Saturday
Apr102010
The Never-Ending Palestine Dance: Israel, the US, and the Arab States (Khouri)
Saturday, April 10, 2010 at 8:49
Rami Khouri writes in The Jordan Times:
The open disagreement and tough words exchanged in public by the United States and Israel a few weeks ago on Washington’s demand that Israel freeze all new settlements in occupied Arab East Jerusalem has now entered phase 2, in which both sides work quietly behind the scenes to harness their political resources, gauge the other side’s intentions and prepare to continue the battle.
The consensus of people I have spoken with in the United States, representing all sides of the issue, seems to see this as a serious clash of positions and perceptions with very little precedent, but we cannot gauge its full significance until three things happen.
These are: the full Israeli response to the American demand to freeze all settlement construction; the Palestinian and Arab response to the situation and what they would do under various scenarios; and the American response to both the Israeli and Arab positions.
We are in the early stages of a drama whose consequences may be more in the realm of political theatre than historic policy shifts. The depressing common denominator on all three fronts is that domestic conditions are totally inauspicious for any resumption of serious negotiations.
The rightwing Israeli government remains firmly committed to expanding its settlements and colonies in Jerusalem and other areas. The Palestinians remain deeply divided between Hamas and Fateh. The United States remains ambiguous and even confused between its role as the ironclad guarantor of Israeli security and military superiority over all its neighbours and the would-be impartial mediator that seeks to nudge Israelis and Palestinians into a serious peace negotiation.
The most interesting and dynamic arena for the moment is in domestic American politics, where the traditional heavily pro-Israeli position of a majority of politicians has been nudged by three intriguing developments. These are: top-level, public and repeated criticisms of Israeli settlement policies by the Obama administration; continued expansion of the impact of J-Street and other more centrist pro-Israel lobby groups that now provide an alternative to the hardline positions of the much older and stronger American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC); a refreshing and rare public debate about whether the impact of pro-Israeli groups like AIPAC on the United States’ pro-Israel policy should give way to a more even-handed approach that would better serve American national interests in the wider Middle East.
These issues are widely and often intensely debated in private these days, but will soon reemerge onto the public stage.
Several dynamics are pushing all sides to shed their ambiguous positions and clarify what they seek and what they will fight for politically. Potentially, the most significant driver of events these days is the American initiative to start the proximity talks between Israelis and Palestinians. The US anticipates that if it can launch the talks, it will be in a position to use its intermediating role to push both sides to define their bottom-line positions and start making “confidence-building gestures” that would shift the momentum in the region from violent confrontation to diplomatic accommodation.
This is an ambitious agenda that also appears slightly fanciful to most people knowledgeable of the Middle East that I have spoken to in recent weeks in the United States and our region. It is fanciful because it repeats the approach that the US tried to use in the past two decades without success, while conditions on the ground have changed radically, notably within Israel and Palestine.
This is why the critical element that also still remains unclear is the American position on what constitutes a fair peace deal. If the US does not clarify what it sees as a fair and realistic peace deal between Israelis and Palestinians, all parties will continue to deal with the prevailing US position, which is a heavy tilt towards Israel on the ground, combined with some rhetorical criticism of Israeli policies that does not transcend the realm of rhetoric.
Washington can criticise Israeli settlements and colonies for months and years, but if it does not put bite into its position - by threatening to withhold financial or trade incentives, say - the mediating role of the United States will remain largely docile, symbolic and ineffective.
If the Arab world, for its part, does nothing beyond making statements and issuing hollow threats to suspend the 2002 Arab peace plan offer, there will be no incentive for either the US or Israel to change their positions.
It is not realistic to expect the United States alone to pressure Israel to change its policies. Either the US, Israel and the Arabs move together diplomatically or they remain mired, as they are now, in a deep stalemate that is enlivened by occasional arm-waving drama but no real change in substance
The open disagreement and tough words exchanged in public by the United States and Israel a few weeks ago on Washington’s demand that Israel freeze all new settlements in occupied Arab East Jerusalem has now entered phase 2, in which both sides work quietly behind the scenes to harness their political resources, gauge the other side’s intentions and prepare to continue the battle.
The consensus of people I have spoken with in the United States, representing all sides of the issue, seems to see this as a serious clash of positions and perceptions with very little precedent, but we cannot gauge its full significance until three things happen.
These are: the full Israeli response to the American demand to freeze all settlement construction; the Palestinian and Arab response to the situation and what they would do under various scenarios; and the American response to both the Israeli and Arab positions.
We are in the early stages of a drama whose consequences may be more in the realm of political theatre than historic policy shifts. The depressing common denominator on all three fronts is that domestic conditions are totally inauspicious for any resumption of serious negotiations.
The rightwing Israeli government remains firmly committed to expanding its settlements and colonies in Jerusalem and other areas. The Palestinians remain deeply divided between Hamas and Fateh. The United States remains ambiguous and even confused between its role as the ironclad guarantor of Israeli security and military superiority over all its neighbours and the would-be impartial mediator that seeks to nudge Israelis and Palestinians into a serious peace negotiation.
The most interesting and dynamic arena for the moment is in domestic American politics, where the traditional heavily pro-Israeli position of a majority of politicians has been nudged by three intriguing developments. These are: top-level, public and repeated criticisms of Israeli settlement policies by the Obama administration; continued expansion of the impact of J-Street and other more centrist pro-Israel lobby groups that now provide an alternative to the hardline positions of the much older and stronger American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC); a refreshing and rare public debate about whether the impact of pro-Israeli groups like AIPAC on the United States’ pro-Israel policy should give way to a more even-handed approach that would better serve American national interests in the wider Middle East.
These issues are widely and often intensely debated in private these days, but will soon reemerge onto the public stage.
Several dynamics are pushing all sides to shed their ambiguous positions and clarify what they seek and what they will fight for politically. Potentially, the most significant driver of events these days is the American initiative to start the proximity talks between Israelis and Palestinians. The US anticipates that if it can launch the talks, it will be in a position to use its intermediating role to push both sides to define their bottom-line positions and start making “confidence-building gestures” that would shift the momentum in the region from violent confrontation to diplomatic accommodation.
This is an ambitious agenda that also appears slightly fanciful to most people knowledgeable of the Middle East that I have spoken to in recent weeks in the United States and our region. It is fanciful because it repeats the approach that the US tried to use in the past two decades without success, while conditions on the ground have changed radically, notably within Israel and Palestine.
This is why the critical element that also still remains unclear is the American position on what constitutes a fair peace deal. If the US does not clarify what it sees as a fair and realistic peace deal between Israelis and Palestinians, all parties will continue to deal with the prevailing US position, which is a heavy tilt towards Israel on the ground, combined with some rhetorical criticism of Israeli policies that does not transcend the realm of rhetoric.
Washington can criticise Israeli settlements and colonies for months and years, but if it does not put bite into its position - by threatening to withhold financial or trade incentives, say - the mediating role of the United States will remain largely docile, symbolic and ineffective.
If the Arab world, for its part, does nothing beyond making statements and issuing hollow threats to suspend the 2002 Arab peace plan offer, there will be no incentive for either the US or Israel to change their positions.
It is not realistic to expect the United States alone to pressure Israel to change its policies. Either the US, Israel and the Arabs move together diplomatically or they remain mired, as they are now, in a deep stalemate that is enlivened by occasional arm-waving drama but no real change in substance
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