Peter Hain speaks truths that Labour has lost sight of

Israel's Channel 14 glorifying in the destruction in Gaza. Source: Al Jazeera screengrab

JVL Introduction

This article by Peter Hain on the war on Gaza is remarkable in a number of ways.

It engages with real problems and suggests ways of thinking about them. It states “some long overdue truths”. It comes from an elder statesperson in the Labour Party.

Its unemotional solidity and clear seriousness stands in sharp contrast to what Starmer and other leaders of today’s Labour Party are saying or, rather, not saying.

What a shabby shower they are.

RK

This article was originally published by the Guardian on Tue 2 Jan 2024. Read the original here.

Israel and its allies must face facts: peace talks are the only way forward, and they will have to include Hamas

I’m a friend to both Israelis and Palestinians, and all my experience tells me this: tough negotiation will achieve what bombs cannot

After the Hamas terror of 7 October and Benjamin Netanyahu’s horrific retaliation in Gaza, some long overdue truths need stating. First, Israel is not going to “destroy Hamas”, as its leaders promise – not even by destroying Gaza.

Although Israel is damaging Hamas militarily, maybe significantly, with many of its tunnels eliminated and its fighters fleeing, Hamas is a movement and an ideology that, in many respects, Netanyahu’s extremism helped to promote.

Rightwing Israeli governments have thwarted serious negotiations with Palestine’s more “moderate“ party, the late Yasser Arafat’s Fatah, since the Camp David summit in 2000 – more than 20 years ago. They have also consistently oppressed Gaza residents, imposing a near-constant state of siege. Is it really surprising that many Palestinians turned in desperation to an extremist alternative in Hamas?

The lesson of all modern conflicts must be that failure by the powerful to end injustice and negotiate a solution breeds extremism. As Britain’s troubled history in Northern Ireland vividly demonstrates, when politics doesn’t work, violence fills the vacuum.

British governments refused for decades to officially negotiate with the IRA because of its terrorist outrages. But when they finally did so, it resulted in the 1998 Good Friday agreement. Although an immensely painful pill for unionists to swallow, it was supported by the US president, the UK prime minister and an EU president, all of whose successors have apparently forgotten that fundamental lesson.

As for the notion, peddled by leaders of the global north, that only negotiations with a discredited Palestinian Authority leadership in the West Bank can be countenanced – that won’t work either. Global north governments have a history of trying and failing to promote their “favoured” candidates on peoples demanding self-determination to choose their own representatives. Hamas will have to be included in some way.

In the end, the solution has to be political. Palestinians of whatever political stripe cannot defeat Israel militarily, but nor can Israel defeat Palestinians militarily. As Tony Blair’s former chief of staff Jonathan Powell wrote compellingly in his book Talking to Terrorists, such conflicts cannot be resolved except by negotiation. And, despite their public postures, Netanyahu, Joe Biden and Rishi Sunak have been negotiating with Hamas over hostage and prisoner releases, albeit mainly through Qatar.

Yet Israel’s rightwing leaders have spurned negotiation, instead dedicating themselves to turning Palestinian territories into occupied dependencies. The West Bank, small islands of which are nominally administered by Fatah (but in practice controlled by Israel), now contains about half a million Israeli settlers; East Jerusalem has nearly a quarter of a million Israeli settlers. Leaders in the global north wring their hands, pointing out that such settlements are illegal, but do nothing, tolerating still more settlers and also the long siege and now near-total destruction of Gaza.

And what has all this got Israel? Not more security but less, as the pogrom on 7 October palpably demonstrated. Israel’s rightwing rulers have monumentally failed to protect their own citizens – and, by prosecuting their ruthless horror in Gaza, they will endanger them even more.

The former Israeli Labor government adviser Daniel Levy was right to say recently in a TV interview: “Israelis can never have security until Palestinians have security. The equation that you can impose a regime of structural violence on another people, you can deny another people their basic rights, and you will live with your own security, that equation never works … because when you are oppressing people, you know in the back of your mind that you are generating a desire for retribution. You can’t actually sleep securely at night.”

Of course, the real agenda of the current Israeli cabinet may be to push Palestinians out of their territories and into Jordan and Egypt. The recent flat rejection of a two-state solution by Netanyahu’s ambassador to the UK merely repeats what he and others in his cabinet have said. No two-state solution, just permanent Israeli domination – with escalating violence and regional instability.

The aim surely must remain security for Israel and self-determination for Palestinians. If a two-state solution is no longer viable, then maybe some form of confederal state could be? One in which Palestinians have self-government and Israel enjoys security?

