The Jerusalem Post

Neverthele­ss, a confederat­ion

- • By MERON RAPOPORT, LIMOR YEHUDA, AMEER FAKHOURY and OREN YIFTACHEL (Reuters)

Many in the mainstream claim that a confederat­ion is not the means to achieve peace between Israel and Palestine. They think that the idea is delusional, suggest that its proponents don’t know the difference between a federation and a confederat­ion, and state that a confederat­ion will lead to constant civil war. In their opinion, only full separation can be the basis of a solution to this conflict.

Before we answer this statement, here is a solid fact: Israelis and Palestinia­ns, Jews and Arabs live intertwine­d between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea; within the State of Israel, in Jerusalem, and beyond the ‘67 lines. The economy is mixed, as are trade and labor. This fact may make some happy, some recoil, but it cannot be ignored. This situation will remain even if an agreement were reached based on the classic separation model. Even if some Israeli government had the political power to uproot 100,000 Jews from the West Bank, there would still remain 1.5 million Palestinia­n Arabs within the borders of Israel. Already, Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman is suggesting that Umm el-Fahm be separated from Israel. Would a settlement necessitat­e the separation of Nazareth from Upper Nazareth? Or the city of Beersheba from the Beduin town of Rahat?

In Jerusalem, the situation is just as complex. Even if Jewish and Arab neighborho­ods are separated, there is still the problem of the Old City. Even the proponents of separation don’t propose placing fences and obstacles in the Old City. The 50,000 inhabitant­s of this crowded and sensitive area, Arabs and Jews, extremists and moderates, are supposed to cooperate in creating a peaceful co-existence in the city’s alleys, under some kind of internatio­nal oversight. If it isn’t possible to create a separation in the heart of the conflict, how will it be possible to create it overall?

It is no coincidenc­e that there is a growing awareness that separation by closed borders is not the solution to ethno-national conflicts. History shows us that the separation in India, Ireland and former Yugoslavia gave birth to violence and deportatio­n rather than peace and reconcilia­tion. The models that ended the violence in Northern Ireland and in Bosnia-Herzegovin­a are based on a combinatio­n of self-determinat­ion and the inclusion of various ethnic groups in the government.

We, the Israeli-Palestinia­n movement A Land for All, follow this model exactly. It is obvious to us that aside from self-determinat­ion for each nation within its own state, extensive cooperatio­n is required. We haven’t invented anything. The UN 1947 partition proposal, which caused the Zionist movement to dance in ecstasy, suggested this exact model. Two states, with an economic union, and Jerusalem as a special district. We call this solution “two states, one homeland.”

A confederat­ion is based on separate sovereign states with clear borders, with a few joint institutio­ns. This is the model that we propose, whether it’s called a confederat­ion, a union, or the Abrahamic Commonweal­th. Two independen­t states, with clear borders running along the 1967 lines. This means an independen­t sovereign Palestinia­n state, with a standing army, a flag, an anthem, and full representa­tion in the UN.

To those who claim that a viable confederat­ion doesn’t exist globally, here are some successful examples: Poland and Lithuania, Sweden and Norway, and for a short time, Serbia and Montenegro. Although these confederat­ions eventually disintegra­ted, it was with no violence. The confederat­ion structure contribute­d to easing the conflict into political and judicial channels.

And of course there is the most obvious example – the European Union. Whether the EU is defined as a confederat­ion or not, it is very similar to the model we are proposing: independen­t states with open borders, freedom of movement, and shared institutio­ns. Several years after the devastatio­n of WWII the union founders understood that a peaceful Europe could only be achieved through cooperatio­n, not separation. There are problems in the EU, but it cannot be disputed that it achieved the longest period of peace known to the continent in centuries.

A confederat­ion, or a union, must include freedom of movement and open borders. This means that Israelis will be able to live in Palestine as Israeli citizens and Palestinia­n residents, and Palestinia­ns will be able to live in Israel as Palestinia­n citizens and Israeli residents. According to our plan, this freedom of movement will evolve in a gradual and mutually agreed rate to avoid destabiliz­ing both countries. This is how it was done in the EU.

Contrary to common belief, this model has considerab­le support on both sides. According to a survey conducted by Dr. Halil Shkaki and Dr. Dalia Shindline, a year ago 24% of Israelis supported this model, and today 33-39% of Jews and 70% of Arabs are in THERE IS no guarantee that a confederat­ion will be the ‘magic pill’ for the Palestinia­n economy, but Gaza has taught us that strict separation is a sure recipe for worsening poverty on the Palestinia­n side. favor. The rising approval by Israelis is apparent across political sectors – Left, Right and Center.

Indeed, there are challenges in our model: the economic gap and the difference in regimes. In our Mission Statement, we write that the two states will be democratic and honor human rights as recognized by internatio­nal law. This is not merely a formality. Those in the know regarding Palestinia­n politics can recognize clear signs of democracy. It can be assumed that joining Israel in a confederat­ion will largely accelerate this process.

The same can be said of the economic gap. There is no guarantee that a confederat­ion will be the “magic pill” for the Palestinia­n economy, but Gaza has taught us that strict separation is a sure recipe for worsening poverty on the Palestinia­n side. Clearly, not a recipe for stability.

In these dark days, it is difficult to imagine a different future. The confederat­e solution is anchored in a new narrative, based on mutual recognitio­n of each nation’s bond with the entire homeland. Twenty-five years after the Oslo Accords, intellectu­al integrity is needed. The concept of total separation did not enable an agreement. Even worse, under its cover, the occupation, the conflict, and the violence deepened. It’s time we got rid of it.

The writers are members of A Land for All, an Israeli-Palestinia­n movement advocating two states with open borders as a solution to the conflict in the Middle East.

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