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Price of Peace
Less Than War
By Shibley Telhami
Baltimore Sun
January 5, 2001
It is important to
remember that any agreement, no matter how good the
terms are for one side or the other, will face
militant opposition by significant segments of the
Israeli and Palestinian public. The hope rests not
with getting universal acceptance, but by garnering
robust majorities to overcome the inevitable
opposition.
WASHINGTON -- The good news is that Palestinian and
Israeli negotiators will have another shot at a
comprehensive framework agreement before Bill Clinton
leaves the White House. The bad news is that their
obstacles have only grown since the failed Camp David
summit in July.
To be sure, the parties are closer than ever to an
agreement on Jerusalem, the issue that was the deal
breaker at Camp David, and they have narrowed the gap on
many other critical issues. But the obstacles they now
face are no longer limited to the significant reservations
they still have, especially on the issue of the "right of
return" of Palestinian refugees. They must also face a
dramatically changed psychological environment among
Israelis and Palestinians.
For Palestinians, the mood is not merely of rage over the
death of hundreds and the wounding of more, but it is also
of a newly found sense of empowerment that the Al-Aqsa
Intifada has provided ordinary people.
In the seven years since the Oslo accords, most
Palestinians have watched helplessly as events unfolded.
They felt little control over Israeli actions, U.S. policy
or the behavior of their own authority as their lives
sometimes went from bad to worse. Despite all the tragic
losses of the past few months, Palestinian self-confidence
has been revived by the Intifada, with most Palestinians
acquiring a sense of power vis-a-vis the Palestinian
Authority, Israel and even the White House.
They feel the power to mobilize Arabs and Muslims
elsewhere in ways they have not witnessed in years. Given
the little trust they have in peace agreements, based on
past experience, they see the scramble for a deal as a
trick not only to save Ehud Barak's career but also to end
the Intifada and rob them of the sense of empowerment --
without leading to a lasting peace.
This singular fear today is the greatest obstacle Yasser
Arafat faces in selling a possible agreement with Israel
-- greater than the weight of any single issue in the
negotiations.
On the Israeli side, the obstacles are also greater than
the very difficult issues of Jerusalem and refugees.
The confrontation over Jerusalem, the religious and
ethnic violence that spread inside Israel itself and the
Intifada more broadly have shaken the Israeli public and
revived profound old fears. Much of the Israeli left is
experiencing deep anxieties akin to the loss of innocence.
The minimal trust in the Palestinian leadership and its
ability to deliver an agreement and overcome the passions
of its public has all but collapsed. Will a signing
celebration at the White House be enough to persuade them
to take a leap of faith when they go to the polls on Feb.
6?
Despite the odds, Mr. Barak and Mr. Arafat may be inclined
to make a serious effort to clinch a framework deal in the
next two weeks. The issue is not merely avoiding
international blame, and the blame of a new U.S.
administration, if the peace process collapses -- although
this issue is high on the minds of both sides. There is
also a genuine fear of the consequences of failure. The
political careers of Mr. Barak and Mr. Arafat are not the
only things at issue. So are the prospects for a
negotiated settlement in any foreseeable future.
The significant casualties of violence over the past few
months are tragic enough, but if the prospects of a quick
agreement disappear, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict will
almost certainly witness significant escalation in
violence that could spin out of control and drag others in
the region into the conflict.
Even more dangerously, it could complete the
transformation of the conflict from a nationalist one that
lends itself to resolution into an ethnic-religious
conflict that is harder to resolve, and that could result
in a civil war between Arabs and Jews in Israel itself.
The costs of failure justify taking the risk of reaching
an agreement that will face an uphill battle domestically
for both Mr. Arafat and Mr. Barak. It is important to
remember that any agreement, no matter how good the terms
are for one side or the other, will face militant
opposition by significant segments of the Israeli and
Palestinian public. The hope rests not with getting
universal acceptance, but by garnering robust majorities
to overcome the inevitable opposition. This should be the
goal that defines the terms of any agreement.
For the United States, the stakes are higher than Mr.
Clinton's legacy. As we have witnessed in the past few
months, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is now a broader
Arab-Israeli conflict that affects vital American
interests. That's why President-elect George W. Bush has
become Mr. Clinton's biggest booster.
Shibley Telhami holds
the Anwar Sadat Chair for Peace and Development at the
University of Maryland, College Park and is a senior
fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Copyright © 2001, Baltimore
Sun
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