Suleyman Demirel
9th President of the Republic of Turkey
Thorbjoern Jagland
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Norway
George J. Mitchell, Chairman
Former Member of the United States Senate
Javier Solana
High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, European Union
Sharm el-Sheikh
Fact-Finding Committee
April 30, 2001
The Honorable George W. Bush
President of the United States
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President,
We enclose herewith the report of the Sharm el-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee.
We sought and received information and advice from a wide range of individuals, organizations, and governments. However, the conclusions
and recommendations are ours alone.
We are grateful for the support that you and your administration have provided to the Committee.
Respectfully,
Suleyman Demirel Thorbjoern Jagland
Warren B. Rudman Javier Solana
George J. Mitchell
Chairman
SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS
The Government of Israel (GOI) and the Palestinian Authority (PA) must act swiftly and decisively to halt the violence. Their immediate
objectives then should be to rebuild confidence and resume negotiations.
During this mission our aim has been to fulfill the mandate agreed at Sharm el-Sheikh. We value the support given our work by the participants
at the summit, and we commend the parties for their cooperation. Our principal recommendation is that they recommit themselves to the Sharm
el-Sheikh spirit and that they implement the decision made there in 1999 and 2000. We believe that the summit participants will support hold
action by the parties to achieve these objectives.
The restoration of trust is essential, and the parties should take affirmative steps to this end. Given the high level of hostility and mistrust, the
timing and sequence of these steps are obviously crucial. This can be decided only by the parties. We urge them to begin the process of
decision immediately.
Accordingly, we recommend that steps be taken to:
END THE VIOLENCE
The GOI and the PA should reaffirm their commitment to existing agreements and undertakings and should immediately implement an
unconditional cessation of violence.
The GOI and PA should immediately resume security cooperation.
REBUILD CONFIDENCE
The PA and GOI should work together to establish a meaningful “cooling off period” and implement additional confidence building
measures, some of which were detailed in the October 2000 Sharm el-Sheikh Statement and some of which were offered by the U.S. on
January 7, 2001 in Cairo (see Recommendations section for further description).
The PA and GOI should resume their efforts to identify, condemn and discourage incitement in all its forms.
The PA should make clear through concrete action to Palestinians and Israelis alike that terrorism is reprehensible and unacceptable,
and that the PA will make a 100 percent effort to prevent terrorist operations and to punish perpetrators. This effort should include
immediate steps to apprehend and incarcerate terrorists operating within the PA's jurisdiction.
The GOI should freeze all settlement activity, including the "natural growth" of existing settlements.
The GOI should ensure that the IDF adopt and enforce policies and procedures encouraging non-lethal responses to unarmed
demonstrators, with a view to minimizing casualties and friction between the two communities.
The PA should prevent gunmen from using Palestinian populated areas to fire upon Israeli populated areas and IDF positions. This
tactic places civilians on both sides at unnecessary risk.
The GOI should lift closures, transfer to the PA all tax revenues owed, and permit Palestinians who had been employed in Israel to return
to their jobs; and should ensure that security forces and settlers refrain from the destruction of homes and roads, as well as trees and
other agricultural property in Palestinian areas. We acknowledge the GOI's position that actions of this nature have been taken for
security reasons. Nevertheless, the economic effects will persist for years.
The PA should renew cooperation with Israeli security agencies to ensure, to the maximum extent possible, that Palestinians workers
employed within Israel are fully vetted and free of connections to organizations and individuals engaged in terrorism.
The PA and GOI should consider a joint undertaking to preserve and protect holy places sacred to the traditions of Jews, Muslims, and
Christians.
The GOI and PA should jointly endorse and support the work of Palestinian and Israeli non-governmental organizations involved in
cross-community initiatives linking the two peoples.
RESUME NEGOTIATIONS
In the spirit of the Sharm el-Sheikh agreements and understandings of 1999 and 2000, we recommend that the parties meet to reaffirm their
commitment to signed agreements and mutual understandings, and take corresponding action. This should be the basis for resuming full and
meaningful negotiations.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Disucssion
What Happened?
Why Did it Happen?
End the Violence
Rebuild Confidence
Resume Negotiations
Recommendations
INTRODUCTION
On October 17, 2000, at the conclusion of the Middle East Peace Summit at Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, the President of the United States spoke on
behalf of the participants (the Government of Israel, the Palestinian Authority, the Governments of Egypt, Jordan, and the United States, the
United Nations, and the European Union). Among other things, the President stated that:
The United States will develop with the Israelis and Palestinians, as well as in consultation with the United
Nations Secretary General, a committee of fact-finding on the events of the past several weeks and how to
prevent their recurrence. The committee's report will be shared by the U.S. President with the U.N. Secretary
General and the parties prior to publication. A final report shall be submitted under the auspices of the U.S.
President for publication.1
On November 7, 2000, following consultations with the other participants, the President asked us to serve on what has come to be known as the
Sharm el-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee. In a letter to us on December 6, 2000, the President stated that:
The purpose of the Summit, and of the agreement that ensued, was to end the violence, to prevent its recurrence,
and to find a path back to the peace process. In its actions and mode of operation, therefore, the Committee
should be guided by these overriding goals ... The Committee should strive to steer clear of any step that will
intensify mutual blame and finger-pointing between the parties. As I noted in my previous letter, "the Committee
should not become a divisive force or a focal point for blame and recrimination but rather should serve to forestall
violence and confrontation and provide lessons for the future." This should not be a tribunal whose purpose is
to determine the guilt or innocence of individuals or of the parties; rather, it should be a fact-finding committee
whose purpose is to determine what happened and how to avoid it recurring in the future. 2
After our first meeting, held before we visited the region, we urged an end to all violence. Our meetings and our observations during our
subsequent visits to the region have intensified our convictions in this regard. Whatever the source, violence will not solve the problems of the
region. It will only make them worse. Death and destruction will not bring peace, but will deepen the hatred and harden the resolve on both
sides. There is only one way to peace, justice, and security in the Middle East, and that is through negotiation.
Despite their long history and close proximity, some Israelis and Palestinians seem not to fully appreciate each other's problems and concerns.
Some Israelis appear not to comprehend the humiliation and frustration that Palestinians must endure every day as a result of living with the
continuing effects of occupation, sustained by the presence of Israeli military forces and settlements in their midst, or the determination of the
Palestinians to achieve independence and genuine self-determination. Some Palestinians appear not to comprehend the extent to which
terrorism creates fear among the Israeli people and undermines their belief in the possibility of co-existence, or the determination of the GOI to
do whatever is necessary to protect its people.
Fear, hate, anger, and frustration have risen on both sides. The greatest danger of all is that the culture of peace, nurtured over the previous
decade, is being shattered. In its place there is a growing sense of futility and despair, and a growing resort to violence.
Political leaders on both sides must act and speak decisively to reverse these dangerous trends; they must rekindle the desire and the drive for
peace. That will be difficult. But it can be done and it must be done, for the alternative is unacceptable and should be unthinkable.
