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Inching Toward Compromise in the Middle East
"What news?" I was on vacation from the world and its problems.
"The Israelis have just announced that they will expand some settlements," he explained breathlessly, with obvious pain in his voice. "They're just ignoring Obama's demands completely."
Realizing that a thoughtful interview at 70 miles an hour might endanger myself and the cars around me, I told him I'd pull over and call him back at the next roadside rest stop. By the time I got there, I understood more clearly why I didn't really share his outrage.
Of course in principle, Israel should cease expanding its settlements in the Occupied Territory. In fact, Israel should dismantle all the settlements: They're illegal under international law. That the settlements exist at all is reason enough to be outraged.
But there's no reason to be especially upset at this latest Israeli announcement, or announcements like it that will continue to emerge. They don't represent any final rejection of the Obama administration's peace moves. They're just part of the public posturing that goes on nearly every day, by Israeli and Palestinian leaders alike, using words as weapons in the continuing struggle for power.
Behind the Scenes
These words are merely the few visible maneuvers in a very complex negotiation process that's playing out mostly behind the scenes. Only a handful of people can see the most important moves. Not even Obama's envoy George Mitchell can likely see the whole playing field at once. Yet, according to what top Israeli and Palestinian officials are saying, much is going on behind the scenes, spurred by the Obama administration's apparently sincere efforts to bring peace to the Middle East.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak (now clearly the number two-man in his government, as a corruption scandal further marginalizes Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman) recently told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that the United States would present a regional peace plan "in the coming weeks" and that "Israel must take the lead in accepting the plan."
Unnamed Palestinian Authority officials were more specific. They said that the United States will set a timetable of about a year and a half for the negotiations and demand that the sides first solve the border issue, under the belief that this will lead to solutions for other issues, such as the settlements and water. After that, the sides will discuss the other fundamental issues — Jerusalem and the refugees.
Neither the Israelis nor the Palestinians have denied these reports. Both sides are creating an air of urgency. Recognizing that Washington will attempt to force compromise, each wants the other to make the first move. The Palestinian claim that borders will be at the top of the agenda, for instance, may well be intended to pressure the Israelis to give in on the settlement expansion issue, since the question of borders quickly leads to the question of which settlements the Israelis can keep and which they must abandon.
There has been only one denial of an impending U.S. peace plan, and that came (though unofficially) from the superpower itself. Unnamed "U.S. sources" told the newspaper al-Hayat that speculations about a nearing peace summit are premature. "The White House wants to focus on three aspects," the sources said. "Having Israel halt settlement expansion, seeing the Palestinian Authority advance security issues and ensuring some overtures by the Arab nations."
But these same sources did acknowledge that Mitchell "has reported a breakthrough after his last visit to the region, adding that the administration has reason to be 'cautiously optimistic' as to the prospects of reigniting bilateral negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority." The White House is apparently doing its own posturing to signal that Mitchell is making some real progress.
Using The New York Times, the administration announced that it will soon "begin a public-relations campaign in Israel and Arab countries to better explain Mr. Obama's plans for a comprehensive peace agreement involving Israel, the Palestinians and the Arab world…a reframing of a policy that people inside and outside the administration say has become overly defined by the American pressure on Israel to halt settlement construction on the West Bank."
More Maneuvering
Both the Israelis and the Palestinians are pushing the United States to offer its peace plan quickly. The Obama administration is responding by putting on the brakes, though only gently. That would dampen excessively high expectations, preparing the public for the possibility that Obama's initiative may be delayed.
At the same time, Washington is sending a message to the parties who will be at the negotiating table: All of you had better make compromises now — and they'd better be the specific ones the administration is calling for — precisely because Uncle Sam will be flexing his muscle soon by laying down at least the general parameters, if not the specific terms, of a regional peace deal.
Contrary to what the news anchor believed, Israel is not free to flaunt U.S. pressure. Here are some indications of Israeli deference. In early July, a senior Israeli official said that Israel hasn't asked for U.S. permission to attack Iran because the Netanyahu government doesn't want to risk being told "no." And in early August, Barak told Israel radio that Israel restrained its attack on Lebanon in 2006 because "a message from the United States indicated we must spare Lebanon's infrastructure."
