Statement by Ambassador Gad Yaacobi
Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations
on
"The Situation in the Middle East"
(Agenda Item 34)
48th Session of the General Assembly
United Nations
1 December 1993
New York
Mr. President,
After more than forty years of Cold War and polarization, the people of
the world are striving to build a better future, trying to overcome
ethnic, religious and national conflicts.
In Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, young democracies are
struggling to lay the cornerstones of peaceful and prosperous futures.
In Western Europe, the European Union has drafted a plan of great
vision. Together, these countries are building prosperous lives on the
solid basis of regional cooperation.
In the Middle East too, historic changes are breaking down the
battlements of a century of conflict and war. As we look forward to an
era of prosperity and cooperation, I think back to a time when Jews and
Arabs flourished together 1,000 years ago, in Spain, when we shared
a Golden Age.
Now, the time has come for us to seize the opportunity to create a new
Golden Age; to enjoy the right to our own lives and destinies. Now, it
is time to lay the foundations for peace, stability, security, economic
progress and human advancement in the embattled Middle East.
Mr. President,
We broke ground fourteen years ago, with the Camp David Accords the
first peace treaty between Israel and an Arab state.
This year, on September 13th, on the same table upon which we sealed
these Accords, we signed the Declaration of Principles between Israel
and the PLO.
And on September 14th, Israel and Jordan signed an agenda for
negotiations towards a peace treaty.
We thank the United States for the constructive role it has played in
all these achievements. And we thank the Russian Federation, Norway,
and all the others whose support has helped encourage these
developments.
These political breakthroughs must be accompanied by economic growth
and development in order to build a stable peace. Economic and human
progress are twin pillars that will support the political achievements.
On October 1st, forty-six countries and organizations came together at
the International Donors' Conference in Washington. They pledged two
billion dollars over five years to finance social and economic
development in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. And the UN established a
high level Task Force to achieve the same goal. This financial backing
ensures that the agreements will stand firmly on two legs, one
political and one economic.
Mr. President,
Israel and the Palestinians are facing opposition, but we believe that
those who look to the future will prevail over those who are trapped in
the past. We both focus now on implementing the Declaration of
Principles. Together, our coordinating committees are hammering out the
details of implementation according to the agreed timetable.
We are making progress with the Palestinians and thirteen other Arab
delegations in multilateral negotiations as well. There we are creating
opportunities for regional cooperation.
Forty-seven countries and international organizations, including the
United Nations, are participating in the multilateral talks. Five
working groups are discussing refugees, arms control, regional economic
cooperation, water and the environment. Alone, each country can do
little about these issues. But together, we can make great progress.
For the first time, all states participating in the talks on regional
economic development agreed on a plan of action. In this plan
thirty-five projects, workshops and studies in diverse areas will be
started.
For the first time in the multilateral negotiations, talks about the
Middle East, among the countries of the Middle East, are being held in
the Middle East. Egypt hosted the environment working group in
mid-November, and Tunisia welcomed the group on refugees a month
earlier. And in April 1994, the working group on water may convene in
Oman.
Mr. President,
For the first time, we are seeing true breakthroughs in both the
bilateral and multilateral realms. But our work is not close to
complete. The peace process would be greatly helped by a summit in
Damascus or Jerusalem between President Assad of Syria and Prime
Minister Rabin of Israel. Let us create another psychological and
political breakthrough, as Egyptian President Sadat did, when he came
to Jerusalem in November 1977.
Let us enjoy a quiet, secure border with Lebanon. Israel has no
territorial claims in Lebanon. We look forward to a peace treaty and
hope that the Lebanese government will assert its sovereignty, and
disarm the terrorists who use its land as a base for attacks on Israel.
We also call upon King Hussein of Jordan to sign a peace treaty with
Israel. As Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said in this hall, "We
live side by side with the Jordanian Kingdom, and what is so obvious
geographically must become clear politically." A treaty would be the
capstone on the advancements we have already made towards peaceful
relations between our countries.
We desire a comprehensive peace, based on individual treaties with the
Gulf States, the North African States, and all other Arab and Moslem
countries.
I want to express my regret over the expressions of violence, the many
injuries and loss of human life, and over the absence of restraint and
tolerance, despite the opening of new horizons before us all. I believe
that the difficult situation will pass. I believe that all sides know
that we have crossed the point of no return on our way to a new era of
peace, security, and economic and social progress.
During yesterday's debate I said, "Of course, there are, and will be,
ups and downs in the process; this is a time of transition. But now is
the time to realize the simple truth: We can choose either painful
compromise or perpetual conflict.
"The implementation will succeed if both parties work persistently,
pragmatically and professionally towards this end. I believe both sides
are proceeding in this spirit, despite moments of hardship and
outbreaks of violence."
Let us progress quickly, for threats to peace will grow with time.
Nuclear proliferation and a spiralling arms race cast long shadows over
the Middle East. And dangerous Moslem fanatics threaten to bring a dark
age to the region.
