It has barely been noticed, but
there has been a change for the better in the Bush administration's
thinking -- or at least talking -- about the Middle East. For the first
time in six years, Washington is putting Israeli-Palestinian negotiations
near the top of its agenda. For the first time, it wants those
negotiations to address the fundamental political issues that divide the
two sides and has begun to evoke the need to lay out what the
administration calls a political horizon. And for the first time, it seems
willing to take a risk. There was even a whiff of Bill Clinton in this
most un-Clintonesque of administrations when Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice suggested that dealing with provisional issues would be
just as difficult as dealing with permanent ones, and hardly as rewarding.
This news is long in the
waiting, but it's good news nonetheless. Movement on the peace process is
important on its own merits, but -- more important from a U.S. perspective
-- there are critical benefits to America's national security as well. The
United States faces greater challenges today from the Middle East than
perhaps at any other time in its history, yet it purposefully deprives
itself of a major asset in that struggle when it walks away from
Arab-Israeli diplomacy. A fair and energetic U.S. role would help restore
America's battered credibility abroad, bolster pragmatic forces throughout
the region, deprive violent groups of an easy recruiting tool, and help
achieve broader objectives in the Middle East. Not everything in the
region would be cured as a result of a credible Israeli-Palestinian peace
process, but virtually nothing can be cured without it.
During the 1990s and into the
early 2000s, the three of us worked on Israeli-Palestinian negotiations
for our respective peace teams -- Israeli, American, and Palestinian. Much
has changed since those days, little of it for the better. Still, many
lessons remain -- from the failures no less than from successes -- of that
previous experience. Whether the Bush administration carries through on
its self-proclaimed objectives (and there is some reason to doubt it will)
or whether the task of reinvigorating peace efforts falls to the next
president, we herewith offer 10 recommendations regarding what the United
States ought to do -- and what it ought to avoid.
1. It's the endgame, stupid.
The time for interim agreements -- agreements that, as in the 1990s,
defined incremental steps both parties should take -- is long past.
Because they satisfy neither side's essential needs, and because both
sides know that the final compromises still await, partial agreements tend
to diminish what they seek to augment, if what they seek to augment is
mutual confidence. The temptation- -- always present, seldom resisted --
is to create new facts on the ground that are prejudicial to a
permanent-status deal. Though it won't be easy,
America's primary focus should be on resolving the conflict through a
comprehensive settlement.
When the Oslo Accords were
signed, Israelis and Palestinians imagined it would take five years of
gradual steps before they could resolve all outstanding issues. At last
count, they were marking the seventh anniversary of that long-missed
deadline. The delay is frustrating, perpetuates hardship, adds to
obstacles on the ground, and fuels regional tensions. Yet it does even
more than that: Over time, it is killing faith among both peoples in the
possibility of a viable two-state solution. The loss of hope, in turn,
risks becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The Israelis and the
Palestinians, given their weak leaderships, are unlikely to reach an
agreement on their own. That means that the United States must put
forward, at the right time, more specific ideas on a permanent settlement,
describing the desired trade-offs and possible compromises. This should
not be rushed, should not be proposed without sufficient international
support, and should not be done out of desperation that all else has
failed. But a permanent settlement should remain the objective, and all
other actions should be subordinated to this aim. Insofar as success may
take time, specific U.S. parameters in the interim would make the
possibility of a two-state solution more palpable and real, and could help
transform domestic dynamics in both Israel and Palestine. It could also
help restore faith in the United States -- no mean or trivial feat given
how low its reputation has fallen.
2. Get the content right.
If the United States is to play a positive role in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, it needs to be perceived as fair by all sides. That is not
necessarily a matter of "neutrality" or of "even-handedness"; too many
American politicians have suffered for too long from the mere utterance of
those words. Nor is it necessarily a matter of ceasing to coordinate
closely with
Israel, or of no longer sharing our plans with Jerusalem in advance. But
enjoying a special relationship with Israel and being an effective and
fair broker are not incompatible; in fact, to the extent that peace with
its Arab neighbors is a vital interest to Israel, they ought to be viewed
as going hand in hand. At the same time, Washington does nobody a favor by
putting forward ideas that are sure to offend even the most open-minded
Palestinian.
