Dear Friend of CMEP,
In this CMEP analysis and action
newsletter, I have stepped back to look
at the situation in the region 30 years
ago and the changes that have, and have
not, taken place. I'm a bit nostalgic as
this is one of my final tasks as CMEP's
Executive Director. During these years,
I have talked with many of you and know
many others by name as I've written
thank-you letters for contributions.
Connecting with you all - across the
nation - and working in Washington with
the wonderful people on the CMEP Board
and staff has been a great experience.
I've enjoyed meeting Warren Clark,
CMEP's incoming Executive Director, and
know that you'll appreciate the fresh
leadership that he brings to CMEP.
The Board and staff held a lovely
tribute dinner for me with colleagues
and friends including some of CMEP's
founding Board members. I was given a
beautiful scrapbook of mementoes and
photos that trace CMEP's history and an
exquisite plaque from the Balian
Ceramics shop in east Jerusalem. I am
especially grateful that the Board has
established a cultivation fund in my
name that will further CMEP's advocacy
work by supporting the development of
young leaders and activists through
scholarships to
CMEP's Advocacy Conference and
Internship opportunities. To contribute
to this fund, please click
here.
Sincerely,
Corinne Whitlatch
December 2007 Newsletter
By Corinne Whitlatch, Executive Director
With the news filled with articles and
commentary about the Annapolis peace
initiative and US relations with Iran, I
am reminded of 1978 when I began working
for Middle East peace, at the regional
office of the American Friends Service
Committee in Des Moines. As I clean my
desk in preparation for my retirement as
Executive Director of Churches for
Middle East Peace after 21 years, I
reflect on these years of organizing
national churches and local church
members for education and advocacy in
support of peace and justice.
In 1978, President Carter brought
Egypt's President Sadat and Israeli PM
Begin to Camp David to hammer out the
first major breakthrough in the
Arab-Israeli conflict by negotiating a
peace treaty between Israel and Egypt.
Israel's occupation of the Sinai ended,
but the occupation of other land as a
result of the 1967 war - Gaza, the West
Bank including east Jerusalem and the
Golan Heights - continued.
Near my home in Iowa is Iowa State
University with a large number of
foreign students. Downtown on Saturdays
in 1978 were demonstrations by Iranian
students, wearing paper bag masks to
hide their identity, with petitions
protesting the shah's cruel regime. In
1979, the shah fled, Ayatollah Khomeini
returned from exile to usher in the
Islamic Republic and the U.S. embassy
was taken hostage.
During this 30 year span, much has
changed, some progress has been made,
and the challenge of resolving these
conflicts has sharpened.
By looking back, we can see the way
forward.
Spotlight on Settlements
The second piece of the Camp David
Accords, regarding Israel withdrawal
from the West Bank and Gaza, was the
topic of follow-up meetings between
Sadat and Begin until the process broke
down in mid- 1980. Meanwhile, Begin
encouraged accelerated Jewish settlement
in the occupied territories, increasing
from 17 settlements with 5,000 settlers
in 1977 to 100 settlements with a
population of more than 20,000 in 1982.
Throughout the years since 1978, Israeli
settlements in the West Bank, east
Jerusalem and Gaza continued to grow,
with the exception of those in Gaza
dismantled in 2005.
The demand for Israel to cease
settlement building was revived at the
November Annapolis meeting, and
follow-up meetings are planned. Now,
negotiators must deal with a situation
of 450,000 settlers (260,000 in the West
Bank and 190,000 in East Jerusalem),
complicated by President Bush's April
2004 letter to Prime Minister Sharon
noting that the realities on the ground
make it unrealistic to expect the
outcome of negotiations to be a full
return to the armistice line of 1949,
generally referred to as the "green
line."
The tied commitments of Israel to freeze
settlements and of Palestinians to end
violence, as the first step in 2003
launch of the "road map" peace plan,
have not been met. The Annapolis meeting
reset the clock on the road map, but it
remains to be seen if settlement
building will halt and if Palestinians
can rein in militant violence.
Big question: Will settlement building
stop and, if not, what will President
Bush do?
Jerusalem for All?
Unlike the West Bank and Gaza, Israel
annexed east Jerusalem and its environs
and proclaimed the expanded city to be
Israel's reunited and eternal capital
and not subject to negotiation. Even
though Israel's claim to all of
Jerusalem was not accepted by the US
government or the international
community, disputing the status of
Jerusalem was a taboo topic in
Washington. For years, the US Congress
has passed legislation mandating the
movement of the US embassy from Tel Aviv
to Israel's capital city, Jerusalem - a
move that successive Presidents refused.
