The artickle of
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/watch/peacewatch/peacewatch2002/402.htm
Robert Satloff, Washington Institute for Near East Policy
23.10.2002
Yesterday, the US administration
acquiesced to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's request to freeze its "road
map" for a solution to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict
until after the elections
and the formation of a new government in Israel. Meanwhile, on Monday,
American envoy David Satterfield
met in Jerusalem with
representatives of
the Quartet for talks on finalization of the road map. Diplomatic sources
said the updated version of the road map
is different and far more
detailed than the
original draft. After hearing the reservations of the Israelis, the
Palestinians and the other members of the Quartet,
the Americans decided to
tighten up security
demands on the Palestinians and called for Israel to freeze settlement
activity.
The following is an
analysis of the original “Road Map” plan, a forty-three-point document
titled "Elements of a Performance-Based
Road Map to a
Permanent Two-State
Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict," which was reportedly handed
to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
when he met
with President Bush
in October. The document, the product of intensive consultation between
the four members of the Middle East
peace
process Quartet (the
United States, Russia, the European Union, and the United Nations), offers
the most ambitious and detailed
plan yet to
restart Israeli-Palestinian
peacemaking after more than two years of terror and violence. The entire
text of the analysis can be found
at
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/.
Brief Outline of the
Roadmap
The roadmap envisions
three "phases" of activity: Transformation/Elections (October 2002-May
2003), Transition (June
2003-December 2003), and Statehood
(2004-2005).
The first phase is
itself broken into two stages: October-December 2002 and January-May 2003.
During the first stage, it is
envisioned that Palestinians prepare
the
legal basis for elections,
draft a new constitution "for statehood," and begin retraining and rebuilding
their security forces.
Palestinians are asked
to take three steps toward Israel: issue an "unequivocal statement reiterating
Israel's right to exist in peace and
security and calling for an
immediate end to the
armed Intifada and all acts of violence against Israelis anywhere"; end
all incitement; and "begin phased
resumption of security cooperation
as
agreed in the Tenet
work plan." At the same time, Israel is asked to facilitate Palestinian
Authority official travel "without restriction";
transfer tax revenues; lift
curfews and ease travel
between Palestinian areas; dismantle settlement outposts erected since
the start of the Sharon government;
and end actions "that undermine
trust," including
attacks in civilian areas and deportations (what the roadmap calls "punitive
measures").
Meanwhile, Arab states
will "move decisively" to cut off funding of extremist groups. During the
second stage, "as comprehensive
security performance moves
forward" and Palestinians
meet "agreed judicial, administrative and economic benchmarks," it is envisioned
that Israel "freeze all
settlement activity," reopen closed
Palestinian economic
institutions in "East Jerusalem," and withdraw its forces progressively
to pre-intifada positions, enabling
Palestinian legislative elections
to be
held. At the close
of this phase, Egypt and Jordan would return their ambassadors to Israel.
The second phase (Transition)
starts after Palestinian elections and ends with the "possible creation
of a Palestinian state with
provisional borders." During this
phase, the Quartet
would convene an "international conference" to launch negotiations on "the
possibility" of such a state. Inside the
territories, Palestinians would
approve a new constitution
and take important security measures. For its part, Israel is envisioned
as completing, with Palestinians,
negotiations for the "creation
of a
state with provisional
borders," as well as taking unspecified "further action" on Jewish settlements
"simultaneous" with the
establishment of the Palestinian
state
(implying that the
provisional borders would not be limited to the current boundaries of Areas
A and B).
The third phase (Statehood)
opens with a second "international conference" to endorse the agreement
on Palestinian statehood with
provisional borders and launch
"final status negotiations"
to reach a permanent settlement in 2005. Should that be attained, the roadmap
envisions "Arab state
acceptance of normal relations
with
Israel and security
for all the states of the region."
Silence on Arafat
The roadmap makes no
mention of Yasir Arafat or, as President George W. Bush called for, "new"
Palestinian leadership. However,
in numerous clauses in which it
refers to actions
by the Palestinian Authority, the roadmap effectively relies on Arafat's
participation and support….
Inching toward an Imposed
Peace?
Although the roadmap
reaffirms the concept of "negotiations between the parties," many of its
proposals and the context in which
they are presented collectively
chip
away at that very
idea. The convening of two international conferences, the proposition that
"judgments" of progress will be
determined by the Quartet, and
the
creation of a "permanent"
monitoring mechanism suggest the not-so-creeping internationalization of
Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking.
The implication of the detailed
timeline offered within
this roadmap is that the peacemaking engine can be expected to have gathered
so much speed by 2004 that
neither Israelis nor Palestinians
will
be in a position to
stop the international locomotive pushing for a final agreement.
International Supervision
On the positive side,
the roadmap repeatedly injects the idea of "performance-based" peacemaking,
suggesting that actions, not
timetables, will determine movement
from one phase to
another….On the one hand, the roadmap envisions progressively more extensive
and intrusive monitoring and an
ever-growing role in this bilateral
conflict for international
actors. This vision is exemplified by the astonishing proposal for a "permanent"
mechanism, suggesting an
international presence assessing
Israeli and Palestinian
behavior in perpetuity.
On the other hand,
however, the roadmap has strange gaps built into the monitoring process.
By the time Palestinians are supposed
to end incitement, for example,
no
supervisory mechanism
is yet in place to monitor compliance. Moreover, no outside role is envisioned
for determining whether the
Palestinian constitution comports
with agreements with
Israel or for overseeing the work of the proposed Palestinian election
commission. The roadmap offers no view
as to what constitutes
compliance, nor does
it prioritize which requirements are deal-breakers….
Sequencing
The roadmap also runs
counter to the thrust of President Bush's "security first" approach (outlined
in his June 24, 2002, speech),
which envisions an end to terror
and
violence as a precondition
to further diplomatic engagement. But whereas previous Quartet statements
suggested simultaneity in
calling for Israeli and Palestinian
steps toward peacemaking,
the sequencing in the roadmap actually suggests a series of substantive
and irreversible Israeli steps in
advance of complementary
Palestinian steps.
For example, in the stage that Palestinians are asked to "reiterate" (i.e.,
repeat their previous commitment
regarding) Israel's right to exist
and end
incitement (though
without monitoring), Israel is asked to accept numerous restrictions on
its security operations in the territories, to
transfer tax monies, and to
dismantle settlement
outposts….
Conclusion
As a springboard for
new and intensive peacemaking efforts, the roadmap has numerous flaws.
It is unclear, however, whether the
document actually represents an
evolving U.S. view
toward pursuing the peace process after the coming confrontation with Iraq,
or whether it has been tabled only as
a temporary expedient to allay
Arab and European
concerns in advance of war in the Gulf. Even if the roadmap is only a device
to deflect these concerns, such
initiatives often have a way of
taking
on a life of their
own. Breathing further life into this approach, without a top-to-bottom
revision of both concept and detail, would
render President Bush's June 24
approach stillborn.
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