Two proud peoples share a land and a destiny. Their competing claims and religious differences have led to a grinding, demoralizing,
dehumanizing conflict. They can continue in conflict or they can negotiate to find a way to live side-by-side in peace.
There is a record of achievement. In 1991 the first peace conference with Israelis and Palestinians took place in Madrid to achieve peace based
on UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338. In 1993, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and Israel met in Oslo for the first
face-to-face negotiations; they led to mutual recognition and the Declaration of Principles (signed by the parties in Washington, D.C. on
September 13, 1993), which provided a road map to reach the destination agreed in Madrid. Since then, important steps have been taken in
Cairo, in Washington, and elsewhere. Last year the parties came very close to a permanent settlement.
So much has been achieved. So much is at risk. If the parties are to succeed in completing their journey to their common destination, agreed
commitments must be implemented, international law respected, and human rights protected. We encourage them to return to negotiations,
however difficult. It is the only path to peace, justice and security.
DISCUSSION
It is clear from their statements that the participants in the summit of last October hoped and intended that the outbreak of violence, then less
than a month old, would soon end. The U.S. President's letters to us, asking that we make recommendations on how to prevent a recurrence of
violence, reflect that intention.
Yet the violence has not ended. It has worsened. Thus the overriding concern of those in the region with whom we spoke is to end the violence
and to return to the process of shaping a sustainable peace. That is what we were told, and were asked to address, by Israelis and Palestinians
alike. It was the message conveyed to us as well by President Mubarak of Egypt, King Abdullah of Jordan, and UN Secretary General Annan.
Their concern must be ours. If our report is to have effect, it must deal with the situation that exists, which is different from that envisaged by
the summit participants. In this report, we will try to answer the questions assigned to us by the Sharm el-Sheikh summit: What happened?
Why did it happen?
In light of the current situation, however, we must elaborate on the third part of our mandate: How can the recurrence of violence be prevented?
The relevance and impact of our work, in the end, will be measured by the recommendations we make concerning the following:
Ending the Violence.
Rebuilding Confidence.
Resuming Negotiations.
WHAT HAPPENED?
We are not a tribunal. We complied with the request that we not determine the guilt or innocence of individuals or of the parties. We did not
have the power to compel the testimony of witnesses or the production of documents. Most of the information we received came from the
parties and, understandably, it largely tended to support their arguments.
In this part of our report, we do not attempt to chronicle all of the events from late September 2000 onward. Rather, we discuss only those that
shed light on the underlying causes of violence.
In late September 2000, Israeli, Palestinian, and other officials received reports that Member of the Knesset (now Prime Minister) Ariel Sharon
was planning a visit to the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Palestinian and U.S. officials urged then Prime Minister Ehud Barak to
prohibit the visit.3 Mr. Barak told us that he believed the visit was intended to be an internal political act directed against him by a political
opponent, and he declined to prohibit it.
Mr. Sharon made the visit on September 28 accompanied by over 1,000 Israeli police officers. Although Israelis viewed the visit in an internal
political context, Palestinians saw it as highly provocative to them. On the following day, in the same place, a large number of unarmed
Palestinian demonstrators and a large Israeli police contingent confronted each other. According to the U.S. Department of State, "Palestinians
held large demonstrations and threw stones at police in the vicinity of the Western Wall. Police used rubber-coated metal bullets and live
ammunition to disperse the demonstrators, killing 4 persons and injuring about 200."4 According to the GOI, 14 Israeli policemen were injured.5
Similar demonstrations took place over the following several days.6 Thus began what has become known as the "Al-Aqsa Intifada" (Al-Aqsa
being a mosque at the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount).
The GOI asserts that the immediate catalyst for the violence was the breakdown of the Camp David negotiations on July 25, 2000 and the
"widespread appreciation in the international community of Palestinian responsibility for the impasse."7 In this view, Palestinian violence was
planned by the PA leadership, and was aimed at "provoking and incurring Palestinian casualties as a means of regaining the diplomatic
initiative."8
The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) denies the allegation that the intifada was planned. It claims, however, that "Camp David
represented nothing less than an attempt by Israel to extend the force it exercises on the ground to negotiations,"9 and that "the failure of the
summit, and the attempts to allocate blame on the Palestinian side only added to the tension on the ground..."10
From the perspective of the PLO, Israel responded to the disturbances with excessive and illegal use of deadly force against demonstrators;
behavior which, in the PLO's view, reflected Israel's contempt for the lives and safety of Palestinians. For Palestinians, the widely seen images
of the killing of 12-year-old Muhammad al Durra in Gaza on September 30, shot as he huddled behind his father, reinforced that perception.
From the perspective of the GOI, the demonstrations were organized and directed by the Palestinian leadership to create sympathy for their
cause around the world by provoking Israeli security forces to fire upon demonstrators, especially young people. For Israelis, the lynching of
two military reservists, First Sgt. Vadim Novesche and First Cpl. Yosef Avrahami, in Ramallah on October 12, reflected a deep-seated Palestinian
hatred of Israel and Jews.
What began as a series of confrontations between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli security forces, which resulted in the GOI's initial
restrictions on the movement of people and goods in the West Bank and Gaza Strip (closures), has since evolved into a wider array of violent
actions and responses. There have been exchanges of fire between built-up areas, sniping incidents and clashes between Israeli settlers and
Palestinians. There have also been terrorist acts and Israeli reactions thereto (characterized by the GOI as counter-terrorism), including killings,
further destruction of property and economic measures. Most recently, there have been mortar attacks on Israeli locations and IDF ground
incursions into Palestinian areas.
From the Palestinian perspective, the decision of Israel to characterize the current crisis as "an armed conflict short of war"11 is simply a means
"to justify its assassination policy, its collective punishment policy, and its use of lethal force."12 From the Israeli perspective, "The Palestinian
leadership have instigated, orchestrated and directed the violence. It has used, and continues to use, terror and attrition as strategic tools."13
In their submissions, the parties traded allegations about the motivation and degree of control exercised by the other. However, we were
provided with no persuasive evidence that the Sharon visit was anything other than an internal political act; neither were we provided with
persuasive evidence that the PA planned the uprising.
Accordingly, we have no basis on which to conclude that there was a deliberate plan by the PA to initiate a campaign of violence at the first
opportunity; or to conclude that there was a deliberate plan by the GOI to respond with lethal force.
However, there is also no evidence on which to conclude that the PA made a consistent effort to contain the demonstrations and control the
violence once it began; or that the GOI made a consistent effort to use non-lethal means to control demonstrations of unarmed Palestinians.
Amid rising anger, fear, and mistrust, each side assumed the worst about the other and acted accordingly.
The Sharon visit did not cause the "Al-Aqsa Intifada." But it was poorly timed and the provocative effect should have been foreseen; indeed it
was foreseen by those who urged that the visit be prohibited. More significant were the events that followed: the decision of the Israeli police
on September 29 to use lethal means against the Palestinian demonstrators; and the subsequent failure, as noted above, of either party to
exercise restraint.
WHY DID IT HAPPEN?
