Update: more from Solomonia here.
From the moment he became the international community’s envoy to the Middle East, there was common agreement that Tony Blair was in for a tough challenge, with the distinct risk of a thankless result.
One of Blair’s roles is to build, patiently and quietly, Palestinian institutions. That’s based on the understanding that stable societies require stable, transparent governance. Day to day, it means he has to engage in complex negotiations and build trust on all sides.
Only today, for example, Israel’s Defense Minister, Ehud Barak, confirmed that more than $20 million would be transferred to pay the wages of local employees of the Palestinian Authority in Gaza, citing a request by Blair as a reason for his agreeing to do so. Coming hours after the announcement that Hamas is not interested in negotiations over abducted soldier Gilad Shalit, and a day after terrorists violated the truce by firing a rocket at the Israeli town of Sderot, it cannot have been an easy decision for an Israeli minister, given the possibility that Hamas - which is corrupt as well as brutal - might seize the funds for its own ends. By the same token, it cannot have been an easy request for Blair to make.
Yet Blair believes that, within limits, risks have to be taken in order to achieve the ultimate goal of a viable Palestinian state, which he insists is essential for Israel’s security. Addressing skeptical Israelis in an interview with the Jerusalem Post last year, he remarked that “the danger in this situation, if I can be very blunt about it, is that you say ‘There have been 60 years of failure of negotiation and therefore it’s always going to fail,’ whereas actually sometimes things aren’t like that. And to be fair to this Palestinian leadership, as I keep emphasizing, they’re living with the legacy of a certain type of politics and you don’t escape from that immediately.”
The leadership to which he refers, of course, is the one headed by Mahmoud Abbas and Fatah in the West Bank. The “type of politics” which has bequeathed such a troublesome legacy is that associated with the late Yasser Arafat. A politics based, you could say, on deceit and false hope. A politics aggressively represented, in our own time, by Hamas.
Hamas, in fact, was negative about Blair from the beginning. “We do not expect Blair’s role to be fair in any issue relating to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict or any other Arab-related cause,” said Ghazi Hamad in the aftermath of the former British PM’s appointment. Just last month, Blair was forced to cancel a trip to Gaza after being warned of a credible security threat (the fact that Gaza is in the iron grip of Hamas compels some eyebrow-raising here.)
Blair’s experience illustrates the sheer messiness of diplomacy in this region: the strained compromises which need to be made, the imperative to resist the narrative of blaming the other which all sides engage in (something that Hamas, which fingered “Israeli collaborators” for the most recent rocket attack, excels at.) As a seasoned, veteran politician, Blair is better placed than many to grapple with all this. All the same, he’s only human; you have to wonder whether, occasionally, Blair wishes that he, too, could indulge in the lazy, simple-minded explanations which other people revel in.
People like his sister-in-law, Lauren Booth. Variously described as a journalist and far-left political activist, Booth has a long record of sniping at Blair - sniping which the British press, which always has one eye on entertainment value, occasionally records. In her most recent outburst, Booth called on Blair to “show some guts” by visiting Gaza. Presumably, had he visited last month and (heaven forbid) actually been assassinated, she would have distributed blame for that between Blair’s Middle East policies and the machinations of the State of Israel.
About the most complex diplomatic hurdle which Booth has thusfar negotiated appears to be her appearance on a reality TV show set in the Australian outback (weirdly, reality shows seem to attract a certain type of British anti-Zionist.) Nonetheless, Booth is now feeling very pleased with herself as she prepares to join two ships, the SS Free Gaza and the SS Liberty, on a mission to “break the siege of Gaza.”
Visit the website of the organization behind this exercise and you find the usual story: very little about what’s actually happening in Gaza, plenty of ire about the Palestinians “forcibly evicted” by Israel sixty years ago “while their homes, farms, and properties are inhabited by Jewish immigrants who arrived in Palestine from around the globe.”