Iranian-backed groups such as Hizballah, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad
have targeted the peace process and its Arab and Israeli supporters.
This is part of their broad strategy to destabilize the entire region
and fulfill their dreams of expansion and domination.
When we signed the Declaration of Principles with the PLO, and the
world welcomed our progress with a shower of blessings and warm wishes,
the fanatics responded with a hail of threats and violence.
Together with all responsible, moderate forces in the Middle East, who
seek a better future, we shall fight terror with all our might and we
shall pursue peace with all our resolve.
Mr. President,
Albert Einstein once said, "The world is a dangerous place to live
not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who
don't do anything about it."
It is time that the United Nations support the peacemakers by adopting
an attitude that reflects the changes in the Middle East. When bitter
enemies take bold steps towards reconciliation, the United Nations must
give its support and encouragement.
We and the Palestinians have together chosen our road to peace. And we
ask the United Nations to support this choice.
It is time to remove from the agenda resolutions that contradict the
Declaration of Principles. It is time to abandon obsolete,
anachronistic resolutions that don't reflect the new realities in the
Middle East. Resolutions wielded as political weapons at the height of
the Arab-Israel conflict have no place in this era of negotiation and
reconciliation.
In their place let us adopt resolutions that contribute to peace, and
demonstrate that the United Nations will rise to the challenges and
opportunities of a changing world. I am pleased that a new resolution
was tabled yesterday by the United States and Russia, supporting the
peace process and its achievements, and calling for international
assistance, regional cooperation and a comprehensive peace.
Mr. President,
Four Israeli soldiers remain missing in action: Tzvi Feldman, Zechariah
Baumel, Yehuda Katz and Ron Arad. We call upon those countries and
organizations holding them to abide by international law, display
humanitarian sensitivity, and bring them home.
We also call upon our negotiating partners to lay down economic weapons
and end the Arab boycott. The boycott can never be accepted, and
certainly not when we are advancing peace. The boycott is an obstacle
to peace that impedes prosperity and hurts all societies in the Middle
East.
Mr. President,
Arabs and Israelis should profit from economic cooperation, not suffer
from economic warfare. Let us unite to create a better future a
future of peace and security, economic growth and social advancement.
In this future, at least part of the seventy billion dollars we
collectively waste on weapons and belligerency will be invested in
human progress.
Science, education, health and technology will advance, as we divert
human energies and resources away from conflict.
Economies will thrive, as peace and stability generate growth, and open
opportunities for joint ventures. Consumer demand will increase as we
shift funds from the military to civilian sector. The threat of war and
instability will no longer scare foreign investment and tourism away.
In this new era we will raise the standard of living and improve the
quality of life for all.
Israelis and Arabs will prosper together, through cooperation. Indeed,
with the Copenhagen Action Plan agreed to in November, we have already
begun. We can integrate our infrastructure: seaports and airports,
roads and railways, electricity grids and energy plants.
Cairo, Jerusalem, Amman, Beirut, Damascus all were joined by road and
rail before 1948. We will renew these links, and we will create new
ones. Commercial trucks will stream across borders on new highways.
Tourists will flow from country to country on commercial flights and
modern trains.
And in Eilat, Aqaba, Gaza, and Ashkelon we can build free trade zones
that draw investment and create jobs. Israel and Jordan should jointly
develop and maintain One deep water seaport and one modern airport on
the tiny strip where Eilat and Aqaba meet on the Red Sea. And a new
railway will become an overland bridge connecting the port in the Gulf
of Eilat with ships in the Mediterranean Sea.
Open borders for tourism will bridge the gulf of understanding and
create the economic interests to preserve tranquility and peace. Nature
and history have endowed our region with many wondrous attractions.
Pilgrims of three religions seek their spiritual roots in Hebron,
Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Mecca. Vacationers flock to Tel Aviv and
Sharm-a-Sheikh for beautiful beaches under blue skies and balmy
weather. And travellers marvel at the incredible sights of Luxor,
Petra, Baalbek, and Timna.
Cooperation in tourism will generate hundreds of thousands of jobs,
strengthen our economies and fortify peace.
Mr. President,
We will reap great benefits, if we sow the seeds of peace and
cooperation now. Speaking at a dinner in honor of Israel's Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin, the Secretary-General of the United Nations
said, "Now there is a new moment in time... We have seen that
negotiations can work... We have seen a small seed of trust start to
take root."
Mr. President,
We still face difficulties as we make the agreement a reality. The
enemies of peace are trying to prevent our success. But we will
continue striving to achieve a comprehensive peace in the Middle East.
Peace is the foundation of security, regional cooperation, economic
development and personal advancement.
This is our obligation to future generations to the young, to our
children.
This is our obligation to ourselves, to our moral conviction.
This is our obligation to the nations and people we represent.
Let the international community represented here work in the same
spirit, with the same sense of obligation and with the same dedication
to this great goal.
Thank you, Mr. President.