The roots of the current violence extend much deeper than an inconclusive summit conference. Both sides have made clear a profound
disillusionment with the behavior of the other in failing to meet the expectations arising from the peace process launched in Madrid in 1991 and
then in Oslo in 1993. Each side has accused the other of violating specific undertakings and undermining the spirit of their commitment to
resolving their political differences peacefully.
Divergent Expectations: We are struck by the divergent expectations expressed by the parties relating to the implementation of the Oslo
process. Results achieved from this process were unthinkable less than 10 years ago. During the latest round of negotiations, the parties were
closer to a permanent settlement than ever before.
Nonetheless, Palestinians and Israelis alike told us that the premise on which the Oslo process is based - that tackling the hard "permanent
status" issues be deferred to the end of the process - has gradually come under serious pressure. The step-by-step process agreed to by the
parties was based on the assumption that each step in the negotiating process would lead to enhanced trust and confidence. To achieve this,
each party would have to implement agreed upon commitments and abstain from actions that would be seen by the other as attempts to abuse
the process in order to predetermine the shape of the final outcome. If this requirement is not met, the Oslo road map cannot successfully lead
to its agreed destination. Today, each side blames the other for having ignored this fundamental aspect, resulting in a crisis in confidence. This
problem became even more pressing with the opening of permanent status talks.
The GOI has placed primacy on moving toward a Permanent Status Agreement in a nonviolent atmosphere, consistent with commitments
contained in the agreements between the parties. "Even if slower than was initially envisaged, there has, since the start of the peace process in
Madrid in 1991, been steady progress towards the goal of a Permanent Status Agreement without the resort to violence on a scale that has
characterized recent weeks."14 The "goal" is the Permanent Status Agreement, the terms of which must be negotiated by the parties.
The PLO view is that delays in the process have been the result of an Israeli attempt to prolong and solidify the occupation. Palestinians
"believed that the Oslo process would yield an end to Israeli occupation in five years,"15 the timeframe for the transitional period specified in
the Declaration of Principles. Instead there have been, in the PLO's view, repeated Israeli delays culminating in the Camp David summit, where,
"Israel proposed to annex about 11.2% of the West Bank (excluding Jerusalem)..." and offered unacceptable proposals concerning Jerusalem,
security and refugees. "In sum, Israel's proposals at Camp David provided for Israel's annexation of the best Palestinian lands, the perpetuation
of Israeli control over East Jerusalem, a continued Israeli military presence on Palestinian territory, Israeli control over Palestinian natural
resources, airspace and borders, and the return of fewer than 1% of refugees to their homes."16
Both sides see the lack of full compliance with agreements reached since the opening of the peace process as evidence of a lack of good faith.
This conclusion led to an erosion of trust even before the permanent status negotiations began.
Divergent Perspectives: During the last seven months, these views have hardened into divergent realities. Each side views the other as having
acted in bad faith; as having turned the optimism of Oslo into the suffering and grief of victims and their loved ones. In their statements and
actions, each side demonstrates a perspective that fails to recognize any truth in the perspective of the other.
The Palestinian Perspective: For the Palestinian side, "Madrid" and "Oslo" heralded the prospect of a State, and guaranteed an end to the
occupation and a resolution of outstanding matters within an agreed time frame. Palestinians are genuinely angry at the continued growth of
settlements and at their daily experiences of humiliation and disruption as a result of Israel's presence in the Palestinian territories. Palestinians
see settlers and settlements in their midst not only as violating the spirit of the Oslo process, but also as an application of force in the form of
Israel's overwhelming military superiority, which sustains and protects the settlements.
The Interim Agreement provides that "the two parties view the West Bank and Gaza as a single territorial unit, the integrity and status of which
will be preserved during the interim period." Coupled with this, the Interim Agreement's prohibition on taking steps which may prejudice
permanent status negotiations denies Israel the right to continue its illegal expansionist settlement policy. In addition to the Interim Agreement,
customary international law, including the Fourth Geneva Convention, prohibits Israel (as an occupying power) from establishing settlements
in occupied territory pending an end to the conflict.17
The PLO alleges that Israeli political leaders "have made no secret of the fact that the Israeli interpretation of Oslo was designed to segregate
the Palestinians in non-contiguous enclaves, surrounded by Israeli military-controlled borders, with settlements and settlement roads violating
the territories' integrity."18 According to the PLO, "In the seven years since the [Declaration of Principles], the settler population in the West
Bank, excluding East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, has doubled to 200,000, and the settler population in East Jerusalem has risen to 170,000.
Israel has constructed approximately 30 new settlements, and expanded a number of existing ones to house these new settlers."19
The PLO also claims that the GOI has failed to comply with other commitments such as the further withdrawal from the West Bank and the
release of Palestinian prisoners. In addition, Palestinians expressed frustration with the impasse over refugees and the deteriorating economic
circumstances in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The Israeli Perspective: From the GOI perspective, the expansion of settlement activity and the taking of measures to facilitate the convenience
and safety of settlers do not prejudice the outcome of permanent status negotiations.
Israel understands that the Palestinian side objects to the settlements in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Without prejudice to the formal
status of the settlements, Israel accepts that the settlements are an outstanding issue on which there will have to be agreement as part of any
permanent status resolution between the sides. This point was acknowledged and agreed upon in the Declaration of Principles of 13 September
1993 as well as in other agreements between the two sides. There has in fact been a good deal of discussion on the question of settlements
between the two sides in the various negotiations toward a permanent status agreement.20
Indeed, Israelis point out that at the Camp David summit and during subsequent talks the GOI offered to make significant concessions with
respect to settlements in the context of an overall agreement.
Security, however, is the key GOI concern. The GOI maintains that the PLO has breached its solemn commitments by continuing the use of
violence in the pursuit of political objectives. "Israel's principal concern in the peace process has been security. This issue is of overriding
importance... [S]ecurity is not something on which Israel will bargain or compromise. The failure of the Palestinian side to comply with both the
letter and spirit of the security provisions in the various agreements has long been a source of disturbance in Israel."21
According to the GOI, the Palestinian failure takes several forms: institutionalized anti-Israel, anti-Jewish incitement; the release from detention
of terrorists; the failure to control illegal weapons; and the actual conduct of violent operations, ranging from the insertion of riflemen into
demonstrations to terrorist attacks on Israeli civilians. The GOI maintains that the PLO has explicitly violated its renunciation of terrorism and
other acts of violence,22 thereby significantly eroding trust between the parties. The GOI perceives "a thread, implied but nonetheless clear,
that runs throughout the Palestinian submissions. It is that Palestinian violence against Israel and Israelis is somehow explicable,
understandable, legitimate."23
END THE VIOLENCE
For Israelis and Palestinians alike the experience of the past several months has been intensely personal. Through relationships of kinship,
friendship, religion, community and profession, virtually everyone in both societies has a link to someone who has been killed or seriously
injured in the recent violence. We were touched by their stories. During our last visit to the region, we met with the families of Palestinian and
Israeli victims. These individual accounts of grief were heart-rending and indescribably sad. Israeli and Palestinian families used virtually the
same words to describe their grief.
