Will Bush and Rice do whatever necessary to secure a legacy?
The mood is dark in the IDF's General Staff ahead of next week's "peace"
conference in Annapolis. As one senior officer directly involved in the
negotiations with the Palestinians and the Americans said, "As bad as it
might look from the outside, the truth is ten times worse. This is a nightmare.
The Americans have never been so hostile."
Thursday a draft of the joint statement that Israeli and Palestinian
negotiators are discussing ahead of the conference was leaked to the media.
A reading of the document bears out the IDF's concerns.
The draft document shows that the Palestinians and the Israelis differ
not only on every issue, but differ on the purpose of the document. It
also shows that the US firmly backs the Palestinians against Israel.
As the draft document makes clear, Israel is trying to avoid committing
itself to anything at Annapolis. For their part, the Palestinians are trying
to force Israel's hand by tying it to diplomatic formulas that presuppose
an Israeli withdrawal to the 1949 armistice lines and an Israeli acceptance
of the so-called "right of return" or free immigration of foreign Arabs
to Israel.
The Palestinians are also trying to take away Israel's right to determine
for itself whether to trust the Palestinians and continue making diplomatic
and security concessions or not by making it the responsibility of outside
actors to decide the pace of the concessions and whether or not the Palestinians
should be trusted.
As the leaked draft document shows, the Americans have sided with the
Palestinians against Israel. Specifically, the Americans have taken for
themselves the sole right to judge whether or not the Palestinians and
the Israelis are abiding by their commitments and whether and at what pace
the negotiations will proceed.
But the Americans are have shown themselves to be unworthy of Israel's
trust. By refusing to acknowledge Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas's Fatah party's direct involvement in terrorism and indeed the direct
involvement of his official Fatah "security forces" in terrorism, the Americans
have shown that their benchmarks for Palestinian compliance with their
commitments to Israel are not necessarily based on the reality on the ground.
Then too, the US demands for wide-ranging Israeli security concessions
to the Palestinians even before the "peace" conference at Annapolis have
shown that Israel's security is of little concern to the State Department.
IDF sources blame the shooting murder of Ido Zoldan on Monday night
by Fatah terrorists on Israel's decision to bow to Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice's demand to take down 24 security roadblocks in Judea and Samaria.
If it hadn't been for US pressure they say, it is quite possible that the
29-year-old father of two small children would be alive today.
But this is of no concern for Washington. As Rice has made clear repeatedly,
the US wants to see "signs of progress." Since the Palestinians are taking
no action against terror and doing nothing to lessen their society's jihadist
fervor, the only way to achieve "signs of progress" is by forcing Israel
to make concessions to the Palestinians. And so that is exactly what Rice
and her associates are doing.
Rice is able to force Israel to accept her demands because she faces
the weakest Israeli leaders the country has ever produced. Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak
are all incapable of standing up to the Americans or even arguing with
them. Olmert and Livni's weakness has been apparent since their mishandling
of the war with Hizbullah last summer and their negotiations over the ceasefire
agreement with Rice. For his part, throughout his brief and disastrous
tenure as prime minister, Barak behaved as though he were then president
Bill Clinton's employee.
But if Olmert, Livni and Barak's willingness to compromise their nation's
security is a function of their weakness, what explains Rice and Bush's
behavior? Why are they weakening Israel and pushing for the establishment
of yet another Middle Eastern terror state? What US interest do they think
they are advancing by acting as they are?
Over the past several weeks, a number of theories have been raised
to explain their behavior. The most frequent explanation is that Rice and
Bush are championing Palestinian statehood at Israel's expense in a bid
to mobilize a coalition of Sunni Arab states to cooperate with the US against
Iran.
According to this theory, if Annapolis is seen as a success, then the
Arab states will be convinced that the US is worth supporting on Iran.
This theory has several flaws. First, as the US's treatment of Israel makes
clear, success in Annapolis involves weakening Israel whose destruction
Iran seeks and empowering the Palestinians who Iran supports. This means
that far from weakening Iran, success at Annapolis advances Iran's interests.
But beyond that, whether wittingly or unwittingly, by convening the
conference next week, the Bush administration has directly empowered Iran.
Today the determination of whether the administration emerges unscathed
or humiliated from Annapolis is entirely in Iran's hands. Iran will decide
whether the conference opens and closes peacefully or whether it is convened
as Lebanon submerged in civil war by Iran's proxies Syria and Hizbullah.