At Camp David with Clinton and Arafat in
2000, Israel Prime Minister Barak
acknowledged that Israeli claims to east
Jerusalem were not absolute and that
some measure of Palestinian sovereignty
might be possible. At the conclusion of
the failed peace talks, President
Clinton outlined bridging proposals
including for Jerusalem. As a general
principle, he stated "Arab areas are
Palestinian and Jewish ones are
Israeli," and in the Old City,
Palestinians would have sovereignty over
the Haram and Israelis would have
sovereignty over the West Wall.
Now, discussions on Jerusalem's future
as a city to be shared by Israelis and
Palestinians as the capital of each
state are commonplace. Scenarios for how
Jerusalem might be shared, or some would
say divided, have been drafted by
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators.
Considerable progress has been made in
just how this very thorny final status
issue will be settled. While the Bush
Administration has not reiterated
Clinton's proposal, it has stood firm on
the position that Jerusalem's status can
only be established by means of
negotiations and has criticized Israeli
actions that would prejudge the future
status of the city prior to
negotiations.
Big question: Will President Bush
elaborate on his vision of a Palestinian
state to include "with its capital in
Jerusalem?"
Refugees Still Waiting
Little progress has been made in
resolving the situation of the
Palestinian refugees during these
decades. Generations of Palestinians
crowd the refugee neighborhoods in
Lebanon, Syria and Jordan. However, the
reiterated promises of Arab and
Palestinian leaders that these refugees
will be able to return to their homes in
Israel have been trumped by the Arab
League Peace Initiative that calls for
an "agreed" solution, which would
require Israel's approval.
This particular final status issue is a
regional matter that involves
neighboring Arab states as well as
Israelis and Palestinians. As is the
case with Jerusalem, the refugee issue
can only be resolved as a package deal
that includes all the final status
issues and is within the framework of a
comprehensive agreement between Israel,
Palestine, and the Arab states.
Proposals have been drafted that would
both recognize the Palestinian refugees'
suffering while also taking into account
the needs and aspirations of both
peoples in the context of a two- state
solution.
Big question: Will President Bush pursue
a comprehensive peace agreement or limit
his engagement to Palestinian-Israeli
negotiations?
Setting the Borders
The "green line" between Israel and the
West Bank was not visible 30 years ago,
neither shown on Israeli maps or by
markers on the ground. But this
armistice line from the 1948 war was
indicated by a dotted line on
international maps and, through UNSC
Res. 242, recognized as the dividing
line between Israel and the
Jordanian-controlled territories that
were occupied and from which, Israeli
withdrawal is required. The lack of a
clear border line allowed some semblance
of interaction between Israelis and
Palestinians, but the breakdown of
negotiations at Camp David in 2000 and
the violence that followed resulted in
separation both psychologically and
physically.
Now, the distinction between the West
Bank and Israel is made all too visible
by the wall and fence infrastructure
that Israel is building, ostensibly for
security purposes. The current debate is
not about the existence of a border, but
the location of the border. Resolution
of the border issue is inextricably
connected to other final status issues,
settlements, Jerusalem and security.
Big question: Will the border be based
on the 1967 "green line" or defined by
the separation barrier that Israel is
building?
Palestinian National Movement
Thirty years ago, the Palestinian people
were struggling for recognition as a
national movement. In 1976, the PLO
(Palestinian Liberation Organization)
became a member of the Arab League and
gained observer status to the United
Nations. But it wasn't until the late
80's that the United States agreed to
talk with the PLO officials; still, at
the 1991 Madrid conference the US
insisted that the Palestinian delegation
not include PLO members. It wasn't until
the Oslo Accords in 1993, which was
based on mutual recognition by Israel
and the PLO, that the United States
agreed to negotiations with the PLO.
Jordan controlled the West Bank and east
Jerusalem until July of 1988 when King
Hussein stunned the international
community by renouncing Jordan's claim.
As the Palestinian uprising, known as
the intifada, took root, the Palestinian
National Council in late 1988 declared
an independent Palestinian state and
accepted UN Resolutions 242 and 338.
Now, with its authority to negotiate on
behalf of the Palestinian people
undisputed internationally, the PLO has
been, in large part, transformed into
the Palestinian Authority whose
leadership is contested by the religious
party Hamas. The questions of
recognizing Israel and renouncing
violence that the PLO answered now
nearly 20 years ago are being replayed
as Hamas stands defiant. The division
within Palestinian society is deep and
there is a lack of will at this point to
reconcile, complicated by US policies
intended to isolate and punish Hamas and
end its control of Gaza.
