Yet many still believe that the United States and
the rest of the world will bring them justice before it’s
too late. If they are wrong, and hopelessness and despair continue
on the inexorable path to hatred, not only Palestinians, but Americans,
Israelis and the entire world could pay a high price indeed.
Amb. Andrew I. Killgore, Amb. Edward Peck, Amb. Carleton S.
Coon, Richard H. Curtiss, Eugene Bird, J. Brady Kiesling, Michael
J. Keating, Janet McMahon and Delinda C. Hanley visited the West
Bank from July 16 to 23, 2004. This report is compiled from articles
several of them have written about their findings. Individual
articles can be found on the Washington Report Web site, <www.wrmea.com>. |