When the widow of a murdered Israeli physician -- a man of peace whose practice included the treatment of Arab patients -- tells us that it
seems that Palestinians are interested in killing Jews for the sake of killing Jews, Palestinians should take notice. When the parents of a
Palestinian child killed while in his bed by an errant .50 caliber bullet draw similar conclusions about the respect accorded by Israelis to
Palestinian lives, Israelis need to listen. When we see the shattered bodies of children we know it is time for adults to stop the violence.
With widespread violence, both sides have resorted to portrayals of the other in hostile stereotypes. This cycle cannot be easily broken.
Without considerable determination and readiness to compromise, the rebuilding of trust will be impossible.
Cessation of Violence: Since 1991, the parties have consistently committed themselves, in all their agreements, to the path of nonviolence.
They did so most recently in the two Sharm el-Sheikh summits of September 1999 and October 2000. To stop the violence now, the PA and GOI
need not "reinvent the wheel." Rather, they should take immediate steps to end the violence, reaffirm their mutual commitments, and resume
negotiations.
Resumption of Security Cooperation: Palestinian security officials told us that it would take some time - perhaps several weeks - for the PA to
reassert full control over armed elements nominally under its command and to exert decisive influence over other armed elements operating in
Palestinian areas. Israeli security officials have not disputed these assertions. What is important is that the PA make an all-out effort to enforce
a complete cessation of violence and that it be clearly seen by the GOI as doing so. The GOI must likewise exercise a 100 percent effort to
ensure that potential friction points, where Palestinians come into contact with armed Israelis, do not become stages for renewed hostilities.
The collapse of security cooperation in early October reflected the belief by each party that the other had committed itself to a violent course of
action. If the parties wish to attain the standard of 100 percent effort to prevent violence, the immediate resumption of security cooperation is
mandatory.
We acknowledge the reluctance of the PA to be seen as facilitating the work of Israeli security services absent an explicit political context (i.e.,
meaningful negotiations) and under the threat of Israeli settlement expansion. Indeed, security cooperation cannot be sustained without such
negotiations and with ongoing actions seen as prejudicing the outcome of negotiations. However, violence is much more likely to continue
without security cooperation. Moreover, without effective security cooperation, the parties will continue to regard all acts of violence as
officially sanctioned.
In order to overcome the current deadlock, the parties should consider how best to revitalize security cooperation. We commend current efforts
to that end. Effective cooperation depends on recreating and sustaining an atmosphere of confidence and good personal relations. It is for the
parties themselves to undertake the main burden of day-to-day cooperation, but they should remain open to engaging the assistance of others
in facilitating that work. Such outside assistance should be by mutual consent, should not threaten good bilateral working arrangements, and
should not act as a tribunal or interpose between the parties. There was good security cooperation until last year that benefited from the good
offices of the U.S. (acknowledged by both sides as useful), and was also supported indirectly by security projects and assistance from the
European Union. The role of outside assistance should be that of creating the appropriate framework, sustaining goodwill on both sides, and
removing friction where possible. That framework must be seen to be contributing to the safety and welfare of both communities if there is to be
acceptance by those communities of these efforts.
REBUILD CONFIDENCE
The historic handshake between Chairman Arafat and the late Prime Minister Rabin at the White House in September 1993 symbolized the
expectation of both parties that the door to the peaceful resolution of differences had been opened. Despite the current violence and mutual
loss of trust, both communities have repeatedly expressed a desire for peace. Channeling this desire into substantive progress has proved
difficult. The restoration of trust is essential, and the parties should take affirmative steps to this end. Given the high level of hostility and
mistrust, the timing and sequence of these steps are obviously crucial. This can be decided only by the parties. We urge them to begin the
process of decision immediately.
Terrorism: In the September 1999 Sharm el-Sheikh Memorandum, the parties pledged to take action against "any threat or act of terrorism,
violence or incitement." Although all three categories of hostilities are reprehensible, it was no accident that "terrorism" was placed at the top
of the list.
Terrorism involves the deliberate killing and injuring of randomly selected noncombatants for political ends. It seeks to promote a political
outcome by spreading terror and demoralization throughout a population. It is immoral and ultimately self-defeating. We condemn it and we
urge that the parties coordinate their security efforts to eliminate it.
In its official submissions and briefings, the GOI has accused the PA of supporting terrorism by releasing incarcerated terrorists, by allowing
PA security personnel to abet, and in some cases to conduct terrorist operations, and by terminating security cooperation with the GOI The PA
vigorously denies the accusations. But Israelis hold the view that the PA's leadership has made no real effort over the past seven months to
prevent anti-Israeli terrorism. The belief is, in and of itself, a major obstacle to the rebuilding of confidence.
We believe that the PA has a responsibility to help rebuild confidence by making clear to both communities that terrorism is reprehensible and
unacceptable, and by taking all measures to prevent terrorist operations and to punish perpetrators. This effort should include immediate steps
to apprehend and incarcerate terrorists operating within the PA's jurisdiction.
Settlements: The GOI also has a responsibility to help rebuild confidence. A cessation of Palestinian-Israeli violence will be particularly hard to
sustain unless the GOI freezes all settlement construction activity. The GOI should also give careful consideration to whether settlements that
are focal points for substantial friction are valuable bargaining chips for future negotiations or provocations likely to preclude the onset of
productive talks.
The issue is, of course, controversial. Many Israelis will regard our recommendation as a statement of the obvious, and will support it. Many
will oppose it. But settlement activities must not be allowed to undermine the restoration of calm and the resumption of negotiations.
During the half-century of its existence, Israel has had the strong support of the United States. In international forums, the U.S. has at times
cast the only vote on Israel's behalf. Yet, even in such a close relationship there are some differences. Prominent among those differences is the
U.S. Government's long-standing opposition to the GOI's policies and practices regarding settlements. As the then-Secretary of State, James A.
Baker, III, commented on May 22, 1991:
Every time I have gone to Israel in connection with the peace process, on each of my four trips, I have been met
with the announcement of new settlement activity. This does violate United States policy. It's the first thing that
Arabs -- Arab Governments, the first thing that the Palestinians in the territories -- whose situation is really quite
desperate - the first thing they raise when we talk to them. I don't think there is any bigger obstacle to peace than
the settlement activity that continues not only unabated but at an enhanced pace.24
The policy described by Secretary Baker, on behalf of the Administration of President George H. W. Bush, has been, in essence, the policy of
every American administration over the past quarter century.25
Most other countries, including Turkey, Norway, and those of the European Union, have also been critical of Israeli settlement activity, in
accordance with their views that such settlements are illegal under international law and not in compliance with previous agreements.
On each of our two visits to the region there were Israeli announcements regarding expansion of settlements, and it was almost always the first
issue raised by Palestinians with whom we met. During our last visit, we observed the impact of 6,400 settlers on 140,000 Palestinians in
Hebron26 and 6,500 settlers on over 1,100,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.27 The GOI describes its policy as prohibiting new settlements but
permitting expansion of exiting settlements to accommodate "natural growth." Palestinians contend that there is no distinction between "new"
and "expanded" settlements; and that, except for a brief freeze during the tenure of Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin, there has been a continuing,
aggressive effort by Israel to increase the number and size of settlements.