In other words, when the U.S. government gives an order and really means it, the Israeli government has obeyed and will obey. Israel won't bite the hand that feeds it several billion dollars a year. As Israeli journalist Amir Oren recently wrote, his country's leaders have no choice but to heed "our master's voice." (Barak's insistence that Israel would not let itself be restrained again, in another war against Lebanon, was simply more public posturing, though this time probably for domestic politics. With Netanyahu's popularity falling, Barak uses tough talk to curry favor with the right and position himself the heir to the throne.)
The Israelis know who is in charge. That's why, despite their bluster and posturing, they've accepted the inevitable curb on settlement expansion. Now the argument is merely about how long Israel must promise to maintain that curb. Mitchell has told Netanyahu and Barak that the United States wants a commitment of a one-year freeze. Israel has agreed to suspend building on the settlements for only six months, at most. Israel wants to force the United States to compromise at less than a year to create a psychological advantage when the really tough bargaining begins.
Of course the Palestinians are playing the same game of looking tough. While clearly accepting a two-state solution and thus implicitly recognizing the existence of Israel, Fatah also pledged to "continue to sacrifice victims until Jerusalem will be returned [to the Palestinians], clean of settlements and settlers." Fatah leaders Mahmoud Abbas and Nabil Shaath emphasized that, though they prefer a nonviolent solution, even their supposedly moderate faction reserves the right to resume armed struggle at any time.
But Fatah's gesture may backfire. Israeli commentator Israel Harel, for one, thinks that Netanyahu allowed Fatah to hold its convention precisely because he wanted the world to see the purported partners for peace "bare their teeth. His real goal is to highlight that even the Palestinians' most moderate wing is characterized by inherent aggressiveness." Israel thus underscores that it has "no partner for peace." The harsh Israeli public reaction to the Fatah convention shows that Netanyahu's strategy is working, at least on the domestic front.
Hamas and Iran
All these public words should be seen as weapons in a fierce battle involving many forces, each pursuing its own conflicting interests. Indeed the Obama administration — which is obviously promoting what is sees as U.S. interests — might have no chance of herding these cats to a single negotiating table, were it not for the one interest all have in common: containing and diminishing the power of Hamas and ultimately its supposed sponsor, Iran.
To achieve that goal, Hamas will be shut out of the peace process by common consent. In the United States, the mainstream media aid that project by continuing to state — as if it were fact — the fiction that Hamas has no interest in joining the process.
This freezing out of Hamas leaves the negotiating parties with two options. They can hammer out an agreement that includes both the West Bank and Gaza in the new Palestinian state, and then hope Abbas can sell it to his people over the objections of Hamas. Or they can declare the West Bank alone as the new Palestinian state and postpone the question of what to do with Gaza.
New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman now opts for the latter course. Urging "quicker negotiations on the contours of a Palestinian state in the West Bank," he adds: "Hamas and Gaza can join later. Don't wait for them. If we build it, they will come." "It" is a Palestinian state firmly cemented in the hoped-for pan-Arab, pro-American, anti-Iranian coalition. Even such a grudging openness to Hamas, coming from this bellwether of mainstream liberal opinion, is a surprising new development.
But Hamas is unlikely to bend to America's will. Excluding Hamas until it bends is a course fraught with danger. The democratically elected ruling party of the Palestinians in Gaza still holds plenty of political power; how much, no one knows for sure. If Fatah agrees to a peace deal largely on American-Israeli terms, a rejectionist Hamas may well increase its popularity enough to render the whole process fruitless.
If the Obama administration truly wants a stable, peaceful Middle East, it should stop using the peace process as an anti-Iranian gambit. It must give Hamas the place it deserves at the negotiating table — now.
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8 Comments so far
Show AllThe Obama Administration doesn't truly want a 'stable, peaceful Middle East', Ira. It wants a truly hammered down Middle East. Your faith in Obama is totally misplaced.
Settlement expansion? How about settlement removal?