There is regrettable precedent
to go by. At the 2000 Camp David summit, the United States assessed
proposals based on how far Israel had moved from its initial positions
rather than on how far it still would have to go. Four years later, in a
letter to then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, the Bush administration took a
stance on territorial and refugee issues that displayed virtually no
sensitivity to Palestinian concerns -- cherry-picking from among the
various compromises only those that the Palestinians would have to make
(no return of refugees to Israel, for instance, and recognition of the
fact that some settlements would be annexed by Israel) and announcing them
in the wake of discussions with Israel from which Palestinians were
deliberately excluded. The net result was to further erode U.S.
credibility and status as an honest broker, jeopardize efforts to mobilize
pragmatic Palestinians, and make more difficult eventual Palestinian
acceptance of compromises that moderates will have wanted to sell as a
fair deal and militants will have wanted to denounce as an imposed one.
This was all the more
unfortunate because, since Camp David, the broad outlines of a settlement
have been demystified, whether in the Clinton parameters of December 2000
or in the more detailed Geneva Initiative. The outlines of an agreement
are now basically known, and polls among both Israelis and Palestinians
consistently show that these outlines enjoy majority support from both
peoples: two states, based on the lines of June 4, 1967, with minor,
reciprocal, and negotiated modifications; Jerusalem as the home to two
capitals, divided along demographic lines; control by each side of its
respective holy places, with unimpeded access to each community's sites; a
solution to the refugee problem that addresses the importance and
legitimacy-conferring role of the exact language used, but whose practical
implication will be that refugees can return to the territory of the
Palestinian state, not Israel, while providing meaningful financial
compensation and resettlement assistance; and security mechanisms that can
address Israeli concerns, while respecting Palestinian sovereignty.
3. Set your objectives and
strategy up front -- and stick to them.
Prior to the Camp David summit of 2000, the Clinton team had settled on an
approach, and appeared determined to pursue it, until objections --
sometimes Israeli, sometimes Palestinian, often both -- derailed it. This
gave rise to a bumper-style diplomacy in which the United States allowed
itself to run into hurdles rather than jump over them. Being flexible is
one thing; being malleable is another -- and being so does a favor neither
to us, nor to the parties, nor to the peace process. Expect Israeli and
Palestinian leaders to protest on matters of substance and process -- they
have to, and they will. But that should not be a showstopper.
The United States needs to
decide for itself -- either now or during the next administration, and on
the basis of its national-security interests -- what it is seeking to
accomplish; acknowledge the domestic and international political capital
it will need to expend to reach that goal; anticipate healthy criticism;
commit to a process; and then, mindful of remaining the master of its own
policy, tenaciously pursue it.
4. Don't fly solo.
The United States may be the principal outside player, but it is not the
only one. This was made plain in 2000, when Palestinian leader Yasir
Arafat was asked to agree to compromises on the question of sovereignty
over Jerusalem's holy sites, which he could not do alone and for which he
lacked the necessary Arab and Muslim backing. In the interim, the need for
involvement by Arab countries has become, if anything, greater given the
fragmentation of the Palestinian political scene and the relative weakness
of the Palestinian leadership. It has also grown given
Israel's increased lack of trust in the Palestinians and concomitant
desire for normalized relations with all Arab states as a quid pro quo for
territorial compromise.
A key task for the U.S.
administration should be to coordinate closely and early with key Arab
countries. This has been made easier by the Arab world's willingness to
engage more proactively due to regional developments, as evidenced by the
Arab peace initiative -- a commitment by all Arab states to normalize
relations with Israel once a comprehensive regional peace settlement is
achieved.
In particular, should the
United States decide to present final status parameters, it ought to make
plain that it will do so only if Arab countries commit in advance to
publicly defend and promote them. This will not be easy: Six years of
desultory U.S. diplomacy -- coupled with four years of a tragic Iraqi
adventure -- has wiped out much of America's credibility with its Arab
allies. A sustained effort to convince the Arabs that the United States is
serious and that it will carry through on its pledges will be required to
obtain the necessary reciprocal commitments.
Along with the Arab world,
Europeans and others need to be involved, and not as a mere afterthought.
In the past, the United States has tended to appear hat-in-hand, expecting
last-minute financial support once political deals were made. That's
unlikely to take it very far. U.S. allies must feel they have a stake in
the success of any peace initiative if they are to do their share --
whether in terms of international endorsement of the agreement; monetary
assistance to finance Palestine's reconstruction and long-term development
(or to create a fund for Palestinian refugees); a multinational military
or police presence to monitor compliance with an eventual agreement and
deter violations; or the establishment of special relations between the
European Union on the one hand and Israel and Palestine on the other.
Palestinian acceptance of any
agreement will be greatly facilitated if it has been endorsed and
legitimized by the United Nations through a Security Council resolution,
the Arab League, and by the Organization of the Islamic Conference, just
as Israel's acceptance will be made easier if its public sees that an
accord will trigger relations with the broader Arab and Muslim worlds.
