PRESS
RELEASE
Drafted by Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed,
Department of International Relations, University of Sussex
For immediate release
28.7.06
SHIN BET VETOED SECRET
ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN PEACE AGREEMENT
Israeli and Palestinian
Sources Concur: Israel Made War
Inevitable
The Omega Institute (OI), which
works closely with the Institute for Policy Research for Development (IPRD), has
learned from Israeli and Palestinian sources that just prior to the current
crisis, senior Hamas leaders were in active dialogue with Israeli religious
leaders in a round of bilateral peace negotiations. Israeli negotiators included Rabbi
Menachem Froman, former deputy leader and co-founder of the Israeli Settler
movement Gush Khatif; Rabbi David Bigman, head of the liberal religious Kibbutz
movement Yeshiva at Ma’ale Gilboa; and Yitzhak Frankenthal, founder of the Arik
Institute. Ongoing negotiations had
resulted in a breakthrough peace “understanding”, which was to be announced at a
press conference in Jerusalem to mark the launching of an
extraordinary peace initiative. Israeli Prime Minister Olmert had been
briefed extensively about the initiative by Frankenthal. Also due to attend the conference were
Khaled Abu Arafa, the Palestinian Cabinet Minister for Jerusalem, Sheikh Muhamed
Abu Tir, senior Hamas Member of the Palestinian Parliament, and other
senior Palestinian delegates.
The meeting was to announce a joint
Israeli-Palestinian call for the release of Corporal Gilad Shalit who had been
abducted by Hamas in Gaza, along with proposals for the beginning of
the release of all Palestinian prisoners. These measures were to precipitate
unprecedented new peace negotiations on a framework peace agreement, drawn on
the 1967 borders. The presence of
Palestinian Cabinet Officers and senior Israeli religious leaders in contact
with the Prime Minster was to underline the seriousness of this peace proposal
on both sides.
Just hours before the meeting was
due to start, the Israeli Shin Bet internal Security Service arrested Abu Tir
and Abu Arafa and warned them not to attend the meeting, under threats of
detention. The meeting, which
offered a major opportunity to obtain Shalit’s release and launch a new
framework for peace, was thrown into disarray. The next day, the Israeli Defence Force
(IDF) invaded Gaza, and the day after both Abu Tir and Abu
Arafa were abducted by Israeli forces, along with a third of
the Palestinian Cabinet, provoking a predictable escalation of violence.
Israel simultaneously began conducting
covert incursions on to Lebanese territory, provoking Hizbollah’s capture of two
IDF soldiers. Credible sources confirm that the soldiers were not abducted
on Israeli territory, but inside Lebanon. Like the scuppered peace negotiations,
Western officials have ignored this, and misinformed the media. However, some reports corroborate the
sources. Israeli officials, for instance, informed Forbes (12.7.06) that “Hezbollah
captured two Israeli soldiers during clashes Wednesday across the border in
southern Lebanon, prompting a
swift reaction from Israel.”
“The revelations show that
Palestinian and Lebanese actors were not principally responsible for the
escalation of the current conflict”, said OI Director Graham Ennis. “Contrary to
the misinformation disseminated by the Whitehouse and Whitehall, Israel vetoed
unprecedented peace proposals that would have initiated a promising new
framework for serious negotiations, and went on to provoke Palestinian and
Lebanese groups into retaliations, that now threaten to escalate into a
dangerous regional conflict.”
For more information
please contact +44(0)7891 132 574 or email info@globalresearch.org
[ENDS]
Notes for
Editors:
Full details and background information are
annexed below in a memorandum by Graham Ennis, Director of the Omega Institute
in Brighton,
UK. It includes
some relevant contacts for further verification. This memo was originally
forwarded to Donald Macintyre at The
Independent.
Memorandum:
From:
Graham Ennis
Omega Institute
Brighton,
England
Begins:
1: Rabbi Menachem Froman is the former deputy
leader, and co-founder, of the extremist Messianic Israeli Settler movement "
Gush Khatif", but he left the movement after the massacre in Hebron of
Palestinians by the Israeli terrorist Baruch Goldstein. He now lives in the West
Bank Samarian settlement of Tekoa, where he works as a Rabbi, and has been long
engaged in Muslim-Jewish dialogue activities. Froman himself has a typical
Israeli political background. His Uncle was murdered in the 1930's by Ezzedine
Al Qassam, a militant Cleric whose name was used by Hama's for it's armed
wing. Froman has a track record. He was a principal negotiator in the release
from prison of the Hama's spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.
