Address of H.E. Mr. Shimon Peres, Foreign Minister of Israel
50th Session of the United Nations General Assembly
2 October 1995
Mr. President,
I would like to congratulate you on your election to the head of the
General Assembly. We are glad that the representative of Portugal, a
nation for which Israel has high regard, was elected to this distinguished
post. I would like to express to the Secretary General, Mr. Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, a man from our region and a man of peace, our deepest
appreciation for his contribution to world peace in general, and to Middle
East peace in particular.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Tomorrow, the Jewish people will pray on the day of Yom HaKippurim: "In
the book of life, blessing, peace, good livelihood, good decrees,
salvation and consultations may you be remembered and inscribed." We pray
for all humanity, for the whole world.
The United Nations, for us is not just a place for prayer, surely not a
platform for speeches. We came here to state our convictions, to announce
our commitments. In our address in 1987, I stated on behalf of the State
of Israel I quote: "We found President Mubarak of Egypt to be a builder
of a better life for his people and bridges for comprehensive peace in the
region." Today, under the leadership of President Mubarak, Egypt is
becoming a center for regional development, on its way to hosting the
first regional bank of development.
In the same address, we stated: "An international conference is the door
to direct negotiations. Once convened, it should lead immediately to face
to face bilateral negotiations." On October 30th, 1991, the Madrid
Conference took place.
In 1992, again, we declared the opportunity to select through democratic
political elections the Palestinian administrative council to enable the
Palestinian people to exercise a double measure of freedom: the freedom to
govern their own lives and to do so democratically. Last week we realized
what we had promised.
In 1993, we declared again from this podium, "geographically speaking we
live side by side with the Jordanian Kingdom and what is so obvious
geographically must become clear politically so we can offer the people of
both sides of the river full peace. The Dead Sea can become a spring of
new life." In October 1994, just one year later, Jordan and Israel signed
a peace treaty.
Last year, we said here, "All countries of the Middle East face a choice,
to remain politically divided and economically stagnant or to become
economically advanced and politically just. We shall try to establish
instruments for development; a regional bank, channels for private
investment, a framework for regional planning." A year later, in October
1994, the first Middle East/North African summit was held in Casablanca
under the splendid presidency of His Majesty King Hassan. At the end of
this month, a second summit will be held in Amman under the auspices of
His Majesty King Hussein. And at the end of November, the first
ground-breaking Euro-Mediterranean conference will be held in Barcelona.
Three years, five promises, all of them fulfilled.
And I would like to use this occasion to turn to the Syrians and to turn
to the Lebanese to ask that they stop hesitating, stop wondering. They
have to look at this record and come in and follow up. The President of
Syria said that from experience he has learned that only through military
negotiations and making security the major agenda one can achieve peace.
Experience has shown that through negotiation on all levels, embracing all
issues, without timidity, without fatigue, we can achieve peace. If
leaders will meet and they won't be successful at the first meeting, they
will have another meeting. What's wrong with that? To work day and night,
ceaselessly, with new ideas and new approaches. They waste not the time of
the leaders, they waste the time of their people, their fortunes, their
happiness, the opportunities for the young generation.
And we tell all countries of the Middle East, not that we want to have a
new Middle East, but that we want the Middle East to join in a new age,
for the good of their people, not for the good of Israel. Israel is in
good shape because we no longer live in a world where we have empires of
power and colonies of poverty. Poverty and oppression are homemade, not
imposed by others. The choice is before every country to become free and
prosperous and democratic, like so many nations did in a relatively short
while in Asia, in Latin America, in some countries in Africa. It is
their choice, their occasion not just to build a different world but to
introduce the new world for their own people.
For us the United States is not an empire of power. We are not afraid of
the United States. For us, the United States is an empire of peace. We
need the United States. For us, Russia is going through a process of
change. Russia will remain great, but will become different. For us, we
welcome the European contribution to other countries, those east of them,
south of them, including by having a Barcelona conference, to offer the
Mediterranean people funds and experience to build a new life. We are glad
that Japan is escaping her economic horizons, by understanding and
contributing to other nations. And we hope that other well-to-do countries
in the Middle East, including Arab countries, will help the needy parts of
our own region.
Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. President,
May I say, that in the best of my judgement, the greatest danger is a
combination between high technology and deep hatred. Between modern
instruments of war and feudalistic views. And the greatest hope, for all
of us, is a doubled effort to respect human values and modern education.