The subject has been widely discussed within Israel. The Ha’aretz English Language Edition
editorial of April 10, 2001 stated:
A government which seeks to argue that its goal is to reach a solution to the conflict with the Palestinians
through peaceful means, and is trying at this stage to bring an end to the violence and terrorism, must announce
an end to construction in the settlements.28
The circumstances in the region are much changed from those which existed nearly 20 years ago. Yet, President Reagan's words remain
relevant: "The immediate adoption of a settlements freeze by Israel, more than any other action, could create the confidence needed..."
Beyond the obvious confidence-building qualities of a settlement freeze, we note that many of the confrontations during this conflict have
occurred at points where Palestinians, settlers, and security forces protecting the settlers, meet. Keeping both the peace and these friction
points will be very difficult.
Reducing Tension: We were told by both Palestinians and Israelis that emotions generated by the many recent deaths and funerals have fueled
additional confrontations, and, in effect, maintained the cycle of violence. We cannot urge one side or the other to refrain from demonstrations.
But both sides must make clear that violent demonstrations will not be tolerated. We can and do urge that both sides exhibit a greater respect
for human life when demonstrators confront security personnel. In addition, a renewed effort to stop the violence might feature, for a limited
time, a "cooling off" period during which public demonstrations at or near friction points will be discouraged in order to break the cycle of
violence. To the extent that demonstrations continue, we urge that demonstrators and security personnel keep their distance from one another
to reduce the potential for lethal confrontation.
Actions and Responses: Members of the Committee staff witnessed an incident involving stone throwing in Ramallah from the perspectives, on
the ground, of both sides. The people confronting one another were mostly young men. The absence of senior leadership on the IDF side was
striking. Likewise, the absence of responsible security and other officials counseling restraint on the Palestinian side was obvious.
Concerning such confrontations, the GOI takes the position that "Israel is engaged in an armed conflict short of war. This is not a civilian
disturbance or a demonstration or a riot. It is characterized by live-fire attacks on a significant scale [emphasis added] ... [T]he attacks are
carried out by a well-armed and organized militia..."29 Yet, the GOI acknowledges that of some 9,000 "attacks" by Palestinians against Israelis,
"some 2,700 [about 30 percent] involved the use of automatic weapons, rifles, hand guns, grenades, [and] explosives of other kinds."30
Thus, for the first three months of the current uprising, most incidents did not involve Palestinian use of firearms and explosives. B’Tselem
reported that, "according to IDF figures, 73 percent of the incidents [from September 29 to December 2, 2000] did not include Palestinian gunfire.
Despite this, it was in these incidents that most of the Palestinians [were] killed and wounded. . ."31 Altogether, nearly 500 people were killed
and over 10,000 injured over the past seven months; the overwhelming majority in both categories were Palestinian. Many of these deaths were
avoidable, as were many Israeli deaths.
Israel's characterization of the conflict, as noted above, is overly broad, for it does not adequately describe the variety of incidents reported
since late September 2000. Moreover, by thus defining the conflict, the IDF has suspended its policy of mandating investigations by the
Department of Military Police Investigations whenever a Palestinian in the territories dies at the hands of an IDF soldier in an incident not
involving terrorism. In the words of the GOI, "Where Israel considers that there is reason to investigate particular incidents, it does so,
although, given the circumstances of armed conflict, it does not do so routinely."32 We believe, however, that by abandoning the blanket
"armed conflict short of war" characterization and by re-instituting mandatory military police investigations, the GOI could help mitigate deadly
violence and help rebuild mutual confidence. Notwithstanding the danger posed by stone-throwers, an effort should be made to differentiate
between terrorism and protests.
Controversy has arisen between the parties over what Israel calls the "targeting of individual enemy combatants."33 The PLO describes these
actions as "extra-judicial executions,"34 and claims that Israel has engaged in an "assassination policy" that is "in clear violation of Article 32 of
the Fourth Geneva Convention... ."35 The GOI states that, "whatever action Israel has taken has been taken firmly within the bounds of the
relevant and accepted principles relating to the conduct of hostilities."36
With respect to demonstrations, the GOI has acknowledged "that individual instances of excessive response may have occurred. To a soldier
or a unit coming under Palestinian attack, the equation is not that of the Israeli army versus some stone throwing Palestinian protesters. It is a
personal equation."37
We understand this concern, particularly since rocks can maim or even kill. It is no easy matter for a few young soldiers, confronted by large
numbers of hostile demonstrators, to make fine legal distinctions on the spot. Still, this "personal equation" must fit within an organizational
ethic; in this case, The Ethical Code of the Israel Defense Forces, which states, in part:
The sanctity of human life in the eyes of the IDF servicemen will find expression in all of their actions, in
deliberate and meticulous planning, in safe and intelligent training and in proper execution of their mission. In
evaluating the risk to self and others, they will use the appropriate standards and will exercise constant care to
limit injury to life to the extent required to accomplish the mission.38
Those required to respect the IDF ethical code are largely draftees, as the IDF is a conscript force. Active duty enlisted personnel,
noncommissioned officers and junior officers -- the categories most likely to be present at friction points -- are young, often teenagers. Unless
more senior career personnel or reservists are stationed at friction points, no IDF personnel present in these sensitive areas have experience to
draw upon from previous violent Israeli-Palestinian confrontations. We think it is essential, especially in the context of restoring confidence by
minimizing deadly confrontations, that the IDF deploy more senior, experienced soldiers to these sensitive points.
There were incidents where IDF soldiers have used lethal force, including live ammunition and modified metal-cored rubber rounds, against
unarmed demonstrators throwing stones.39 The IDF should adopt crowd-control tactics that minimize the potential for deaths and casualties,
withdrawing metal-cored rubber rounds from general use and using instead rubber baton rounds without metal cores.
We are deeply concerned about the public safety implications of exchanges of fire between populated areas, in particular between Israeli
settlements and neighboring Palestinian villages. Palestinian gunmen have directed small arms fire at Israeli settlements and at nearby IDF
positions from within or adjacent to civilian dwellings in Palestinian areas, thus endangering innocent, Israeli and Palestinian civilians alike. We
condemn the positioning of gunmen within or near civilian dwellings. The IDF often responds to such gunfire with heavy caliber weapons,
sometimes resulting in deaths and injuries to innocent Palestinians. An IDF officer told us at the Ministry of Defense on March 23, 2001 that,
"When shooting comes from a building we respond, and sometimes there are innocent people in the building." Obviously, innocent people are
injured and killed during exchanges of this nature. We urge that such provocations cease and that the IDF exercise maximum restraint in its
responses if they do occur. Inappropriate or excessive uses of force often lead to escalation.
We are aware of IDF sensitivities about these subjects. More than once we were asked: "What about Palestinian rules of engagement? What
about a Palestinian code of ethics for their military personnel?" These are valid questions.
