The End of the Peace Process: Oslo and After by Edward W. Said | (PDF) Free Download

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Ebook Info

  • Published: 2000
  • Number of pages: 368 pages
  • Format: PDF
  • File Size: 2.80 MB
  • Authors: Edward W. Said

Description

In this important collection of fifty pieces, Edward Said questions the very foundations of the Oslo accords. Signed in September 1993 on the White House lawn by Israel and the PLO, the accords were immediately hailed as a success and a breakthrough for peace in the Middle East, but Said realized that the imbalance of power between the signees would set up a problematic dynamic, bringing only an illusionary stability. The later interim agreements of Taba, Hebron, and the Wye Plantation would already limit the next phase — the final-status negotiations set to conclude this year, when the future condition of refugees, Jerusalem, borders, water and compensations must be decided.Incisively cutting through the hyperbole in the press surrounding the accords, these pieces document the historic content but also give otherwise unreported accounts of what has really gone on in the occupied territory since the signing. The continuing expansion of Israeli settlements, the repressive leadership and inflated bureaucracy of Yasir Arafat, Said’s own return to Jerusalem after forty-five years, the subsequent banning of his books by the Palestinian Authority, and Oslo’s inability to recognize Palestine’s self-determination are among the issues of peace and justice he discusses.Together these essays are an eloquent and courageous statement for peaceful coexistence and equality between two peoples, and for an end to the separation of Jews and non-Jews — the only hope for a lasting solution in the Middle East.