Big question: Will Hamas moderate and
can internal Palestinian divisions be
overcome to achieve the unity necessary
for a durable peace?
A Changed World
The Israeli-Arab conflict, 30 years ago,
was a fuse to super-power conflict. US
policy in the Middle East, and globally,
was dedicated to the perceived threat
posed by the Soviet Union. As the USSR
gave support to the nascent Palestinian
cause and armed its Arab allies, the
United States bolstered its influence by
arming Israel and oil-producing allies,
including Iran under the leadership of
the shah.
Then, secularism was a tenet of Soviet
principles and the Arab leaders in the
Soviet orbit repressed opposition, most
especially from the Muslim Brotherhood.
As the Islamist political movement
spread throughout the region,
governments tied to the Soviets and
those allied with the West, felt the
heat.
Now, the Soviet Union no longer exists,
but the United States is newly
challenged by the emergence of a
resurgent sense of Muslim self-identity
across the region that is expressed in a
multitude of ways, including political
engagement and, by some, violent acts
against their rulers and the West.
It was in Iran, nearly 30 years ago,
that religious leaders joined with
leftist opponents to topple the secular
US-backed ruler. Ever since Iranian
students seized American diplomats and
held them hostage for over a year,
United States-Iran relations have been
broken and characterized by hostile
rhetoric.
Now, there are new doors opening for
diplomatic engagement to resolve the
Israeli-Arab conflict and to restore
relations with Iran.
Changes at CMEP
Churches for Middle East Peace has grown
from a working group of Washington staff
of protestant churches in the National
Council of Churches into a broad
coalition that includes Catholics and
Orthodox churches and organizations and
has greatly strengthened its advocacy
voice on Capitol Hill. I retire from
CMEP knowing it is in good hands - with
an extraordinary staff, dedicated Board
and a new Executive Director,
Warren Clark. Together they will
continue to guide CMEP and the CMEP
network of church members and clergy
toward timely and effective advocacy.
Advocacy Action
2008 is sure to be a significant year
for Israeli-Arab peacemaking. President
Bush has set a goal of establishing a
Palestinian state by the end of the
year. Doubt is reasonable, but inaction
is not. CMEP's role, and yours, is to
express the churches' long-standing
commitment to peacemaking and to help
provide policymakers with the necessary
commodities - moral courage and
political will. Our concern should not
be predicting whether the peace talks
that will follow the Annapolis meeting
will fail or succeed but doing
everything we can do to ensure they
become the vehicle for a just peace.
There are rejectionists in all camps -
political and religious - who will work
hard to dissuade your senators and
representative from supporting the
strong leadership by President Bush and
Secretary Rice that is essential for
real progress in negotiations. Your
voice is important now, and will be
necessary during the year as specific
issues come onto the table.
CMEP urges advocacy directed toward the
Administration and to the Congress. Make
the following points in calls or emails
to President Bush and your Senators and
Representative:
-
As an American Christian, I long for
the day when there will be peace in
the Holy Land. I encourage the
President and Secretary of State to
continue their strong leadership
following the Annapolis meeting, with
the bipartisan support of Congress,
toward the goal of a viable and
independent Palestinian state and a
negotiated end of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict by the
end of 2008.
-
I support sustained, robust U.S.
diplomatic engagement, together with
the Arab League states and the
Quartet, to help achieve a
comprehensive Israeli-Arab peace that
includes agreements between Israel and
Syria, and Israel and Lebanon.
-
I urge the President and Secretary of
State to continue to work with Israeli
PM Olmert and Palestinian President
Abbas to make progress both on the
humanitarian and security conditions
on the ground and on negotiations on
final status issues, such as
Jerusalem, borders, refugees,
settlements, security and water.
[FOR SENATE ADVOCACY: UPDATE ON POST-ANNAPOLIS DODD LETTER
TO RICE] The deadline for the
Dodd sign-on letter is the end of
the day, tomorrow, Wed. Dec. 19th.
Call your Senators today and ask them to
join in signing this constructive letter
that
applauds Sec. Rice for her
work at the
Annapolis conference, requests
that she
remain actively engaged, and
encourages her to press both
Israelis and Palestinians to honor their
commitments to reach a final status
agreement. For more background,
see CMEP's Dec
13th action alert. To reach
your Senate offices, call the
Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121.
White House: 202-456-1111 or
president@whitehouse.gov
Congress: 202-224- 3121 or
www.senate.gov and
www.house.gov