Instead of presidents and prime ministers in Washington DC, London and Europe colluding in terrible failure, they should support a regional summit involving Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia – and, yes, Iran too – along with Jordan, Qatar and the UAE. For there will be no stability in the region unless all parties are included.

Not since Barack Obama’s presidency has there been serious diplomacy and engagement. As Obama’s envoy John Kerry wrote in his autobiography: “In foreign policy … there is rarely enough focus on the risks of inaction. That is especially true about peace in the Middle East.”

I write this from Cape Town where decent South Africans of all races and creeds are contemptuous of what they see as profound double standards by global north leaders – wanting backing for Ukrainian self-determination, but being complicit in the denial of Palestinian self-determination and culpable in the horror in Gaza. The geopolitical breach with the global south is deepening, and will cost Washington, London and Brussels dearly in an increasingly turbulent world.

Meanwhile, I remain a friend to both Israelis and Palestinians. That is no sellout of either, but a recognition that they share a future together or they share no future worth having.

  • Lord Hain is a former UK Middle East minister and Northern Ireland secretary of state

Comments (13)

  • Richard Snell says:

    The final two sentences state the whole case with wonderful brevity.

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  • Paul Smith says:

    It is the supremacist, colonialist mentality – an intrinsic feature of Zionism – which prevents a settlement with Palestinians. This drove the creation of Israel and the expulsion of 750,000 Palestinians in 1948, and the subsequent conquest of the remainder of Palestine and the Golan Heights in 1967 and their ongoing colonization. One longstanding goal of some Zionists is the seizure of the waters of the Litani river.

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  • Rachel Lever says:

    I don’t know what “confederal” means, but there is another way: a single democratic country with equal rights and votes for all. It happened in South Africa, as Peter Hain must know.

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  • Jack T says:

    I can understand how Hain can be a friend to non-Zionist Israelis who oppose racism. But not a friend to the terrorist State of Israel.

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  • Richard Pink says:

    Well said the most common sense I have read from a member of the establishment everyone else seems to just repeat narratives like Israel has a right to self defence. No country has a right to bomb hospitals churches Mosques schools and universities with impunity. In my opinion the western alliance of The EU Australia Canada UK and the USA are all collaborators in war crimes and should all face charges under international law. How will anyone ever take the western alliance seriously again this has made the whole world less safe, this is not just a disaster for Gazans and Palestinians its a disaster for the whole world now.

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  • JW says:

    I fear things have gone beyond this. The aerial slaughter in Gaza is greater than anything since Vietnam. A new generation of fighters are being created. They will look – rightly – to Russia and China. The fight in Israel is ultimately against US domination. Israel is just a spoiled client state.

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  • Teresa Grover says:

    Sadly there has been too much collusion with countries whose weapons manufacturering businesses have prospered greatly!
    These are the weapons & white phosphorus that has murdered over 22.000 Palestinians & children that we know of, but how many thousands still lie beneath the bombed concrete ??
    It is the Western & European Leaders who have supported this annihilation as for Britain it’s become a Zionists friend shaking Netanyahus hand is a sign of weakness! WHY is everyone frightened of upsetting Zionists?
    Zionism is NOT JUDAISM yet the power, demands & threats that Zionists command is horrific! This form of genuflecting is abhorrent & people are losing their jobs & reputations by criticising Zionist Israeli violence, tortures, illegal imprisonment & Genocide.
    Illegal settlers come from the US & UK whose idea of law comes from the Talmud they say & quote ancient text that killing Arabs & Arab children is their right!!!
    Jewish & non people are protesting in their thousands to stop this insanity yet no government is listening!
    Netanyahu is a psychopath who has been given permission by his supporters to exterminate everything Palestinian & get to Gaza for the oil & gas that has been discovered!
    An atrocity has been committed & supported by shameful leaders!

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  • Chris Romberg says:

    Of course, it is welcome that an establishment figure should state the obvious truth, that the ending of oppression/resistance in Israel/Palestine should be by negotiation leading to a just and fair political solution. However, there are some parts of the article that need to be called out.
    Just like Sunak, Hain calls the attack of 7 Oct a “pogrom”, a term that traditionally describes the attack of a powerful antisemitic majority on a defenceless Jewish minority. The use of this word buys into the Israeli/US/European narrative that Palestinians are motivated purely by racial/religious hatred and pose an existential threat to all Jews, while Israel is the innocent victim. If the term is going to be used in this context, it should be applied to the vicious attacks by armed ‘settlers’ against the people of the occupied West Bank.
    Rachel Lever has rightly commented above on Hain’s expression “confederal state…..in which Palestinians have self-government and Israel enjoys security”. That sounds much like the outcome of the Oslo accords: an ineffectual and powerless Palestinian administration under Israeli military domination. We know how well that has worked. What about a democratic state with rights and justice for all its citizens?
    Hain calls for a regional summit and states that “there will be no stability in the region unless all parties are included” and then lists the potential participants including, bravely, Iran. But who is missing from his list? Yes, it’s the Palestinians, who presumably are once again to be discussed and decided on in absentia.
    I praise Hain for speaking out and recognise that he does so in a difficult political and media environment (in the UK, presumably less so in South Africa), but he should consider some of the limitations of his own thinking.