If someone moves into your house, claiming God gave him one of the bedrooms a few thousand years ago, and then he gradually takes over room after room, killing your family and stealing your possessions, are you going to "compromise" by agreeing to confine yourself to a corner of the basement, and let the thief keep the whole rest of the house because it's a "fact on the ground" that he has stolen it?
The solution of this "problem" should be decided by international law, not by the international criminal states of Israel and the U.S. All the settlements, which are actually illegal Israeli colonies on illegally- occupied Palestinian land, must be removed, and reparations made to the Palestinians.
Once again, there is no mention of the vast natural gas reserves that have been discovered off the coast of Gaza, which Israel is illegally tapping into and stealing, just as they continue to steal Palestinian land and water resources.
In fact, the recent Israeli slaughter of Palestinians in the Gaza Ghetto may have been launched partially as cover for the Israeli natural gas heist. (See "On Exploiting Land and Natural Gas," http://www.palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=15328
Obama is going to shift gears here as much as he does anywhere else: Symbolic gestures, business as usual. The settlement issue rates right up there with Obama's pathetically lame lecturing of Wall Street honchos awarding themselves obscene bonuses.
I agree with both PetrKrop and Vern: Obama will cave, and Israel's very existence is an ongoing crime against peace that was illegal as hell when declared and hasn't improved since.
The ink was completely dry on the UN Charter, which ratified post-hoc the Nürnberg declaration that taking land by force is the Number One world-crime, when the invaders declared statehood on the Palestinian land they had stolen by force.
I find it significant that dominionist Zionism is 99% a product of East-European, Ashkenazi Judaism. They treat the Jews native to the Semitic Region - the Mizrahi/Sephardim - very nearly as shamefully as they treat the Arabs. It was hundreds of thousands of Sephardic kids who got their brains boiled by Ashkenazi "researchers" in the '50s under the guise of treating ringworm.
(Undermining still further any possibility that the Ashkenazim have legitimate claims to the land of Palestine is also the "minor" factor that according to religious law - the Halacha - Jewishness is passed through the mother not the father, and conversion from Goy to Jew is a formal, non-trivial, rabbinically-mediated process. Yet the reason why European-descended Jews "don't look Jewish" is that during the Diaspora, the emigrating/fleeing men took non-Jewish wives from among the local populations. Did those women go through a Halachically proper conversion? I bet they didn't! Which would mean that their kids weren't properly Jewish, nor are any of their current descendents.)
You propagate the myth the Ashkenazi Jewishness comes from ancient Israel. They are actually descendants of the Khazars, whose kingdom was much larger and more prosperous than ancient Israel.
Oh, Ira Chernus, ye of too much faith! There's no tangible evidence of U.S. "pressure" having the slightest influence on Israeli actions or intentions about settlements, but you just KNOW that it's coming because Israeli and Palestinian sources put out confidential messages that big things are happening way beneath the radar of public awareness. You've consistently supported Obama as the Hope of peace in the world and, as a Professor of Religious Studies, I guess you have to hold onto your faith. Those of us who are political agnostics are people from Missouri who say "show me." (I'm from Florida but way of Oklahoma and New York but we have "show mes" even in these places.)
So Chernus believes that "The Israelis know who is in charge". Is this the same Israel whose Prime Minister said:
"Every time we do something you tell me America will do this and will do that . . . I want to tell you something very clear: Don't worry about American pressure on Israel. We, the Jewish people, control America, and the Americans know it." - Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, October 3, 2001, to Shimon Peres, as reported on Kol Yisrael radio.
And the same Israel that bombed the USS Liberty with no response from the US: http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/ussliberty.html?
Is this the same Israel for whom the US has cast at least 75 vetoes of UN Security Council resolutions, most of them to protect it from world opprobrium for killing Palestinians?
And same Israel whose spies Rosen and Weissman had charges dropped in May of this year even though their US contact Franklin had been imprisoned for 12 years?
Is this the same Israel whose Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was able to claim publicly that he had forced President George Bush to shame his Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice and that he had interrupted Bush in the middle of a speech to do so?
Please Mr Chernus, you can do better than that!
Lots of talk about moves toward peace. But, the actions are against peace. What speaks louder, words or action? If Obama was interested in peace, he would announce, and follow through on, Israel's veto power in the UN Security Council.