About Us

IMRA
IMRA
IMRA

 

Subscribe

Search


...................................................................................................................................................


Saturday, December 14, 2002
The peace profiteers - COLUMN ONE BY CAROLINE GLICK

The peace profiteers - COLUMN ONE BY CAROLINE GLICK

Dec. 13, 2002 The Jerusalem Post

In an interview last year, former US Middle East envoy Dennis Ross responded
somewhat awkwardly to a question of mine about Palestinian corruption and
authoritarianism. I had asked him why the Clinton Administration did not
raise an eyebrow when it was clear that the Palestinian Authority was an
authoritarian regime and completely corrupt. After a brief pause and an
embarrassed glance, Ross said, "Well, it wasn't as if the Israelis were
particularly concerned about the problem."

In answering the question as he did, Ross was behaving like the consummate
diplomat that he is. The Rabin, Peres and Barak governments, who initiated
and went forward with the Oslo process, were actually very interested in
Palestinian
authoritarianism and corruption. But what interested these governments was
encouraging this corrupt dictatorship. Rabin, we recall, defended his choice
of PLO chieftain Yasser Arafat as the Palestinian leader by explaining that
under the dictatorship of Arafat, the PA would fight terrorism unimpeded by
"the Supreme Court and [the human rights organization] B'tselem."
Israeli encouragement of Palestinian corruption was cut from the same cloth
as our leaders' support for Arafat's dictatorship. In the early years of
Oslo, as the first inklings of Arafat's economic adviser Muhammad Rashid's
economic machinations began surfacing, far from discouraging the trend,
Israeli political leaders and security brass clamored for meetings with
Rashid.
Rather than opposing the systematic terrorization of Palestinian businessmen
as Rashid squeezed them out of an ever widening swathe of economic markets,
(cement, gas and petroleum, cigarette and mobile telephone imports come to
mind most rapidly), Israeli officials dropped all connections to these
forcibly disenfranchised businessmen and concentrated all their charms and
favors on Rashid and his business partners Palestinian strongmen Muhammad
Dahlan and Jibril Rajoub as well as Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) and from time
to time Ahmed Qurei (Abu Ala).

The justification for Israeli encouragement of the undermining of any
semblance of financial order or legal system for the Palestinians under
Arafat's regime was the stability of the peace process. It was argued, or
actually, it was taken for granted, that the concentration of wealth in the
hands of Arafat's close associates would give them a vested and personal
interest in making peace with Israel.

The same men who enriched themselves at the expense of their own people were
considered by Israeli and US policymakers to be the best candidates for
forcing acquiescence to peaceful coexistence with Israel down the throats of
rank and file Palestinian society.

As the law of unintended consequences would have it, in the end just the
opposite occurred. These men, together with their boss and business partner
Arafat, increased their hold over Palestinian society as expected, but it
was the Israelis, not the Palestinians who developed vested and personal
interests in continuing with Oslo.

A number of months ago, this column discussed the corrupting impact of the
Shimon Peres Center for Peace on the decision-making capability of top
Israeli leaders. As I wrote at the time, the fact that the Government of
Norway was one of the center's principal contributors may have had something
to do with the $100,000 cash prize that the center presented to UN Special
Middle East Coordinator Terje Larsen and his wife, Norwegian Ambassador Mona
Juul in 1999. And this fiduciary relationship may also have influenced
then-foreign minister Shimon Peres's lone defense of Larsen after he libeled
Israel in the immediate aftermath of the bloody battle in Jenin refugee camp
during Operation Defensive Shield.

As I also wrote in that column, Yossi Ginossar sits on the Board of
Directors of the Peres Center. In a tell-all interview with Ma'ariv last
week, Ginossar's business partner, Ozrad Lev gave a detailed account of
Swiss bank accounts that he and Ginossar managed for Rashid and Arafat. Lev
told of the millions of dollars that he and Ginossar received in kickbacks
from Rashid and Arafat for their handling of the funds.

While Lev's account is as disturbing as it is revealing, all it serves to do
is expose the worst kept secret in Israel. Since 1994, everyone who is
anyone in the top echelons of Israel knew full well that Ginossar, who
served as special envoy to Arafat for prime ministers Rabin, Peres, and
Barak, was Rashid's business partner. Everyone knew that Ginossar was a
partner in Rashid's cement and petroleum monopolies. Everyone knew that
Ginossar was Rashid's bagman for funds he siphoned off from the PA treasury
accounts.

Everyone knew and everyone either stood by silently or actively supported
this situation. And Ginossar is far from the only Israeli official who has
accrued financial and professional benefit from his activities with the
Palestinian Authority.
In his defense, Ginossar told Ma'ariv, "During the entire period of my
activities with the Palestinian Authority and other Arab regional officials
on behalf of the state, I acted in accordance with the state's requests to
me, using my special connections with the Palestinians as a private
citizen." This is a disingenuous statement. While Ginossar's intimate
relations with Rashid and Arafat may have made him attractive to Israeli
leaders, there can be no doubt that Ginossar's access to Israeli leaders
made him attractive to the Palestinian leadership.

