Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Consociationalism Notes

This post is a work in progress.
These are notes for future reference as I formulate my thoughts.
From Hootsbuddy's Place, my old blog about twenty years ago...

(My own interest in the politics of the region began nearly a year and a half ago when I came across the word consociational in a post about Lebanon. I thought it was a typo, but learned upon investigation that it is descriptive of a hybrid strain of representative democracy which institutionalizes the interests of selected minority interests in the form of protected parliamentary seats. It seems to be a built-in safeguard against tyranny of the majority, but at the same time places a kind of cog in the gears that can hamper progress. I'm not a political scientist, but my instinct is that consociationalism is similar to the old county-unit system of the South which allowed rural interests to dominate rural interests in state legislatures until the "one man, one vote" principle was finally implemented by the courts.)

Nima and Laith are in conversation about events unfolding 
in Lebanon even as I'm crafting this post.


Laith is reporting from Spain where he has made contact with Catalonian activists who apparently have been traveling to Lebanon in support of the Lebanese resistance to Israel's attacks. When I searched to validate this claim this is what I received...

There are no credible news reports or verified pieces of evidence showing that Catalonian activists are traveling to Lebanon to militarily join forces with the Palestinian armed resistance against Israel.
The political mobilization originating from Catalonia, Spain, regarding the conflict remains strictly focused on humanitarian aid, civil disobedience, and political protests.
Active Mobilization in Catalonia
Recent activities involving pro-Palestinian activists from Catalonia include:
  • Civilian Maritime Flotillas: Activists from Catalonia actively participate in civilian-led aid initiatives. For instance, several Catalan activists were recently detained and subsequently deported by Israeli authorities after participating in the ⁠Global Sumud Flotilla, a civilian-led humanitarian mission aimed at challenging restrictions on aid access to Gaza. [1, 2, 3]
  • Local Strikes and Public Protests: Trade unions and activist networks in Barcelona frequently organize general strikes and large-scale street demonstrations. These protests pressure the Spanish government and the European Union to implement arms embargoes and sever commercial ties with Israel. [1, 2, 3]
  • Targeting Corporate Entities: Activist campaigns within Catalonia primarily center on domestic actions, such as camp protests targeting companies like ⁠Israel Chemicals Ltd. (ICL) over localized environmental impacts and allegations tied to military supply chains. [1, 2]
Claims suggesting that these civilian activists are converting into active combatants or traveling to Lebanon for paramilitary deployment are unsubstantiated.



It seems clear to me that Laith's report of Catalonian activists joining the Lebanese resistance is totally credible. 

Laith's mention of Catalonia rang a bell with me because as a music student long ago I had a chance to learn about Pablo Casals and see him in person when he came to FSU to conduct a one-time production of El Pessebre performed by the combined music department.
I learned at the time about his never-ending political activism supporting Catalonian separatism from Spain which led him to stop personally performing in America as a way to express his opposition which has never found political supported here. 
Once again, here is the AI search result...