On the Palestinian side there are disturbing ambiguities in the basic areas of responsibility and accountability. The lack of control exercised by
the PA over its own security personnel and armed elements affiliated with the PA leadership is very troubling. We urge the PA to take all
necessary steps to establish a clear and unchallenged chain of command for armed personnel operating under its authority. We recommend that
the PA institute and enforce effective standards of conduct and accountability, both within the uniformed ranks and between the police and the
civilian political leadership to which it reports.
Incitement: In their submissions and briefings to the Committee, both sides expressed concerns about hateful language and images emanating
from the other, citing numerous examples of hostile sectarian and ethnic rhetoric in the Palestinian and Israeli media, in school curricula and in
statements by religious leaders, politicians and others.
We call on the parties to renew their formal commitments to foster mutual understanding and tolerance and to abstain from incitement and
hostile propaganda. We condemn hate language and incitement in all its forms. We suggest that the parties be particularly cautious about
using words in a manner that suggests collective responsibility.
Economic and Social Impact of Violence: Further restrictions on the movement of people and goods have been imposed by Israel on the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip. These closures take three forms: those which restrict movement between the Palestinian areas and Israel; those
(including curfews) which restrict movement within the Palestinian areas; and those which restrict movement from the Palestinian areas to
foreign countries. These measures have disrupted the lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians; they have increased Palestinian
unemployment to an estimated 40 percent, in part by preventing some 140,000 Palestinians from working in Israel; and have stripped away
about one-third of the Palestinian gross domestic product. Moreover, the transfer of tax and customs duty revenues owed to the PA by Israel
has been suspended, leading to a serious fiscal crisis in the PA.
Of particular concern to the PA has been the destruction by Israeli security forces and settlers of tens of thousands of olive and fruit trees and
other agricultural property. The closures have had other adverse effects, such as preventing civilians from access to urgent medical treatment
and preventing students from attending school.
The GOI maintains that these measures were taken in order to protect Israeli citizens from terrorism. Palestinians characterize these measures as
"collective punishment." The GOI denies the allegation:
Israel has not taken measures that have had an economic impact simply for the sake of taking such measures or
for reasons of harming the Palestinian economy. The measures have been taken for reasons of security. Thus, for
example, the closure of the Palestinian territories was taken in order to prevent, or at least minimize the risks of,
terrorist attacks. ... The Palestinian leadership has made no attempt to control this activity and bring it to an
end.40
Moreover, the GOI points out that violence in the last quarter of 2000 cost the Israeli economy $1.2 billion (USD),
and that the loss continues at a rate of approximately $150 million (USD) per month.41
We acknowledge Israel's security concerns. We believe, however, that the GOI should lift closures, transfer to the PA all revenues owed, and
permit Palestinians who have been employed in Israel to return to their jobs. Closure policies play into the hands of extremists seeking to
expand their constituencies and thereby contribute to escalation. The PA should resume cooperation with Israeli security agencies to ensure
that Palestinian workers employed within Israel are fully vetted and free of connections to terrorists and terrorist organizations.
International development assistance has from the start been an integral part of the peace process, with an aim to strengthen the
socio-economic foundations for peace. This assistance today is more important than ever. We urge the international community to sustain the
development agenda of the peace process.
Holy Places: It is particularly regrettable that places such as the Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif in Jerusalem, Joseph's Tomb in Nablus, and
Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem have been the scenes of violence, death and injury. These are places of peace, prayer and reflection which must be
accessible to all believers.
Places deemed holy by Muslims, Jews, and Christians merit respect, protection and preservation. Agreements previously reached by the parties
regarding holy places must be upheld. The GOI and the PA should create a joint initiative to defuse the sectarian aspect of their political
dispute by preserving and protecting such places. Efforts to develop inter-faith dialogue should be encouraged.
International Force: One of the most controversial subjects raised during our inquiry was the issue of deploying an international force to the
Palestinian areas. The PA is strongly in favor of having such a force to protect Palestinian civilians and their property from the IDF and from
settlers. The GOI is just as adamantly opposed to an "international protection force," believing that it would prove unresponsive to Israeli
security concerns and interfere with bilateral negotiations to settle the conflict.
We believe that to be effective such a force would need the support of both parties. We note that international forces deployed in this region
have been or are in a position to fulfill their mandates and make a positive contribution only when they were deployed with the consent of all of
the parties involved.
During our visit to Hebron, we were briefed by personnel of the Temporary International Presence in Hebron (TIPH), a presence to which both
parties have agreed. The TIPH is charged with observing an explosive situation and writing reports on their observations. If the parties agree,
as a confidence-building measure, to draw upon TIPH personnel to help them manage other friction points, we hope that TIPH contributors
could accommodate such a request.
Cross-Community Initiatives: Many described to us the near absolute loss of trust. It was all the more inspiring, therefore, to find groups (such
as the Parent's Circle and the Economic Cooperation Foundation) dedicated to cross-community understanding in spite of all that has
happened. We commend them and their important work.
Regrettably, most of the work of this nature has stopped during the current conflict. To help rebuild confidence, the GOI and PA should jointly
endorse and support the work of Israeli and Palestinian non-governmental organizations (NGOs) already involved in confidence-building
through initiatives linking both sides. It is important that the PA and GOI support cross-community organizations and initiatives, including the
provision of humanitarian assistance to Palestinian villages by Israeli NGOs. Providing travel permits for participants is essential. Cooperation
between the humanitarian organizations and the military/security services of the parties should be encouraged and institutionalized.
Such programs can help build, albeit slowly, constituencies for peace among Palestinians and Israelis and can provide safety nets during times
of turbulence. Organizations involved in this work are vital for translating good intentions into positive actions.
RESUME NEGOTIATIONS
Israeli leaders do not wish to be perceived as "rewarding violence." Palestinian leaders do not wish to be perceived as "rewarding occupation."
We appreciate the political constraints on leaders of both sides. Nevertheless, if the cycle of violence is to be broken and the search for peace
resumed, there needs to be a new bilateral relationship incorporating both security cooperation and negotiations.
We cannot prescribe to the parties how best to pursue their political objectives. Yet the construction of a new bilateral relationship solidifying
and transcending an agreed cessation of violence requires intelligent risk-taking. It requires, in the first instance, that each party again be
willing to regard the other as a partner. Partnership, in turn, requires at this juncture something more than was agreed in the Declaration of
Principles and in subsequent agreements. Instead of declaring the peace process to be "dead," the parties should determine how they will
conclude their common journey along their agreed "road map," a journey which began in Madrid and continued -- in spite of problems -- until
very recently.
To define a starting point is for the parties to decide. Both parties have stated that they remain committed to their mutual agreements and
undertakings. It is time to explore further implementation. The parties should declare their intention to meet on this basis, in order to resume full
and meaningful negotiations, in the spirit of their undertakings at Sharm el-Sheikh in 1999 and 2000.