Because of his official position, the Shin Bet, under Ya'acov Perry, Carmi
Gillon and Ami Ayalon, gave Ginossar not only free access to intelligence
information about the Palestinians, they also gave him free access to
Arafat. When Gaza was declared a closed military zone to which Israelis were
prohibited from traveling, Ginossar was chauffeured to Arafat's office in
Shin Bet armored cars.

In his interview with Ma'ariv, Lev also spoke of Ginossar's partner Stephen
Cohen. According to Ma'ariv's account, Cohen, who is deeply embedded in the
Jewish American peace camp, opened up Arafat's kingdom to Ginossar when
Rabin first appointed him point man with the PA in 1993. Together the two
made millions in kickbacks they received from Rashid for their role in the
cement and petroleum monopolies he built.

Americans are more familiar with Cohen than Israelis. For over a decade his
name has frequently appeared on the op-ed page of The New York Times as
columnist Thomas Friedman's in-house Middle East specialist.

According to a top former governmental official, Cohen made a name for
himself as an unofficial channel to Egyptian, Syrian,
and PLO leaders as far back as the 1980s. What we learn from Ma'ariv's
disclosures is that Cohen's impassioned defense of Israeli concessions to
the PLO, which he voiced regularly to key officials in the Clinton
administration, like Ross's deputy Aaron Miller and media stars like
Friedman, may very well have been influenced as much by pecuniary as
ideological motivations. Then too, it has been reported that during the Camp
David summit, Ginossar was the most fervent advocate of Israeli concessions
to Arafat among the Israeli team.

Stephen Cohen has over the years also enjoyed financial backing from US
business tycoon Daniel Abraham. Abraham is also one of the largest backers
of the Peres Center. Then too, Cohen's close colleague Nimrod Novick was
Peres's chief of staff during the 1984-1988 unity government with Yitzhak
Shamir and a close associate of Yossi Beilin's.

Yossi Beilin himself has used his Oslo advocacy to draw large foreign
contributions to his think tank the Economic Cooperation Foundation. It has
been reported that in his capacity as a chief researcher at ECF, Beilin
receives a ministerial salary and an unlimited expense account for his world
travels during which he advances his radical views on the need for Israeli
surrender to Palestinian terrorism.

And there are many others as well. The sad fact that comes out of a study of
the financial interests of high ranking Israeli officials and international
peace activists is that while Arafat, Rashid and their associates pocketed
their monies and prepared for war against Israel, these top Israeli
officials became their chief advocates. These peace profiteers have for nine
and a half years made their personal fortunes by illogically arguing that
Arafat is both the problem and the solution - that without his dictatorial
consent, Israel will get no peace deal with the Palestinians.

In a column on the subject back in 1994, Friedman quoted Cohen as saying,
"Everyone is ready to tell Arafat how to shave his beard, but as long as
they treat him only as a problem and not a solution, the problem just gets
worse."

The truth is that the problem has gotten worse because so many so-called
peace advocates have made personal fortunes by dint of their close relations
with Arafat and his cronies. When we look around us, after two years and
three months of the PA terror war and wonder how it is possible that Oslo
and the corrupt terror regime it spawned still has domestic and
international support, we need only to look to the money for our
explanation.

Rather than acting as the catalyst for Palestinian support of peaceful
coexistence with Israel, Israeli support for and participation in the
emergence of the PA as a wholly corrupt authoritarian regime has created a
permanent Israeli constituency for Arafat's regime.

In a column in last Friday's Ma'ariv, commenting on Lev's disclosures,
prominent Israeli media personality Dan Margalit called for the
establishment of a commission of inquiry into Ginossar's financial dealings
with the PA. What Margalit probably does not realize is that in calling for
the formation of such a commission he is adding his voice to those calling
for an inquiry into the entire Oslo process. Ginossar's double-dealings,
corruption, and borderline treason cannot be truly investigated without an
impartial (whatever that means) investigation into the entire history of
Oslo. As one security source put it to me this week, "Ginossar is never
going to be a scapegoat. If he goes down, he'll bring the entire Israeli
establishment down ahead of him." If we've learned anything from the past
two years and three months, we have learned that this will never happen.

Search For An Article

....................................................................................................

Contact Us

POB 982 Kfar Sava
Tel 972-9-7604719
Fax 972-3-7255730
email:imra@netvision.net.il IMRA is now also on Twitter
http://twitter.com/IMRA_UPDATES

image004.jpg (8687 bytes)