May I say that Israel itself is in good shape. We are strong militarily, I
don't deny this. We have an excellent economy, an economy of brains, and
of material resources. We absorbed a very large immigration of white and
black Jews. Whites coming from Russia and black Jews coming from Ethiopia.
But nobody can understand what made Israel, in such a relatively good
position. What made us, is, first of all, to return to the moral choice.
By the end of this year, latest at the beginning of the next year, no
single Palestinian will remain under our control. For the first time in
the history of the Palestinian people they are educating already their
children without intervention by us, or anybody else.
Nobody forced us to do so. We are not weak. We are not poor. We are not
under pressure. We have had to take serious risks because terror still
continues. The Arab boycott is still intact. In our own country there is
strong opposition to what we are doing. We have to spend a great deal of
budgets to make peace and yet, in spite of all this, we decided to make a
moral choice not to dominate another people. We said it at this respected
audience that this is our intention. Now we have done it. Even
politically, as difficult as it may be at home, because as a party, we may
win historically, but we may also lose politically. But then, winning the
peace is more important in our eyes than winning elections. Why should you
be elected if you don't use the mandate of the people to change the course
of your history in a more reasonable way.
We believe that the strength of ethical judgement is as important as
military exercises or triumph. We gave up land and we produced instead an
economy of brains. Today, Israel is making out of her brains more than
some other countries in our vicinity are making out of oil. What we expect
from the Palestinians is to become democratic, to be prosperous, to fight
violence and terror. What we are telling to our neighbors is a simple
message: what we could do, everybody can do.
For many years there was a legend that only the North which is white and
wealthy and permanent can be a success story whereas the South is
condemned to backwardness, to poverty, to lagging behind. What happened in
Asia, where there are the most vibrant economic endeavours today and what
is happening in Latin America shows that economy has nothing to do with
geographic location or the color of your skin. Make the right choice,
serve your people and create a new future. What we are offering to whoever
is interested is our experience.
We do not want to dominate anyone, surely not the economy of anyone. We
give up the domination of people not to gain domination of markets. And we
are telling our neighbors that we are happy that they have accepted our
offer that the new frontiers between, for example, Jordan and Israel,
will not be frontiers of mines and hostile fences but an occasion for
joint ventures. The whole rift of Africa, the whole desert valley that
separates the Jordanians and us, will become with godspeed a source of
provision, of work, of development. We shall build there hotels and
schools, desalinization plants and parks. People will be free to move from
one side to another side, competing without hating, cooperating without
dominating. We want to do the same about the dividing line between us and
the Palestinians, to build alongside the line on the West Bank and Gaza,
eight industrial parks, so the Palestinians will not have to cross the
border and go through the checkposts of Israel but work will come to them
and together we shall invest and together we shall develop.
A better economy is the best guarantee for peace. Actually, you cannot
have economic cooperation if you don't have political understanding. You
know, in our negotiations, we created three zones of security sensibility
on the West Bank: Zone A, Zone B, Zone C. We then turned to the water and
to the electricity and we wanted the water and the current to submit to
our political wisdom. But the electricity and the water said we can't
distinguish between A,B and C. Water flows according to nature and not
according to artificial agreements, and electric currents don't stop at A
or B or C. They serve everybody.
Today in the Middle East, like elsewhere, the distinction is no longer
ideological or religious or national. There is just one distinction
between an old, poor, backward economy or a new age, where economy is
based on technology and science: whether the natural resource is school
for the children or mines of the gold. Everybody can postpone this choice,
but nobody can escape it. And what we are aiming at is to have peace to
serve our people, to have education, to equip our children to take
advantage of the new age, to be equal to others, to compete with other
children. And it cannot be, it cannot remain a peace between leaders. It
must become a peace for people.
For them, for the future. I started by showing what happened in four or
three short years. It's a revolution. It's a beginning. We shouldn't stop
in the middle. Let everybody pray to the Lord in the language he's used
to. Let everybody respect his own tradition, his heritage, his special
experience as a nation, as a people, but let all of us give up unnecessary
hatred, untold suspicion. Let us give up fortifying behind old dogmas and
terrible prejudices. Let us serve the people and the future and then, the
coming fifty years of the United Nations will offer not just fifty years
without war but a coming fifty years with peace and prosperity.
Thank you very much.