According to the Lebanese constitution, Saturday is the last day on
which a new Lebanese president can be elected. Lebanon's president must
be elected by two-thirds of the members of Lebanon's parliament. Through
their campaign of assassination, Syria and Hizbullah have taken away the
2/3 majority that anti-Syrian forces won in the 2005 elections. As a result,
Hizbullah has veto power over the election. And so far, Iran and Syria
have refused to allow Hizbullah to back any candidate. This is the case
despite the anti-Syrian majority's willingness to support a pro-Syrian
presidential candidate.
Due to the Iranian-Syrian induced impasse, today there are two possible
scenarios for what may happen in the next few days in Lebanon. Either Iran
and Syria will allow elections to take place and an agent of their regimes
and Hizbullah will take over the presidency, or elections will not take
place and two governments - one anti-Syrian under Prime Minister Fuad Siniora
and one pro-Syrian will be formed. The pro-Syrian government will be supported
by Hizbullah and the Lebanese army. The anti-Syrian government will be
supported by Christian, Sunni and Druse militias. A civil war will ensue.
Syria, Hizbullah and Iran will win.
In a bid to induce the first scenario, Bush has been lobbying every
leader he can think of to appeal to Teheran and Damascus to relent and
allow elections to go through. To this end, he even asked their primary
arms supplier Russian President Vladimir Putin to intervene. Olmert's decision
to allow Fatah security forces to receive 25 advanced Russian armored personnel
carriers in spite of IDF objections was no doubt a consequence of Bush's
appeal to Putin for help.
If the Americans believe the key to countering Iran is to build an
anti-Iranian Arab coalition, the crisis in Lebanon shows just how futile
their efforts are. Just as the Sunni Arab states oppose Iran acquiring
nuclear weapons, so they oppose Iranian control over Lebanon. Yet in spite
of this, they have done nothing to prevent Iran and its proxies from taking
control of the country. To the contrary, the Saudis have encouraged the
Siniora government to support pro-Syrian candidates for the presidency.
So if the administration has decided to embrace the Palestinians as
a means of weakening Iran, its decision is wrong on three counts. First,
given Iran's support for the Palestinians, empowering them against Israel
simply advances Iran's interest. Second, the Annapolis conference has become
a hostage of Iranian goodwill which is non-existent. And finally, even
if it were formed, an anti-Iranian Arab coalition would be powerless to
check Iran's power.
Even though the summit at Annapolis weakens the US's position vis-?-vis
Iran, it might still make sense for the Bush and Rice to support Palestinian
statehood if doing so enhanced public support for the administration. But
the opposite is occurring. Bush and Rice's seeming obsession with Palestinian
statehood is being criticized from all sides of the aisle.
Critics on the Left like New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman and
former Clinton negotiator and Palestinian apologist Robert Malley have
expressed mystification at the administration's insistent advance of negotiations
between Israel and the Palestinians when there is no chance that those
negotiations will bring peace. So too, over the past few weeks, four Republican
presidential candidates - Rudy Guiliani, Mitt Romney, John McCain and Fred
Thompson - have criticized Bush and Rice's Palestinian policies generally
and the convening of the conference at Annapolis in particular.
There is also the theory that Bush and Rice's primary concern in pushing
for Palestinian statehood is their legacies. Rice's stated intention of
seeing a Palestinian state declared before Bush leaves office lends weight
to this view. But of course, given that the maximum that Israel is willing
to concede to the Palestinians is less than the minimum that the Palestinians
are willing to accept, and given that the Olmert government will be brought
down if Olmert agrees to any major concessions, it is clear that there
is no chance that Rice will succeed.
Finally there is the thought that Rice and Bush understand that there
is no chance of achieving peace, but that they think that their legacies
will be strengthened just for having tried. After all, Bill Clinton is
remembered well for his attempts to achieve peace between Israel and the
Palestinians in spite of the fact that his attempts brought war rather
than peace. But Clinton's example is no longer applicable because the conditions
under which Clinton pursued peace were far different than those that exist
today.
Clinton's peace policies caused a war that began only at the end of
his presidency. Until then, they seemed like relatively safe and cost-free
moves. On the other hand, Bush's presidency has occurred in its entirety
against the backdrop of the Palestinian jihad. Every attempt he has made
at peacemaking from the Tenet Plan through the Roadmap and Sharm el Sheikh
and onto Annapolis has been blown apart through violence before it could
get off the ground.
So then there is no good excuse for the Bush administration's decision
to embrace the Palestinians at Israel's expense. It all comes down to Bush
and Rice not thinking through the consequences of their moves.
It is a singular tragedy that Israel's elected leaders are too weak
to make them understand that by harming Israel, they are harming the United
States and making fools of themselves.
© 2007, Caroline B. Glick
Jewish World Review
Nov. 23, 2007 /13 Kislev 5768
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