Neither side will be able to achieve its principal objectives unilaterally or without political risk. We know how hard it is for leaders to act --
especially if the action can be characterized by political opponents as a concession -- without getting something in return. The PA must -- as it
has at previous critical junctures -- take steps to reassure Israel on security matters. The GOI must -- as it has in the past -- take steps to
reassure the PA on political matters. Israelis and Palestinians should avoid, in their own actions and attitudes, giving extremists, common
criminals and revenge seekers the final say in defining their joint future. This will not be easy if deadly incidents occur in spite of effective
cooperation. Notwithstanding the daunting difficulties, the very foundation of the trust required to re-establish a functioning partnership
consists of each side making such strategic reassurances to the other.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The GOI and the PA must act swiftly and decisively to halt the violence. Their immediate objectives then should be to rebuild confidence and
resume negotiations. What we are asking is not easy. Palestinians and Israelis - not just their leaders, but two publics at large - have lost
confidence in one another. We are asking political leaders to do, for the sake of their people, the politically difficult: to lead without knowing
how many will follow.
During this mission our aim has been to fulfill the mandate agreed at Sharm el-Sheikh. We value the support given our work by the participants
at the summit, and we commend the parties for their cooperation. Our principal recommendation is that they recommit themselves to the Sharm
el-Sheikh spirit, and that they implement the decisions made there in 1999 and 2000. We believe that the summit participants will support bold
action by the parties to achieve these objectives.
END THE VIOLENCE
The GOI and the PA should reaffirm their commitment to existing agreements and undertakings and should immediately implement an
unconditional cessation of violence.
Anything less than a complete effort by both parties to end the violence will render the effort itself ineffective, and will likely be interpreted by
the other side as evidence of hostile intent.
The GOI and PA should immediately resume security cooperation.
Effective bilateral cooperation aimed at preventing violence will encourage the resumption of negotiations. We are particularly concerned that,
absent effective, transparent security cooperation, terrorism and other acts of violence will continue and may be seen as officially sanctioned
whether they are or not. The parties should consider widening the scope of security cooperation to reflect the priorities of both communities
and to seek acceptance for these efforts from those communities.
We acknowledge the PA's position that security cooperation presents a political difficulty absent a suitable political context, i.e., the relaxation
of stringent Israeli security measures combined with ongoing, fruitful negotiations. We also acknowledge the PA's fear that, with security
cooperation in hand, the GOI may not be disposed to deal forthrightly with Palestinian political concerns. We believe that security cooperation
cannot long be sustained if meaningful negotiations are unreasonably deferred, if security measures "on the ground" are seen as hostile, or if
steps are taken that are perceived as provocative or as prejudicing the outcome of negotiations.
REBUILD CONFIDENCE
The PA and GOI should work together to establish a meaningful "cooling off period" and implement additional confidence building measures,
some of which were proposed in the October 2000 Sharm el-Sheikh Statement and some of which were offered by the U.S. on January 7, 2001 in
Cairo.
The PA and GOI should resume their efforts to identify, condemn and discourage incitement in all its forms.
The PA should make clear through concrete action to Palestinians and Israelis alike that terrorism is reprehensible and unacceptable, and that
the PA will make a 100 percent effort to prevent terrorist operations and to punish perpetrators. This effort should include immediate steps to
apprehend and incarcerate terrorists operating within the PA's jurisdiction.
The GOI should freeze all settlement activity, including the "natural growth" of existing settlements.
The kind of security cooperation desired by the GOI cannot for long co-exist with settlement activity described very recently by the European
Union as causing "great concern" and by the U.S. as "provocative."
The GOI should give careful consideration to whether settlements which are focal points for substantial friction are valuable bargaining chips
for future negotiations or provocations likely to preclude the onset of productive talks.
The GOI may wish to make it clear to the PA that a future peace would pose no threat to the territorial contiguity of a Palestinian State to be
established in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
The IDF should consider withdrawing to positions held before September 28, 2000 which
will reduce the number of friction points and the potential for violent confrontations.
The GOI should ensure that the IDF adopt and enforce policies and procedures encouraging non-lethal responses to unarmed demonstrators,
with a view to minimizing casualties and friction between the two communities. The IDF should:
Re-institute, as a matter of course, military police investigations into Palestinian deaths resulting from IDF actions in the Palestinian territories in
incidents not involving terrorism. The IDF should abandon the blanket characterization of the current uprising as "an armed conflict short of
war," which fails to discriminate between terrorism and protest.
Adopt tactics of crowd-control that minimize the potential for deaths and casualties, including the withdrawal of metal-cored rubber rounds
from general use.
Ensure that experienced, seasoned personnel are present for duty at all times at known friction points.
Ensure that the stated values and standard operating procedures of the IDF effectively instill the duty of caring for Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip as well as Israelis living there, consistent with The Ethical Code of The IDF.
The GOI should lift closures, transfer to the PA all tax revenues owed, and permit Palestinians who had been employed in Israel to return to
their jobs; and should ensure that security forces and settlers refrain from the destruction of homes and roads, as well as trees and other
agricultural property in Palestinian areas. We acknowledge the GOI's position that actions of this nature have been taken for security reasons.
Nevertheless, their economic effects will persist for years.
The PA should renew cooperation with Israeli security agencies to ensure, to the maximum extent possible, that Palestinian workers employed
within Israel are fully vetted and free of connections to organizations and individuals engaged in terrorism.
The PA should prevent gunmen from using Palestinian populated areas to fire upon Israeli populated areas and IDF positions. This tactic
places civilians on both sides at unnecessary risk.
The GOI and IDF should adopt and enforce policies and procedures designed to ensure that the response to any gunfire emanating from
Palestinian populated areas minimizes the danger to the lives and property of Palestinian civilians, bearing in mind that it is probably the
objective of gunmen to elicit an excessive IDF response.
The GOI should take all necessary steps to prevent acts of violence by settlers.
The parties should abide by the provisions of the Wye River Agreement prohibiting illegal weapons.
The PA should take all necessary steps to establish a clear and unchallenged chain of command for armed personnel operating under its
authority.
The PA should institute and enforce effective standards of conduct and accountability, both within the uniformed ranks and between the police
and the civilian political leadership to which it reports.
The PA and GOI should consider a joint undertaking to preserve and protect holy places sacred to the traditions of Muslims, Jews, and
Christians. An initiative of this nature might help to reverse a disturbing trend: the increasing use of religious themes to encourage and justify
violence.
The GOI and PA should jointly endorse and support the work of Palestinian and Israeli non-governmental organizations (NGOs) involved in
cross-community initiatives linking the two peoples. It is important that these activities, including the provision of humanitarian aid to
Palestinian villages by Israeli NGOs, receive the full backing of both parties.
RESUME NEGOTIATIONS
We reiterate our belief that a 100 percent effort to stop the violence, an immediate resumption of security cooperation and an exchange of
confidence building measures are all important for the resumption of negotiations. Yet none of these steps will long be sustained absent a
return to serious negotiations.
It is not within our mandate to prescribe the venue, the basis or the agenda of negotiations. However, in order to provide an effective political
context for practical cooperation between the parties, negotiations must not be unreasonably deferred and they must, in our view, manifest a
spirit of compromise, reconciliation and partnership, notwithstanding the events of the past seven months.
