Turki al-Faisal – Land First, Then Peace

by SR Editor on 09/14/2009

By Prince Turki al-Faisal*

Prince Turki al-Faisal

Prince Turki al-Faisal

The United States and other Western powers have for some time been pushing Saudi Arabia to make more gestures toward Israel. More recently, the crown prince of Bahrain urged greater communication with Israel and joint steps from Arab states to revive the peace process.

Saudi Arabia is the birthplace of Islam, the custodian of its two holy mosques, the world's energy superpower and the de facto leader of the Arab and Muslim worlds — that is why our recognition is greatly prized by Israel. However, for all those same reasons, the kingdom holds itself to higher standards of justice and law. It must therefore refuse to engage Israel until it ends its illegal occupation of the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights as well as Shabaa Farms in Lebanon. For Saudis to take steps toward diplomatic normalization before this land is returned to its rightful owners would undermine international law and turn a blind eye to immorality.

Shortly after the Six-Day War in 1967, during which Israel occupied those territories as well as East Jerusalem and the Sinai Peninsula, the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution stating that, in order to form "a just and lasting peace in the Middle East," Israel must withdraw from these newly occupied lands. The Fourth Geneva Convention similarly notes "the occupying power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies."

Now, Israeli leaders hint that they are willing to return portions of these occupied territories to Arab control, but only if they are granted military and economic concessions first. For the Arabs to accept such a proposal would only encourage similar outrages in the future by rewarding military conquest.

After the Oslo accords of 1993, Arab states took steps to improve their relationships with Israel, allowing for recognition in the form of trade and consular agreements. Israel, however, continued to construct settlements, making its neighbors understandably unwilling to give up more without a demonstration that they would be granted something in return.

Today, supporters of Israel cite the outdated 1988 Hamas charter, which called for the destruction of Israel, as evidence of Palestine's attitude toward a two-state solution, without considering the illegalities of Israel's own occupation. Israel has never presented any comprehensive formulation of a peace plan. Saudi Arabia, to the contrary, has done so twice: the Fahd peace plan of 1982 and the Abdullah peace initiative of 2002. Both were endorsed by the Arab world, and both were ignored by Israel.

In order to achieve peace and a lasting two-state solution, Israel must be willing to give as well as take. A first step should be the immediate removal of all Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Only this would show the world that Israel is serious about peace and not just stalling as it adds more illegal settlers to those already occupying Palestinian land.

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At the same time, the international community must pressure Israel to relinquish its grip on all Arab territory, not as a means to gain undeserved concessions but instead as an act of good faith and a demonstration that it is willing to play by the Security Council's rules and to abide by global standards of military occupation. The Arab world, in the form of the Arab peace initiative that was endorsed by 22 countries in 2002, has offered Israel peace and normalization in return for Israeli withdrawal from all Arab territories including East Jerusalem — with the refugee issue to be solved later through mutual consent.

There have been increasing well-intentioned calls for Saudi Arabia to "do a Sadat": King Abdullah travels to Israel and the Israelis reciprocate by making peace with Saudi Arabia. However, those urging such a move must remember that President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt went to Israel in 1977 to meet with Prime Minister Menachem Begin only after Sadat's envoy, Hassan el-Tohamy, was assured by the Israeli foreign minister, Moshe Dayan, that Israel would withdraw from every last inch of Egyptian territory in return for peace. Absent a similar offer today from Israel to the leaders of Palestine, Lebanon and Syria, there is no reason to look at 1977 as a model.

President Obama's speech in Cairo this summer gave the Arab and Muslim worlds heightened expectations. His insistence on a freeze on settlement activity was a welcome development. However, all Israeli governments have expanded settlements, even those that committed not to do so.

No country in the region wants more bloodshed. But while Israel's neighbors want peace, they cannot be expected to tolerate what amounts to theft, and certainly should not be pressured into rewarding Israel for the return of land that does not belong to it. Until Israel heeds President Obama's call for the removal of all settlements, the world must be under no illusion that Saudi Arabia will offer what the Israelis most desire — regional recognition. We are willing to embrace the hands of any partner in peace, but only after they have released their grip on Arab lands.

*Prince Turki al-Faisal, the chairman of the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies, is a former director of Saudi Arabia's intelligence services and ambassador to the United States.

Source: The New York Times Company

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1 gordon September 15, 2009 at 1:33 pm

He's right

2 Tar September 15, 2009 at 4:27 pm

Simple and factual.

3 Mohamed Ihsan September 16, 2009 at 7:11 am

excellent piece of work… truth to the dot.

4 No Peace With Israel September 16, 2009 at 2:50 pm

And what about the dead Palestinian children whom Israeli soldiers first herded in a building then bombed the building to rubble.
How dare you suggest Israeli cannibals ‘reciprocate’ by visiting Saudi Arabia? Why isn’t Turki taking the first step – of making an absolute embargo on Israel and whoever does business with Israeli cannibals.
Take my words, Israel doesn’t want peace. It wants to occupy as much land as possible, with Greater Israel as the map; that includes Madinah.

5 Robin September 17, 2009 at 12:51 am

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=109564&d=4&m=5&y=2008

Prince Turki, who was an adviser at the Royal Court in 1973 when King Faisal took the oil-embargo decision, said the king was not shaken by the US threat and stood firm.

He added that the oil embargo was instrumental in encouraging the US to find a quick and just solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict. “King Faisal and other Arab leaders were forced to take the decision as a result of America’s unprecedented support for Israel during the war,” the prince said.

WWKFD? (What would King Faisal do?)

6 pabelmont September 19, 2009 at 2:57 pm

On September 13, Prince Turki correctly said that Israel’s settlers are present illegal (“and not just stalling as it adds more illegal settlers to those already occupying Palestinian land.”). On September 10, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon had already said “new homes for Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank * * * are illegal and violate the International Law”.

I have seen no comment in the US press on these allegations of illegality (which are, of course, correct, being supported by the authoritative judicial opinion of the International Court of Justice, July 9, 2004). Google sees no articles regarding this illegality in the major US media.

Some Americans must be surprised to hear that the settlements are illegal. This surprise is accounted for by the US’s “voluntary” censorship of facts and opinions injurious to Israel. I put quotes on “voluntary”, because there are powerful enforcers who will punish those who break this silence within the US (at least).

Other Americans, favoring the settlements, must know that the settlements are illegal, comfortable in the knowledge that the US is unconcerned with international illegality, at least on Israel’s part.

The political problem for US “democracy” regarding the illegality of the settlements is getting a discussion of that illegality, and of the human rights issues involved, started in any major newspaper or news magazine or by any major politician. The alternative is to get that discussion blossoming in the European (or any other major) press. Because, in the US, no-one wants to cut his own wrists by being first directly and straightforwardly to address this issue.

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