Pablo Casals (born Pau Casals i Defilló) is widely considered one of the greatest cellists of all time, but his legacy is equally defined by his unwavering resistance against fascism and his devotion to his native Catalan culture. A passionate defender of the Second Spanish Republic, Casals utilized his musical prominence to aid the Catalonian and Spanish resistance during the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), performing during bombardments and raising funds for refugees. When General Francisco Franco’s fascist forces, aided by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, defeated the Republican government in 1939, Casals fled into exile across the Pyrenees to the French village of Prades. From there, he began decades of voluntary exile and artistic protest, refusing to return to Spain until democracy was fully restored. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
The story of Casals and the Catalonian resistance encompasses several key facets of his life and activism:
1. The Ban on Catalan Culture
Following the triumph of Francoist forces, Catalonia’s long-standing autonomy was violently stripped away, and its language, flag, and cultural institutions were legally banned. Dictator Franco sought to impose a single, cohesive Spanish national identity. Casals responded by refusing to perform in Germany (in protest of Hitler's anti-Jewish laws) and expanding his boycott to fascist Italy and, eventually, any country that officially recognized the Franco regime. [1, 2, 3, 4]
2. Aid to Spanish Refugees
When over half a million Spanish and Catalan refugees fled Franco’s forces over the Pyrenees in the dead of winter, they were placed in squalid concentration camps in southern France. Casals visited these camps, which he described as "Dante’s Inferno," and spent years writing thousands of letters daily to raise funds to assist these refugees and impoverished children. He transformed Prades, a historically Catalan region in France, into an epicenter for displaced artists and musicians. [1, 2, 3, 4]
3. The "Silenced Cello" and Global Boycotts
After World War II, Casals was deeply pained that the Allied nations, after defeating Hitler and Mussolini, chose to leave Franco in power. In response to this international apathy, Casals made the dramatic decision to retire from public performance, effectively silencing his cello. He declared he would not play publicly as long as his people were oppressed. He only returned to the stage in 1950 for a Bach festival in Prades on the condition that all proceeds would go to a refugee hospital. [1, 2, 3, 4]
4. "El Cant dels Ocells" (The Song of the Birds)
To maintain the spirit of the Catalonian resistance in exile, Casals began ending every concert with his cello arrangement of the traditional Catalan Christmas carol "El cant dels ocells" (The Song of the Birds). The song, an ode to peace and freedom, became a global anthem for Catalan identity and resistance. [1, 2, 3]
5. "I Am a Catalan" Speech
In 1961, Casals made an exception to his boycott of countries recognizing Franco, performing at the White House for U.S. President John F. Kennedy, an act that brought immense global attention to the Spanish dictatorship. Later, in 1971, upon receiving the UN Peace Medal, the 95-year-old Casals delivered his famous "I Am a Catalan" speech to the United Nations General Assembly. In it, he declared: [1, 2, 3]
"I am a Catalan. Today I am a Catalan but I have always been one. Catalonia has always been the greatest nation in the world... Catalonia had the first United Nations in the 11th century." [1, 2]
6. Legacy and Return to Democracy
Casals spent his final years in Puerto Rico (where his mother was born) but remained entirely dedicated to his homeland's liberation. He passed away in 1973, two years before Franco’s death, which eventually paved the way for Spain's transition to a democratic constitutional monarchy. In recognition of his enduring moral leadership, the Catalan government posthumously awarded him its highest honor, the Gold Medal of the Generalitat of Catalonia, in 1979. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Oslo Accords -- 1993 and 1995

 What were the Oslo Accords and what happened after that?

The Oslo Accords were a pair of breakthrough interim peace agreements signed between the Government of Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in 1993 (Oslo I) and 1995 (Oslo II). Brokered secretly in Norway, they established the first-ever direct formal recognition between the two sides: the PLO officially recognized Israel’s right to exist in peace and renounced terrorism, while Israel recognized the PLO as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Rather than a final peace treaty, the Accords served as a transitional five-year roadmap. They established the Palestinian Authority (PA) to grant Palestinians limited self-governance over parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Highly contentious, long-term "final status" issues—such as the status of Jerusalem, the right of return for Palestinian refugees, illegal Jewish settlements, and final borders—were intentionally deferred to be negotiated later. [1, 2, 3, 4]

Key Framework: The Division of the West Bank [1]
The 1995 Oslo II Accord divided the occupied West Bank into three distinct administrative and security zones, a framework that remains structurally intact today: [1, 2]
  • Area A (18% of the territory): Under full Palestinian civilian and security control. Includes major Palestinian cities.
  • Area B (approx. 22% of the territory): Under Palestinian civilian control, but joint Israeli-Palestinian military security control.
  • Area C (approx. 60% of the territory): Under full Israeli civilian and military security control, containing most agricultural land and all Jewish settlements. [1, 2, 3, 4]
What Happened After: The Breakdown of the Peace Process
While the early years saw some progress, including the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops and the return of PLO leader Yasser Arafat from exile, the entire peace process gradually collapsed due to escalating violence, internal political shifts, and unfulfilled commitments: [1, 2, 3, 4]
    [1993-1995: Oslo I & II Signed] 
                  │
                  ▼
       [1995: Rabin Assassinated] ───► Hardline shift in Israeli politics
                  │
                  ▼
   [Late 1990s: Settlement Expansion] ───► Growing Palestinian disillusionment
                  │
                  ▼
     [2000: Camp David Fails] ───► Final-status talks collapse completely
                  │
                  ▼
    [2000-2005: Second Intifada] ───► Widespread violence; permanent derailment
1. Rise of Extremism and the Rabin Assassination (1995)
The agreements faced severe opposition from hardliners on both sides. The Palestinian militant group Hamas strongly rejected Oslo and launched a wave of suicide bombings against Israeli civilians. Conversely, right-wing Israelis viewed the territorial concessions as a betrayal. In November 1995, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by a right-wing Jewish extremist. This dealt a catastrophic blow to the momentum of the peace talks. [1, 2, 3]
2. Settlement Expansion and Movement Restrictions
Despite the spirit of the Accords, subsequent Israeli governments drastically accelerated the construction of illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, tripling the settler population in the decades that followed. Israel also increased checkpoint restrictions on Palestinian movement and began constructing a massive separation wall, leading Palestinians to feel that the Accords were being used to entrench, rather than end, the military occupation. [1, 2, 3, 4]
3. Collapse of the Camp David Summit (2000)
In July 2000, U.S. President Bill Clinton hosted Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat at Camp David to finally resolve the deferred "final status" issues. The summit ended in a bitter deadlock, as both sides could not agree on the borders of a future Palestinian state, the status of Jerusalem's holy sites, and the refugee crisis. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
4. The Second Intifada (2000–2005)
Months after the summit failed, a massive Palestinian uprising known as the Second (Al-Aqsa) Intifada erupted. Characterized by intense violence, suicide bombings, and heavy Israeli military incursions into Area A, the conflict effectively shattered the remaining trust between the two populations and definitively buried the Oslo peace process. [1, 2, 3, 4]