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  • Tony says:

    “I write this from Cape Town where decent South Africans of all races and creeds are contemptuous of what they see as profound double standards by global north leaders – wanting backing for Ukrainian self-determination, but being complicit in the denial of Palestinian self-determination and culpable in the horror in Gaza. The geopolitical breach with the global south is deepening, and will cost Washington, London and Brussels dearly in an increasingly turbulent world.”

    I think this part of the article tells us what Hain’s real concerns are. It reminds me of David Miliband’s recent claim that the invasion of Iraq was wrong but only because it made it more difficult to promote the war in the Ukraine to a sceptical global south.

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  • Linda says:

    @ Richard and all:-

    I’ve now read about half (44 pages of an 84 page document) of South Africa’s “case” that Israel is committing genocide (see https://www.icj-cij.org/sites/default/files/case-related/192/192-20231228-app-01-00-en.pdf).

    What surprised me was that ALL the alleged genocidal tactics Israel have used in their current onslaught against Gaza and the West Bank have been used – and documented and witnessed – in a number of previous attacks on the Palestinians. There have been ongoing investigations against Israel for genocide and war crimes long before 2023 – I knew nothing about these.

    I’d been expecting to read a dry legal case. It wasn’t. South Africa’s well-known history of oppression under Apartheid guides them on where to look for evidence, how to appraise it and the important part the Public Relations cover-up plays in allowing wrongdoing to continue.

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  • Paul Wimpeney says:

    Has the “L” in JVL become “Liberal” as in Peter Hain’s affiliation during the “Stop the Seventy tour”?
    It doesn’t deserve much linguistic analysis, but the terminology in the opening paragraphs gives the game away: Hamas is accused of “terror”; Netanyahu is guilty of “retaliation”. This looks very much like the “everything was OK until October 7th” line. Israel was merely responding to a serious disturbance of what they would have the rest of us believe was “peace”.
    Then we hear that Netanyahu is guilty of “extremism”, locking us into the moderation-versus-extremism paradigm. There is no “moderate” Zionism. It all leads to dispossession via ethnic cleansing at best and annihilation at worst.
    We read about “Rightwing Israeli governments.” The settlement builders in 1967 were led by Levi Eshkol of the Labour Party who have shown just as much commitment to land-theft as any other grouping in Israel.
    I don’t even dare to offer comment on the Irish material and the “painful pill” of the Unionists. How difficult it was to think that Catholics might try to get a job at Harland and Wolff!
    This piece never gets beyond the surface of anything; there is little here that Starmer would object to.

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  • john hall says:

    Are we forgetting / ignoring the (particularly US) Christian Zionist and Evangelical drive to see Jews “recolonise” “Palestinian Zion”? This is a move that will pave the way for the Second Coming. You’ve got to find a way to persuade Joe Biden and other Christian Zionists that Jesus does not rely on mere mortals to fulfil such man-made prophecies The next prophecy involves the demolition of Israel’s third-most holy shrine on “Temple Mount” to make way for the Third Jewish Temple. Please don’t let’s go there!

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  • Bernie Grant says:

    Common sense talks and negotiations are never going to persuade Zionist Israel to give an inch. They’ve had one aim since 1948 and it hasn’t changed an inch over the past 75 years. Like S Africa, it would have to be forced to change and it took economic sanctions and boycotting, ie no International Sport, it worked. The difference is Israel has the backing of the US, 1. It sees Israel as its own Fully Armed, Middle East Military Base. 2. The recently discovered Gas field in the eastern Mediterranean, which stretches under Gaza, there are fortunes to be made out of it, especially from Europe since the US blew up the Nordstream Gas Pipelines, it’s almost certainly why the US is so silent on the Genocide that’s being carried out. Israel gets the Gaza Strip and the US gets to make fortunes out of the Gas. At this point, all I can see is the complete Ethnic cleaning of Palestine and the dispersal of the remaining Palestinians.
    I would love to see a glimmer of hope but I cannot see one, the prizes for the US and Israel are too great AND the rest of the Western World bends in the direction that the US tells them.

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