Right now, it’s not clear whether these ships will actually sail, and, if they do, whether they will be able to proceed to Gaza. It doesn’t really matter, because this is yet another demonstration of the gesture politics and grandstanding beloved of the Palestinian solidarity movement. It will make all the participants feel noble and brave. It will feed their desire to be in the limelight. It will permit them to flirt with danger without taking the mortal risk of going somewhere like Darfur or Zimbabwe or Georgia. But it will do nothing to alleviate Gaza’s humanitarian crisis (I could add, “or secure the release of Gilad Shalit, or end once and for all the rocket attacks on Israel,” but neither of those is an aim of Booth or her shipmates.)
What it will do is pose a number of questions for the Palestinians, particularly those living in Gaza. Does hope really lie in these empty, narcissistic campaigns? Note well that every media mention of Lauren Booth describes her, in giggling fashion, as “Tony Blair’s sister-in-law” - is this about her or about you? Where is the value in the type of solidarity which sees you only as victims, and which ignores the massive human rights abuses and colossal political mistakes which your current rulers are responsible for? Above all, who is in a position to bring tangible change to your lives: Lauren Booth or Tony Blair?
And no, I’m not saying that Tony Blair has all the answers. But I’m certain that his sister-in-law doesn’t have any.



So Blair thinks there’s been a 60 year failure to negotiate, and not that on one side of the divide we have a party that either takes a completely non-negotiable position (Hamas) and another that bargains in bad faith (Fatah).
Don’t you find it bizarre how Palestinian narrative tries to imitate, almost point by point, the saddest and most traumatic highlights in modern Jewish history?
Edward Said started it, when he insisted on equivalence between the Holocaust and the Nakba. Of course he didn’t come out and just declared it to be so but rather snuck it into the I/P discourse, when he “prophesized” that peace would only be possible when the Arabs accepted the reality of the Holocaust and Jews - the reality of the Nakba.
Following Rachel Corrie’s death, there has been a flurry of impassioned literary activity to make her out to be the “Palestinian” Anne Frank.
To say nothing about the analogy of Gaza and the concentration camps or Ramallah and Warsaw Ghetto.
And now this ridiculous ship with its ridiculous agenda and its ridiculous passengers, trying to imitate that other Jewish ship, Exodus.
It’s a systematic attack on Jewish history by means of auctioning ethnic self-pity.
Mr Blair’s idiotic sister-in-law presumably wanted him to show us all his guts on Hamas News!
The woman’s a fool and should be locked up. Pity we can’t choose our family members.
I too believe that Mr Blair is possibly the only one who can get things moving out there. If he can’t, I tell you, no-one can.
Blair’s a great man, and a great loss to my country.
She may be a fool, but that’s not a crime.
It’s certainly entertaining reading your “article” if you can call it that.
Considering I have heard it is no good to try to write extreme right winged hawks, I thought it was a vaguely entertaining attempt to undermine the truth of our mission.
You should meet this well spoken, extremely bright and brave woman before you judge her.
As most people on the boat I seek to remain anonymous, I’m neither thrill seeking nor fame seeking……. the mission I have joined is a reputable, to focus the eyes of the world not on ourselves but on the desperate conditions suffered by those in Gaza due to Israel’s illegal blockade.
I don’t have much time to write in response, and you will most likely edit this, but all I can do it throw my voice out.
Don’t worry you will hear from us soon!
We are very excited to be accepted by 100,000 to 200,000 Palestinians when we arrive on their shore, if Israel doesn’t shoot us down before we can put down anchor.
Sorry to disappoint you, anonymous, but you weren’t deleted or edited. Your comment has been published exactly as you wrote it. I leave the task of censorship to those who would boycott Israeli academics, artists and writers simply because they are Israelis.
I’m really not that interested in the person you describe as “a well spoken, extremely bright and brave woman.” My point concerns the futile gesture politics you and your shipmates are indulging in, which are a blind alley for the people you claim to be helping.
If you do get to Gaza, will you be examining the human rights abuses committed by Hamas? Or does that not fall into your definition of solidarity?