In the spirit of the Sharm el-Sheikh agreements and understandings of 1999 and 2000, we recommend that the parties meet to reaffirm their
commitment to signed agreements and mutual understandings, and take corresponding action. This should be the basis for resuming full and
meaningful negotiations.
The parties are at a crossroads. If they do not return to the negotiating table, they face the prospect of fighting it out for years on end, with
many of their citizens leaving for distant shores to live their lives and raise their children. We pray they make the right choice. That means
stopping the violence now. Israelis and Palestinians have to live, work, and prosper together. History and geography have destined them to be
neighbors. That cannot be changed. Only when their actions are guided by this awareness will they be able to develop the vision and reality of
peace and shared prosperity.
Suleyman Demirel
9th President of the Republic of Turkey
Thorbjoern Jagland
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Norway
George J. Mitchell, Chairman
Former Member and Majority Leader of the United States Senate
Warren B. Rudman
Former Member of the United States Senate
Javier Solana
High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, European Union
NOTES:
1.A copy of the statement is attached.
2.Copies of the President's letters are attached.
3.When informed of the planned visit, Ambassador Dennis Ross (President Clinton's Middle East Envoy) said that he told Israeli Minister
of Interior Shlomo Ben-Ami, "I can think of a lot of bad ideas, but I can't think of a worse one." See Jane Perlez, "US Envoy Recalls the
Day Pandora's Box Wouldn't Shut," The New York Times, January 29, 2001.
4.U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2000 (Israel), Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor,
February 2001, http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2000/ nea/index.
5.Government of Israel, First Statement, 28 December 2000 (hereafter "GOI, First Statement"), para 187. B'Tselem (The Israeli Information
Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories) reported that 70 police were injured. See Events on the Temple Mount - 29
September 2000: Interim Report, http://www.btselem.org/files/site/Violent Events/TempleMount 2000 eng.as.
6.Disturbances also occurred within Israel's Arab community, resulting in thirteen deaths. These events do not fall within the mandate of
this Committee and are the subject of an official GOI inquiry.
7.GOI, First Statement, para 118.
8.Id., para 110. According to the GOI, the Palestinian Minister of Posts and Telecommunications declared at a rally in Lebanon in March
2001 that the confrontation with Israel had been planned following the Camp David Summit. See Government of Israel, Second Statement, 20 March 2001 (hereafter, "GOI, Second Statement"), para 2. The PA provided the Committee a translation of a letter from the Minister, dated March 12, 2001, in which the Minister denied saying that the intifada was planned, and that his statement in Lebanon was misquoted and taken out of context. We were told by an Israeli Defense Force (IDF) intelligence officer that while the declaration itself was not definitive, it represented an "open-source" version of what was known to the IDF through "other means"; knowledge and means not shared by the IDF with the Committee.
9.Palestine Liberation Organization, Preliminary Submission of the Palestine Liberation Organization to the International Commission of
Inquiry, December 8, 2000, p. 10. Note: submissions to the Committee from the Palestinian side were made by the PLO.
10.Palestine Liberation Organization, A Crisis of Faith: Second Submission of the Palestine Liberation Organization to the Sharm El-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee, December 30,2000 (hereafter "PLO, Second Submission"), p. 16.
11.See GOI, First Statement, para 286.
12.Palestine Liberation Organization, Third Submission of The Palestine Liberation Organization to the Sharm El-Sheikh Fact-Finding
Committee, April 3, 2001 (hereafter "PLO, Third Submission"), p. 51.
13.GOI, Second Statement, para 4.
14.GOI, First Statement, para 19.
15.PLO, Third Submission, p. 25.
16.Id., pp. 46-50.
17.Id., pp. 27-28.
18.PLO, Second Submission, p. 14.
19.Id., pp. 14-15.
20.GOI, Second Statement, para 82.
21.GOI, First Statement, para 99.
22.GOI Second Statement, para 19, referring to the Exchange of Notes Between the Prime Minister of Israel and the Chairman of the PLO, 9-
10 September 1993.
23.Id., para 21.
24.Testimony before the United States House of Representatives Committee on Appropriations, 102nd Congress, May 22, 1991.
25.On March 21, 1980, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, speaking on behalf of the Carter Administration, stated: "U.S. policy toward the
establishment of Israeli settlements in the occupied territories is unequivocal and has long been a matter of public record. We consider it
to be contrary to international law and an impediment to the successful conclusion of the Middle East peace process."
On September 1, 1982, President Ronald Reagan announced what came to be known as The Reagan Plan for the Middle East,
stating that: "[T]he immediate adoption of a settlements freeze by Israel, more than any other action, could create the confidence
needed for wider participation in these talks. Further settlement activity is in no way necessary for the security of Israel and only
diminishes the confidence of the Arabs that a final outcome can be freely and fairly negotiated.
On December 16, 1996, at a press conference, President Bill Clinton stated: "It just stands to reason that anything that preempts
the outcome [of the negotiations] ... cannot be helpful in making peace. I don't think anything should be done that would be
seen as preempting the outcome." Asked if he viewed the settlements as an obstacle to peace, President Clinton replied,
"Absolutely. Absolutely."
On April 5, 2001, a U.S. State Department spokesman, speaking for the current administration, stated: "Continuing settlement
activity does risk inflaming an already volatile situation in the region"; he described that activity as "provocative."
26.There are 400 settlers in the "H2" sector of central Hebron, and 6,000 in the Kiryat Arba settlement on the eastern edge of the city. See "An Introduction to the City of Hebron," published by the Temporary International Presence in Hebron, http://www.tiph.org
27.Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook 2000, http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/gz.html
28.Ha'aretz, English Language Edition, April 10, 2001, p. 5.
29.GOI, First Statement, para 286.
30.Id., para 189.
31.B'Tselem, Illusions of Restraint: Human Rights Violations During the Events in the Occupied Territories, 29 September-2 December 2000,
December 2000, p. 4.
32.GOI, First Statement, para 306. "The stated policy of the IDF is that whenever a Palestinian in the Occupied Territories dies at the hands of a soldier, an investigation is to be made by the Department of Military Police Investigations (MPI), except in cases defined as 'hostile terrorist activity.'" See B'Tselem, Illusions of Restraint, p. 24. See also, Alex Fishman, "The Intifada, the IDF and Investigations," Yediot
Aharonot (in English, Richard Bell Press, 1996, Ltd.), January 19, 2001.
33.GOI, Second Statement, para 69-80.
34.PLO, Third Submission, p. 69.
35.Id., p. 60.
36.GOI, Second Statement, para 78.
37.GOI, First Statement, para 305.
38.Israel Defense Forces, The Ethical Code of the Israel Defense Forces, http://www.idf.il/english/doctrine/doctrine.stm.
39.See, e.g., U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, 2000 (Occupied Territories),
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2000/nea/index. See also, B'Tselem, Illusions of Restraint, pp. 15-16, reporting on the alleged
practice of separating rubber bullets into individual rounds, as opposed to firing them properly in a bound cluster of three. Separation
increases range and lethality.
40.GOI, Second Statement, para 92.
41.Id., para 89.