April
8, 2002 8:30 a.m. Polling
Israel Out of Existence
Why
Arafat must go.
By Ronni Gordon
Stillman & Alexander T. Stillman
Nothing
is lacking for the making of peace but the Arab persistence in denying
Israel's very right to exist. Nothing can wrench out of our hearts or
out of our policy this wish for peace, this hope of peace — not even
our indignation over the killing of our loved ones, not even the enmity
of the rulers of the Arab world.
Golda Meir
s
the Israeli incursions aimed at rooting out the Palestinian terrorist
infrastructure in the West Bank and Gaza enter their second week, the
United States and other nations have urged Israel to wrap up its military
maneuvers quickly and seek a political and diplomatic solution to the
escalating crisis. The establishment of a Palestinian state as endgame
is a concept endorsed and supported by the Bush administration and Israel.
Yet a poll taken in mid-February 2002 by the Development Studies Programme
(DSP), an institute affiliated with Birzeit University in the West Bank,
reveals that Palestinian statehood would probably not end the hostilities
between Israelis and Palestinians. Of 1,198 Palestinians polled
in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, 49.5 percent said that a future Palestinian
state and Israel could not coexist peacefully.
The
results of two other public-opinion surveys taken since Yasser Arafat
unleashed his al-Aqsa intifada in September 2000 indicate that a large
percentage of the Palestinian population does not want to make peace with
Israel. The polls, sponsored by the DSP and the Palestinian Center for
Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR), surveyed Palestinians living in the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip on their attitude toward the peace process,
terrorism, coexistence with Israel and relations with Israelis. The polls
were published in November
2000 (1,234 Palestinians polled) and December
2001 (1,357 Palestinians polled).
THE
PEACE PROCESS The
public-opinion surveys on the peace process target issues such as the
elimination of anti-Israel references in the official Palestinian Ministry
of Education school curriculum, the partition of Jerusalem and the right
of refugees to return. When respondents were asked in the December 2001
survey if a future Palestinian state should adopt a school curriculum
that recognizes Israel and teach schoolchildren not to demand the return
of all Palestine to the Palestinians, 90.7 percent of the respondents
opposed or strongly opposed such a change in curriculum. In the November
2000 poll, a whopping 92 percent said that peace is not possible between
Palestinians and Israelis if East Jerusalem is not the capital of a Palestinian
state. Yasser Arafat has consistently called on Palestinians to wage jihad
for Jerusalem and the responses reflect this. 74.3 percent of those surveyed
answered that even if East Jerusalem were to come under Palestinian sovereignty,
they still would not accept Israeli sovereignty over West Jerusalem. As
for the question of refugees, 91.5 percent of Palestinians polled in November
2000 believe that peace is not possible if Israel does not recognize the
right of Palestinian refugees to return.
TERRORISM
When
surveyed in December 2001, 81.8 percent of the Palestinian respondents
supported or strongly supported armed attacks against Israeli targets,
and 92.3 percent supported or strongly supported armed attacks against
Israeli soldiers in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. In the same poll,
82.3 percent disagreed or strongly disagreed with defining the suicide
bombing at the Dolphinarium discotheque that murdered 23 mostly teenage
Israelis (and wounded 100 more) as a terrorist attack. 69.4 percent of
the respondents questioned would not consider the use of chemical or biological
weapons against Israel an act of terror. Thus, a significant number of
Palestinians not only favors violent attacks on Israelis, but would support
the use of weapons of mass destruction against Israeli civilians.
NORMALIZATION
The
Palestinian view of Israelis is not conducive to normalization of relations.
In polls taken since November 2000, between 50 percent and 60 percent
of Palestinian respondents asked if Palestinians and Israelis could coexist
after an independent Palestinian state had been established next to the
Israeli state answered that there is no chance for peaceful coexistence
between the two peoples. Furthermore, even if a Palestinian state were
established, 64.8 percent of the respondents in the November 2000 survey
would not view a friendship between a Palestinian and an Israeli positively.
And 62.3 percent of Palestinians surveyed in December 2001 would not invite
an Israeli colleague to their home even if a peace agreement had been
implemented and a Palestinian state were recognized by Israel.
CULTURE
OF ANTI-JEWISH HATRED
The
results of these public opinion surveys should not be surprising. After
all, terrorist dictator Yasser Arafat has indoctrinated a generation of
Palestinians with his vile culture of anti-Jewish hatred, so virulent
it rivals that of Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Having agreed to abstain
from incitement and hostile propaganda, he has violated the letter and
the spirit of the Oslo accords with Israel. Sen. Connie Mack told Congress
after a trip to Israel in 1999, "peace is a matter of the heart.
How can peace be obtained when Palestinian children are being taught hatred?"
Arafat
has made no attempt to change the hearts and minds of his people, but
rather harden and poison them with his praise of jihad against Israel
and his glorification of young suicide bombers as martyrs. And he certainly
has not prepared the Palestinians for peaceful coexistence with Israel.
What emerges from a reading of the polls is that the conflict is not about
land or settlements or holy sites or water. The plain truth is that Yasser
Arafat's war, instigated and funded by the Arab world, is about Israel's
very right to exist.
Ronni Gordon Stillman is an associate scholar at the Middle East
Forum. Alexander T. Stillman is president of the International Consulting
Group.
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