User’s Reviews

Editorial Reviews: From Publishers Weekly In his 18th book, Palestinian writer and Columbia University literary scholar Said (author of the highly praised memoir Out of Place) once again brings acute insight to a controversial subject. In 50 essays (most of which were originally published in the Cairo Ahram Weekly and London’s al-Hayat), he offers a bleak and somewhat cynical view of the Middle East peace process since Oslo. Deeply concerned with the fate of the Palestinian people, and without mincing words, Said probes their relationship to the Israeli government and their lives under Arafat’s Palestinian Authority. He skewers the Oslo Agreements–arguing that Palestinians merely surrendered to the Israelis–as well as the Palestinian Authority and Arafat. (Peace, he points out, can only exist if equality and respect exist; as a result, he urges Palestinians to resist Israeli settlements with nonviolent demonstrations and to create stable, democratic institutions that can coexist peaceably with Israel.) Throughout, Said also comments on the role of intellectuals in political discourse, the Holocaust and, in a particularly poignant essay, the political development of his son, Wadie. Although they’re stimulating, because these essays originated as newspaper columns, they’re also occasionally repetitive, and some of the events that inspired them have receded into oblivion. Still, on the whole, this is a potent analysis–one that refuses to follow a party line–of the complexities and stark realities of Middle Eastern politics. (Apr.) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal The Oslo “peace process,” which resulted in the signing of an agreement between Israel and Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat, has been the subject of numerous books, articles, and commentaries. In this refreshing and intelligently argued book, Palestinian American Said (English and comparative literature, Columbia Univ.; Orientalism; Culture and Imperialism) provides a sobering analysis of the pitfalls of the Oslo agreement. Most of the essays in this collection have appeared in Cairo’s al-Ahram Weekly and al-Hayat, London’s Arabic-language daily. Each essay is Said’s reflection on a dimension of the Palestinian predicament. Said convincingly explains why the “peace process” has had damaging effects on the fabric of Palestinian society and polity. (It puts nothing in writing, for instance, about the further expansion of Israeli settlements.) He is as critical of the corruption, incompetence, and authoritarianism of the Palestinian Authority as he is of American and Israeli postures. In his vintage style, Said forces the reader to look beyond clich s, sound bites, myths, and conventional thinking about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Highly recommended for public and academic libraries.DNader Entessar, Spring Hill Coll., Mobile, AL Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Booklist As he did in Peace and Its Discontents (1996), Said gathers four-dozen essays on the Mideast. Most first appeared between 1995 and 1999 in Cairo Ahram Weekly and (in Arabic) in London-based al-Hayat; “On Visiting Wadie” and “Truth and Reconciliation,” were written for the London Review of Books and the New York Times Magazine, respectively. Readers familiar with Said’s work will not be surprised that he is more critical of Arafat and the Palestinian Authority than of Israel’s leaders, nor that he views Oslo-based negotiations in the context of U.S.-dominated globalization. Some of Said’s essays respond to current events: announcement of the Oslo accords and, later, the Wye agreement; specific negotiations; actions by the Palestinian Authority; and visits to the Mideast by U.S. leaders. Other pieces take a longer view, such as “The Role of the Private Sector,” “Modernity, Information, and Governance,” “Isaiah Berlin,” “Mandela, Netanyahu, and Arafat,” and “Art, Culture, and Nationalism.” An always provocative commentator. Mary Carroll From Kirkus Reviews A collection of 50 impassioned, damning essays on the consequences of the Middle East peace process. In his latest book on Israeli-Palestinian relations, Said (Out of Place, 1999, etc.) blasts all the major players. He criticizes the Oslo peace process as a sham, attacks Israeli politicians as manipulative, and, most surprisingly, labels Yasir Arafat, head of the Palestinian Authority, as corrupt and incompetent. Based mostly on recent visits to the West Bank, these wonderfully clear and generous essays document how the Oslo accords created an illusory veil of peace behind which Israel continues to build settlements on traditionally Arab land, and how Arafat wastes international aid in support of the tiny zones where he has been allowed control. Said doesnt hide his disgust for Arafat. While Israel often acts despicablyclosing Jerusalem off to West Bank Palestinians, bulldozing Arab communities without warningSaid argues that it at least does so out of national self-interest. The former head of the PLO, on the other hand, has become like most other contemporary Arab leaders: he rules solely for personal gain instead of in the interests of his people. Said details how Arafat, under the peace accords, has purposefully hobbled Palestinian civil society, creating multitudes of sinecurial posts for his flunkies and, worse, an apparatus of security services whose goal seems only to be keeping the Palestinian people in line for the Israelis. This while universities, health care, and roads decay. The best essay in the collection is On Visiting Wadie, an account of the author visiting his American-born son, who at the time was living and working in the West Bank. Here the decadence of the Israel-Arafat regime is set against the promise of Wadies friends, young and old Palestinians working in organizations dedicated to the advancement of human rights. Such activists serve as a hopeful counterpoint to Saids otherwise dismal picture. A powerful, ground-level perspective on one of the greatest tragedies of our time. — Copyright ©2000, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. Review ?Eloquent, impassioned, and beautifully written.??Foreign AffairsFrom the Trade Paperback edition. From the Publisher “Said (author of the highly praised memoir Out of Place) once again brings acute insight to a controversial subject…. Deeply concerned with the fate of the Palestinian people, and without mincing words, Said probes their relationship to the Israeli government and their lives under Arafat’s Palestinian Authority… A potent analysis–one that refuses to follow a party line–of the complexities and stark realities of Middle Eastern politics. “–Publishers Weekly From the Inside Flap rtant collection of fifty pieces, Edward Said questions the very foundations of the Oslo accords. Signed in September 1993 on the White House lawn by Israel and the PLO, the accords were immediately hailed as a success and a breakthrough for peace in the Middle East, but Said realized that the imbalance of power between the signees would set up a problematic dynamic, bringing only an illusionary stability. The later interim agreements of Taba, Hebron, and the Wye Plantation would already limit the next phase — the final-status negotiations set to conclude this year, when the future condition of refugees, Jerusalem, borders, water and compensations must be decided.Incisively cutting through the hyperbole in the press surrounding the accords, these pieces document the historic content but also give otherwise unreported accounts of what has really gone on in the occupied territory since the signing. The continuing expansion of Israeli settlements, the repressive leadership and inflated bur About the Author Edward W. Said is University Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. He is the author of eighteen books, including Orientalism, which was nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award, Culture and Imperialism, Representations of the Intellectual, and Out of Place, a memoir.Edward W. Said’s Covering Islam, Peace and Its Discontents, The Politics of Dispossession, Culture and Imperialism, Representations of the Intellectual, The Question of Palestine, and Orientalism are available in Vintage paperback. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. IntroductionEver since it began secretly in Oslo and was signed on the White House lawn in September 1993, the Middle East “peace process” has seemed to me not only inevitable in its course but certain in its conclusion. Despite various apparent setbacks — from the 1994 Hebron massacre, to Yitzhak Rabin’s assassination in 1995, to the various Palestinian suicide bombings and subsequent closures of territory, to, most recently, the destructive Benjamin Netanyahu period 1996-9 — the sheer disparity in power between the United States and Israel, on the one hand, and the Palestinians as well as the Arab states on the other, has dictated that inevitability and its conclusions: the Oslo agreements would end in apparent success. As Avi Shlaim, the Israeli revisionist historian, puts it in a new book The Iron Wall, it “was the assessment of the IDF director of military intelligence that Arafat’s dire situation [in 1992], and possible imminent collapse, [that] made him the most convenient interlocutor for Israel . . .” With Ehud Barak’s assumption of power in May 1999 things have certainly speeded up, so much so that a comprehensive peace between Israel, the Palestinians, Syria, and Lebanon will very likely be signed, if not completely implemented, within a year or so. All the parties seem to want it. The Arab states, Egypt and Jordan chief among them, have declared themselves willing partners, and what Israel wants it most certainly will get, including the additional military aid and support from the United States that Clinton gave Barak in July 1999. Yasir Arafat and his small coterie of supporters can furnish little resistance to the Israeli-American juggernaut, even though of course real Palestinian self-determination, in the sense that the Palestinian people will enjoy genuine freedom, will be postponed yet again. A “permanent interim agreement” — minus any resolution to the problems of refugee, the status of Jerusalem, exact borders, settlements, and water — is the likely result for the year 2000.The essays in this book provide a personal attempt to chronicle the final official chapter of the Oslo peace process, to lay bare its assumptions, to detail its accomplishments and, much more, its failures, and above all, to show how despite the tremendous media and governmental attention lavished on it, it can neither lead to a real peace nor likely provide for one in the future. Written mostly for the Arab and European press these essays, I believe, provide a detailed point of view rarely to be found in the U.S. press. My assumption throughout is that as a Palestinian I believe that neither the Arabs nor the Israelis have a real military option, and that the only hope for the future is a decent and fair coexistence between the two peoples based upon equality and self-determination. Already the Middle East accounts for 60 percent of the world’s arms sales. Far too much of Arab as well as Israeli society is militarized even while democratic freedoms are abrogated, education and agriculture have declined, and the situation of the average citizen with regard to citizenship itself is worse than it was in 1948. The era of partitions and separations since 1948, the date of the Palestinian nakba, or disaster, as well as the date of Israel’s establishment, has not produced wonderful results, to say the least, and can indeed be seen to have failed. The separation of peoples into supposedly homogenous states has imposed burdens on “outsiders” that are intolerable, both in Israel and in countries like Lebanon, whose fifteen-year-old civil war was based on sectarian exclusivism, and produced nothing except a more sectarianized country. Israel’s non-Jewish, i.e., Palestinian, citizens constitute 20 percent of the state, so that even the Jewish state is not “just” a Jewish one. The Oslo agreements have built on, rather than modified, these unsound foundations. Insecurity breeds more insecurity