The Lasting Legacy Today
Though the five-year transitional timeline expired in 1999, a comprehensive final peace treaty was never realized. As of 2026, the temporary administrative structures built by the Accords—most notably the Palestinian Authority—continue to function as the baseline legal framework governing daily life and security cooperation in the West Bank, even as the broader dream of a viable two-state solution remains profoundly frozen. [1, 2, 3, 4]

What happened to the Palestinian Authority?
The Palestinian Authority (PA), which was designed to be a temporary five-year stepping stone toward full Palestinian statehood, has become a permanent, severely weakened, and deeply unpopular entity. Rather than evolving into a sovereign government, it has faced a combination of internal political fragmentation, financial collapse, and systematic marginalization by Israel. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Today, the PA finds itself in a state of existential crisis, characterized by the following developments:
1. The Territorial Split (Fatah vs. Hamas)
The PA lost unified control over the Palestinian territories in 2006–2007. After the militant group Hamas won the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections, a violent civil war erupted between Hamas and Fatah (the secular party that dominates the PA). [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Hamas seized de facto control of the Gaza Strip.
  • Fatah maintained control of the PA in the West Bank.
    This geographic and political schism has fundamentally broken the PA's claim to govern all Palestinians.
    [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
2. Loss of Democratic Legitimacy
The PA has suffered from a severe democratic deficit and is widely viewed by its own population as corrupt, authoritarian, and out of touch. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • President Mahmoud Abbas was elected to a four-year term in 2005. He has remained in power for over 20 years without a new presidential election, repeatedly delaying votes due to political disputes with Hamas and Israel. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • New electoral rules were decreed to expand the legislative council, scheduling new legislative elections for late 2026 and presidential elections for 2027, though past promises of elections have frequently collapsed. [1, 2]
  • 3. Financial and Institutional Collapse
    The PA is on the brink of complete economic collapse. Under the Oslo framework, Israel collects tax revenues (clearance funds) on behalf of the PA and transfers them monthly. However, Israel frequently freezes, delays, or slashes these transfers—especially amid heightened conflict or in retaliation for PA political moves. Consequently, the PA has been unable to pay full salaries to public servants, medical supplies are scarce, and public infrastructure is deteriorating. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    4. Marginalization and De Facto Annexation
    On the ground, the PA's nominal authority in the West Bank is shrinking. Israel's military frequently enters Area A (supposedly under full PA control) to conduct security raids, demonstrating the PA's lack of true sovereignty. Furthermore, right-wing shifts in Israeli governance have led to the systematic dismantling of remaining Oslo agreements. For instance, Israel formally revoked the 1997 Hebron Protocol, stripping the PA of its municipal and construction powers in that flashpoint city. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
    5. Status in Post-War Planning
    Following the devastating military conflicts in Gaza, the international community (including the U.S. and Arab allies) has pushed for a "revitalized" Palestinian Authority to eventually assume civil and security control of Gaza to reunify the territories. However, Israel's political leadership strongly objects to any formal PA rule in Gaza, viewing the entity as complicit in anti-Israel hostility, leaving the PA stuck in a geopolitical limbo: too weak to govern effectively, yet too essential to regional stability for the international community to allow it to fully disappear. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]