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Happy New Year to
each of you. As each year begins, I try to assess what lies ahead
with hope that the optimistic bits are more accurate than those that
forecast doom.
CMEP begins the
new year with farewells to Holly Byker, who is off to new adventures
after two years with CMEP, and greetings to Julie Schumacher Cohen,
the new CMEP office manager. I’m off on vacation and will be back on
January 18 or 19th. Then, the Email Network can look forward to a
message from CMEP about an ecumenical Christian leaders’ letter to the
President that will be published in the New York Times, and delivered
to your members of Congress.
Outlook 2005: Hope for Peace in the Holy Land, Ongoing
War in Iraq, and New Worries
New
Opportunity for the New Year
The year begins
with a promising event – Palestinians going to the polls to vote for a
new president to succeed Yasser Arafat, the legendary father of
Palestine who died in November. While it is nearly certain that
Mahmoud Abbas, known as Abu Mazen, will be the winner, the slate of
seven candidates indicates a new era for Palestinian governance. For
the last four years President Arafat served as the comprehensive
excuse for both Israeli Prime Minister Sharon and President Bush,
allowing both to ignore entreaties from near and far to resume a
political peace process. Now, Arafat’s demise has become the rationale
for a direly needed push for the two-state solution that could end the
long and bloody conflict.
In the initial
phase, the emphasis for action will be directed toward the
Palestinians – to cease violence and reform the institutional
structures of the Palestinian Authority. That will be the limited
agenda of the conference that British PM Tony Blair is planning early
in the new year. While Palestinian elections and governance reform
will not resolve the conflict, the fresh flow of international donor
aid and political attention could relieve Palestinians’ despair and
restore confidence that they may thrive and be free in their own state
at last.
Elected to a
second term, President Bush appears to be committed to fulfilling his
vision of two states, living side by side in peace. The challenge for
advocates of peace will be to ensure that the political, economic and
societal needs of a viable Palestinian state are adequately met –
psychologically and geographically. Advocates for peace will need at
the same time to provide Israelis with assurances that real peace, and
regional acceptance, will result from their ending the occupation and
returning land to Palestinians for their sovereign state.
The contest among
Israelis about the future of the settlements will be tremendously
agonizing and potentially dangerous. Assuming that P.M. Sharon
genuinely intends to carry out his
Gaza
withdrawal plan, he risks civil strife between religious and secular
Jewish Israelis as well as violent resistance from the more militant
settlers. The opening salvo could be sparked by the Road Map’s call
for the removal of the “outposts,” which are intended by their young
and radical founders to thwart efforts to restrain Jewish settlement
in the West Bank.
President Bush
wants to, and needs to, improve strained relations with European
allies, whose help he needs, especially in Iraq and with Iran policy.
British P.M.Tony Blair is pressing his friend in the White House
toward closer collaboration with the European Union in jump-starting
the Road Map plan in order to calm the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
NATO might provide a vehicle for U.S.-EU cooperation; NATO has been
proposed for a third-party role as the Israeli military withdraws from
the West Bank, and there is talk of Israel becoming part of NATO.
Israel has long resisted any outside constraints on its military
actions, but NATO’s secretary general, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, is going
there in the spring for talks.
Expectations of Support in Congress
Unlike the
congressional opposition by the conservatives to the Oslo agreements
of the 1990s, the Israeli right may find a more united congressional
front in support of President Bush’s requests relative to
Israeli-Palestinian matters. Partisan rancor on this particular issue
is weakening, as shown by reports that the House majority whip, Rep.
Roy Blunt (R-MO) and House minority whip, Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-VA) were
bunkmates on a December trip to the region (one of five high-level
congressional tours to the Middle East since Arafat’s Nov. 11 death).
It is expected
that President Bush will request Congressional appropriation of
considerable financial aid for Palestinian development and institution
building, beginning with help for the January election. If settlement
evacuation does take place, surely Congress will be asked to provide
additional funds to
Israel
as well.
War or
Peace for Syria?
Syria
will certainly be in the news in 2005. In a strange twist, the U.S. is
discouraging Israel from resuming negotiations with Syria. In the
last year, Syria has repeatedly offered to reopen talks with
Israel’s
leaders, and recently the Israeli defense minister, the military chief
of staff and the head of intelligence have all spoken out in favor.
Some U.S.
officials are concerned that Syrian-Israeli talks would delay progress
with the Palestinians. Other officials are eager to chastise, or do
worse to, Syria
for its alleged support for Iraqi insurgents and Palestinian terrorist
groups. One Israeli official, quoted in the Dec. 17 issue of the
Forward, said, “It really wouldn’t look good if Israel legitimizes
Syria’s regime by resuming peace talks when there is talk in
Washington about striking Syria militarily.”
Crisis
with Iran Looms
The convoluted
effort to determine if Iran’s nuclear ambitions are a threat and if
so, how to deal with it, is a cliffhanger. The Administration has been
split on policy towards Iran. Some urge warmer relations, working
cooperatively with
Europe, and recognizing that
Iran has legitimate
interests in Iraq. The hawkish neoconservatives, in collaboration with
rightwing Israelis, are ready for preemptive bombing of Iran’s nuclear
facilities. A major worry is that if
Iran
develops nuclear weapons, Arab neighbors such as
Saudi Arabia
will feel compelled to do so as well.
There is a chance
that the Iran
crisis could open the door for consideration of a regional regime for
control of weapons of mass destruction. A “common security” approach
for WMD control is most likely to make progress alongside movement
toward a comprehensive resolution of the broader Arab-Israeli
conflict.
Iraq
Tragedy Worsens
The Bush
Administration wants to see Iraq stabilized so U.S. troops can leave.
But violence against troops and cooperating Iraqis is escalating with
no improvement in sight. Hope has withered that the upcoming
elections would open the door for a new democratic and unified state.
It can be expected that within Congress, and the American public, the
debate on who is to blame and what to do will be hot and heavy. A full
scale popular opposition to the war itself, with demands that U.S.
troops leave Iraq, is possible.
It is impossible
to predict at this time how the Iraq war will play out. The mounting
death tolls of Iraqi people as well as American and coalition
personnel, along with deficit-producing supplemental appropriations
for war costs, cannot long be obscured by flippant upbeat assessments
from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Most people have awakened from
the neoconservative dream that Iraq would be a model for the formation
of secular democracies throughout the region.
The notion that
religious authority must be and can be expunged from politics in the
Middle East is challenged by reality. Some experts on Islam have an
alternative view. Reuel Marc Gerecht, a fellow of the American
Enterprise Institute, and a former CIA specialist, argues that devout
followers of Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, a Shiite cleric, offer not
just the best hope for democracy, but really the only one.
Reform Is
on the Agenda
Cynics can easily
dismiss the President’s call for democratization and “reform” of Arab
states and Iranian governance as disingenuous and intended to distract
from his economic and cultural imperialist objectives. Nevertheless,
the clarion call of liberty is heard purely by oppressed people, and
there are many throughout the Middle East. In 2005, the debate about
reform in the Arab world will be huge and widespread. The leader of a
pro-reform NGO in
Syria,
quoted by columnist Tom Friedman, said, “For some people it forced the
reform issue, because they said ‘Let’s change ourselves before the
Americans change us.’ Some Arab liberals want to use the
U.S.
presence to pressure their governments to go ahead with reform. But in
one way or another, the Iraqi issue is forcing the issue of reform on
everyone.”
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