so long as a whole nation or people feels deprived and manifestly treated as inferior on the basis of ethnicity or religion defined in advance as “other” or “alien.”These essays have been written as testimony to an alternative view, another way of looking not just at the present and past, but at the future as well. I maintain here that only by seriously trying to take account of one’s own history — whether Israeli or Palestinian — as well as that of the other can one really plan to live with the other. In both instances, however, I find this historical awareness sadly lacking. The current Palestinian leadership has, in a cowardly and slavish way, tried to forget its own people’s tragic history in order to accommodate their American and Israeli mentors. Consider the most recent instance, the cancellation by the PLO of a meeting to be held July 15, 1999, in Geneva by the High Contracting parties to the Geneva Conventions on war, a meeting originally asked for by the PLO and accepted by the United Nations as a way of protecting the Palestinian populations of the West Bank and Gaza from further Israeli violations (torture, land expropriation, house demolition, imprisonment, etc.) of the Conventions. Instead of going through with the meeting on July 15, the PLO summarily cancelled it as a sign of good will toward Ehud Barak after only one hour’s convening of the group. And this before negotiating with a leader whose long history of enmity toward Palestinians is well known, and whose meager announcements have made it clear that he is not prepared to dismantle most of the illegal Israeli settlements established on Palestinian land since 1967. It is worth noting that there are 13,000 settlement units now under construction, and that no less than 42 hilltop settlements have been established in the West Bank since last year (1998-9). Along with the already existing 144 settlements and, including the population of annexed Jerusalem, there are about 350,000 Israeli Jewish settlers on Palestinian land. With leaders who refuse ever to deal with this major problem, it is this sort of tampering with and manipulating the Palestinian tragedy by our own leaders that these essays strenuously oppose, committed as I am in them to the facts of our history and not to fictions created at will by oppressive dictators.As for Israeli history, one of the reasons I salute the New or Revisionist Israeli historians is that through their work they have exposed the myths and propaganda narratives that have attempted to deny Israel’s responsibility in 1948 and thereafter for producing, in effect, the Palestinian catastrophe. I contend that unless this historical responsibility is officially borne by Israeli leaders and faced honestly by Israeli society and its supporters in the West, no paper arrangement, such as the one being projected now, can be transformed into peace. There are too many refugees still left homeless (four million at least), too many claims unsettled, too many apartheid policies still in place that discriminate explicitly against Palestinians on ethnic and religious grounds for us to accept such tinkerings as the Oslo peace process. It cannot succeed for long. Particularly after the NATO war on behalf of the Kosovo refugees, it seems ludicrously unjust not to apply the same criteria of right of return to people who were made deliberately homeless by ethnic cleansing over fifty years ago. But once again, I want it clearly understood here that I am totally in favor of peace by coexistence, self-determination, and equality between the Israeli and Palestinian peoples on the land of historical Palestine, and I am therefore exactly the opposite of an opponent of peace. The current Oslo “peace process” is an expedient and, in my opinion, foolish gamble that has already done far more harm than good. The facts must be faced, and in this book I try to face them. Peace requires sterner measures than Arafat, Clinton, and company have, or are ever likely to have, taken. And so some of us must try to make the effort that our leaders will not make.Yet what the United States wants, the Arabs are prepared to give. More explicitly, as concerns the Oslo-Wye agreements it is absolutely clear that whether or not these agreements have actually helped or hindered Palestinian self-determination, no leader is prepared in any way to forego, modify, or renege on them. The Oslo agreements signed at the White House were first, two letters of “mutual recognition” exchanged between Israel and the PLO (though Israel only recognized the PLO as the representative of the Palestinian people) and second, a Declaration of Principles that laid out the interim arrangements for redeployment rather than withdrawal of the Israeli army from unspecified, areas of the West Bank except for parts of Gaza and Jericho. The agreements postponed the really complicated issues — Jerusalem, refugees, settlements, borders, and sovereignty — to final-status negotiations that were to have commenced in 1996. Subsequent agreements at Cairo and Taba, and later concerning Hebron, were designed to set up the Palestine Authority that was to administer Palestinian life under Arafat but retained security, border control, water, and most of the land for Israel. Settlements were allowed to continue. Far from ending, the Israeli occupation was simply repackaged, and what emerged in the West Bank was about seven discontinuous Palestinian islands amounting to 3 percent of the land surrounded and punctuated by Israeli controlled territory. Even in Gaza, Israeli settlers held 40 percent of the land.The Wye River agreement signed in October 1998, which was to give Palestinians about 10 percent more land, was never implemented by Netanyahu; he tried to modify or nullify all these agreements but in May 1999 was voted out of office. Ehud Barak has been greeted as the peace candidate, but given his background and what he has said and done so far I am certain that his ideas are not different enough from Netanyahu’s to warrant great optimism. For Barak, Jerusalem remains basically unnegotiable (except for giving Palest… Read more