As a result of discussions with Froman, Yassin subsequently offered a ease-fire,
which Yassin withdrew, after the offer was spurned by the israeli Government. He
now works closely with Rabbi David Bigman, head of the Liberal religious
Kibbutz movement's Yeshiva at Ma'ale Gilboa. They in turn are connected to
Yitzhak Frankenthal, founder of the Arik Institute, who is also involved in
religious and political dialog with Palestinians. Frankanthal has an unusual
background. His son Arik was murdered by Hama's operatives whilst hitch-hiking in July
1994. Instead of sinking into bitterness, Frankanthal has become a
major force in Israel in the peace movement.
The significance of all this is that Frankanthal
has developed deep contacts with Palestinians. He was rapidly able to confirm,
after Corporal Gilad Shalit was abducted in Gaza by Hama's, that he was only
lightly wounded and still alive, as a Hama's prisoner. Frankenthal became
concerned that the abduction would destroy the opportunity that had arisen,
after the agreement between Fatah and Hama's
prisoners in Israeli jails, to negotiate peace with Israel, which
was then underway. Hama's had made public its agreement to
negotiations. After Shalit's abduction, and the Israeli incursion into Gaza, this peace process
has collapsed.
What is not publicly known, however, is that these
bi-lateral peace negotiations between Jewish and Palestinian religious activists
had gone further than is believed. After Shalit's abduction, Frankanthal and the
other Israeli peace workers had kept up a close and continuous dialog with
senior Hama's
leaders. On at least one occasion, Frankanthal had given a detailed briefing to
an aide of the Israeli Prime Minister Olmert, who was demanding Shalit's return.
All these negotiations had resulted in a
remarkable secret "understanding", as a result of which, the day before the
Israeli incursion into Gaza, there was to have
been a major press conference in Jerusalem. At the press meeting, there would
have been an extraordinary peace initiative launched. Attending the conference
would have been not only Israeli's like Frankanthal, Froman, Bigman, etc, but,
more remarkably, The Palestinian Cabinet Minister for Jerusalem Khaled Abu
Arafa, and the senior Hama's Member of the Palestinian Parliament,
Sheikh Muhamed Abu Tir. The meeting was also supported by Sheikh Ibrahim
Sarsour, Chairman of the Islamic Movement in the occupied territories.
The meeting would have issued a joint call for the
release of Shalit, implicitly backed by the Palestinian Cabinet, due to the
authorized presence of the Cabinet Officer, Abu Arafa. Also, this would have
formed part of a call for this to be the beginning of the release of all
Palestinian prisoners, as part of an immediate start to peace negotiations on a
framework peace agreement, based on the joint agreement of the Hama's/Fatah
prisoners, drawn on the 1967 borders. The presence of Palestinian Cabinet
Officers would have underlined the seriousness of this peace proposal.
However, what actually happened was that just
hours before the meeting was due to start, the Israeli Shin Bet internal
Security Service arrested Abu Tir and Abu Arafa and warned them not to attend
the meeting, under threats of detention. This threw the meeting, which would
have been a major opportunity to obtain Shalit's release, into complete
disorder. The organizers were forced to franticly contact other Rabbis, already
on the road to Jerusalem, and tell them not to
appear.
The next day, the Israeli Army invaded Gaza. The day after that,
Abu Tir and Abu Arafa were kidnapped by Israeli forces, along with a third of
he Palestinian Cabinet. Israel revoked the two men's citizenship, making
them stateless, and also removed their residency rights in Jerusalem. The subsequent
escalation of violence, which also spread to Lebanon, resulted, in
part, from the failure of the peace agreement that had been about to be
announced, together with calls for the release of Shalit, which had been
strongly "Signalled" by the Palestinians. The intervention of Shin Bet
almost certainly aborted a planned release of Shalit, and a powerful appeal for
peace negotiations to start. The role, in all this, of Palestinian leader Abbas,
which has been extensive, will one day be revealed, and written up, by
Historians of this huge calamity. That is, if there is still a history, and
historians, and a future, as the whole Middle East faces something that Robert
Fisk memorably denounced as "Not Dunkirk, but Munich." Or is it once again, 92 years
after that fateful European Summer, time for another, terrible, "Guns
of August".
ENDS:
NB: Useful contacts:
- Arthur Neslan, Tel Aviv. (significant Israeli
writer, and journalist, writes also in English.)
- Palestinian leader Mahmoud Al-Zahar.
- Ted Belman, Israel
National Radio.