Reviews from Amazon users which were colected at the time this book was published on the website:

⭐The Lost Road was an abandoned story by Tolkien, perhaps superseded by the need for him to get the anthology that formed ‘The Silmarillion’ ready for publication. As a result, there were a hoard of manuscripts, some in various versions all cleanly written, found by his son Christopher who set to get these annotated for both the scholar as well as the lay enthusiast. I fall well into the latter category. So when these books were published in 1987, I found I could only get my hands on half of the 12 volumes, and only now have been able to locate and buy the missing volumes, of which Volume V is one of them. So I find myself delighted finally to have these to read, and to my mature mind (I first read LOTR at 13 and I’m 56) these fill in many gaps and questions harboured over decades. I simply refused to get the paperback and kept looking for the same edition hardcover to make the shelf of these volumes look perfect. The Lhammas is a long essay found here you can’t find anywhere else. But the treasure within must surely be the chapter ‘Quenta Silmarillion’ (page 199), this 1987 US hardcover edition. This is not the story itself but a detailed commentary by Christopher of his father’s development of the Silmarillion, of its many revisions, and where on the actual manuscript there were revisions and corrections made by the author. This is fascinating to read: you can imagine yourself looking at the sheets of written or typed paper, and Christopher somewhat over your shoulder explaining, ‘you see here, from this point…’ What I liked most was the undistllled serve of information, unlike if you held a Tolkien Dictionary or encyclopaedia. The Appendix is spartan, containing genealogies, lists of names and a second Silmarillion Map, probably made in 1930s, and altered and added to it, which was to become the version published later on. Here he describes how these are originally four square sheets, pasted together, but the grid lines do not quite line up, and… (you will have to read this book to find out the rest, quite simply).

⭐I bought this volume hoping to learn more about how Tolkien developed the Elvish script (Sindarin?) , that is the Elvish “writing” as is shown on “The One Ring” and the front cover of some editions of The Lord of the Rings as well as inside the trilogy in a few places. To me, at least, this (admittedly invented ) writing is beautiful to look at. In that respect, the book let me down, but that is not a fault of the book or the writer as I should have researched that more carefully prior to ordering. The book does cover the Elvish words, their development as well as the process Tolkien went through over the years to flesh out some of his writings. This book will fascinate the Lord of the Rings “historians” and especially budding and professional linguists, but I am not among the ranks of either group. I give the book five stars for satisfying the readers for whom it was intended-it is a painstaking and thoroughly researched book for those two groups mentioned above, whom I think will like it very much. Lastly, I wanted to mention that in the written Elvish script Tolkien seems to have “borrowed” from several other languages including Hebrew. At least one Elvish vowel looks very much like the Hebrew vowel “Segol” ( the “eh” sound) except that he places the dots on top of the consonant and inverts the dots. An interesting history of Tolkien’s writing process, however.

⭐The slip cover is totally intact and Mylar protected. The inside of the book has clear water damage that I feel is inconsistent with the quality grade assigned to the book when I purchased it.

⭐These are getting expensive! Used is the only way to go. If you have an interest in Middle Earth and how it was developed then reading the History Of Middle Earth books will give you insight into the creative process; at least, by the father of real-world fantasy. Being a Middle Earth fan I just had to have them all!

⭐Great addition to other books in the series

⭐Any one of the volumes of HoME (History of Middle Earth) is intended for those who are interested in having a glimpse of Tolkien’s creative process and how his characters and the world he created developed and evolved. They are not really intended for those casual readers that perhaps loved the Lord of the Rings but were not really thrilled by the Silmarillion.That being said, I am a Tolkien lover and I love these books. I even bought two editions of each HoME volume, the hardbound for keeps and the paperback mass market edition to read and make notes. They are well worth the money!

⭐A mandatory piece of the History of Middle Earth. Contributes greatly to the overall story line. Important for long-time and dedicated Tolkien fans like myself.

⭐Tolkien at his best

⭐Ambos libros son los esperaados y estan en buen estado. Sin anotaciones ni garabatos.A highly interesting if depressing series of articles. So little has changed in the way of real reconciliation and peace.

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