Ultimately, the aim should be to make the benefits of an agreement as
tangible, real, and attractive as possible.
5. Don't get spooked by
domestic Israeli politics.
The one constant of recent Israeli politics has been its inconstancy. What
began in the mid-1990s as perpetual instability has since bordered on
systemic crisis. The breakdown began when a change in Israel's electoral
rules coincided with deepening socioeconomic trends of marginalization and
a new wave of immigration. The result has been a fragmented political
mapping, the strengthening of political parties catering to narrow
sectarian or ethnic constituencies (Russian, Sephardic-religious,
anticlerical, Arab), the decline of the two dominant movements (Likud and
Labor), and an inability to form stable governing blocs.
Over the years, U.S. officials
have become experts in, fashioned themselves micromanagers of, and ended
up paralyzed by the famously complicated Israeli political system. How
often have Israeli officials invoked the fragility of the coalition du
jour to argue against a given U.S. initiative, warning it would
simultaneously torpedo the government and usher in a more right-wing
successor? And how often have U.S. officials taken the bait?
It is in the nature of Israel's
democracy to be vibrant, unpredictable, and utterly unmanageable. That is
sometimes good (as when an independent commission holds the government
accountable for its mismanagement of the
Lebanon war), and sometimes less so (as when all government action is
seemingly halted as an entire nation awaits the cabinet's fate). The
United States cannot afford to shape its actions on the basis of the
latest poll or coalition maneuver. Instead, and without being oblivious to
political realities, Washington should remind itself that a credible peace
plan enjoying strong American backing can count on majority Israeli public
support. This, rather than the latest round of cabinet musical chairs, is
what should guide U.S. policy-makers.
6. Leave Palestinian
politics to the Palestinians.
Just as it has suffered from excessive knowledge of Israeli politics, the
United States has been hamstrung by insufficient knowledge of Palestinian
politics. To Americans, they are unfamiliar, both complex and fluid, with
ever-shifting alliances and loyalties. Sources of power and legitimacy, as
well as the modalities of political behavior, are seldom straightforward,
a function of overlapping geographical, generational, historical, and
ideological considerations. And this is at the best of times, without
taking into account Fatah's more recent fragmentation, Hamas' ascent, and
the assertion of numerous militias, tribes, and families.
There often will be temptation
to play Palestinian politics, especially when parts of the leadership
appear nonresponsive to U.S. pressures or, worse, hostile to U.S.
interests. And there rarely will be a shortage of Palestinian leaders
offering themselves up as potential allies in the hope that ties to the
United States will strengthen their hand in the domestic competition. Yet
every time the United States has sought to meddle, the meddling has
backfired, with results ranging from the ineffective to the outright
counterproductive. Lack of understanding is part of the reason, but part
only. Added to that is the reality that
America's embrace can do more harm than good to those it seeks to benefit.
Attempts to isolate and bypass Arafat, to mention but one glaring example,
not only failed to reduce his standing; they also contributed to Fatah's
fragmentation and to the loss of U.S. credibility and leverage.
Rather than waste its resources
seeking to manage a political game that is beyond both its understanding
and control, the United States should focus on promoting a more successful
peace process. Over the long run, there is no better or surer way to
influence the Palestinian political landscape.
7. Don't view the domestic
Jewish community through a monolithic prism.
The domestic political risks of the Arab-Israeli peace process have been
called the third rail of American politics, but that term is
extraordinarily reductive and misleading, simultaneously flattering and
disserving the Jewish community: There is flattery (at least of a kind) in
ascribing to that community the sort of omnipotence that often is assumed,
and there is disservice in suggesting that all American Jews are of one
mind (the most intransigent mind) when it comes to the Middle East.
True, the most vocal and
organized groups tend to advocate the most rigid policies, and they tend
to enjoy disproportionate political influence, most notably in Congress.
This, for good reason, inspires caution within the executive branch, which
is loath to expend political capital and provoke an unwanted political
distraction for the sake of an uncertain gain. Yet poll after poll
suggests that the vast majority of American Jews support Israel, oppose
settlements, favor territorial compromise, and prefer diplomatic solutions
to military ones (and American engagement to disengagement) in order to
further these goals. The key is for the administration to have a clear
strategic vision and to articulate it in terms of defending
U.S. national interests without compromising Israel's. If it does so,
American Jewish support is certain to follow.
8. Dial Damascus.
Although the Israeli-Palestinian dispute is the heart of the Arab-Israeli
conflict, it cannot be resolved in a vacuum. Within the limits of its
reach -- and its reach into Palestine has only grown as the Palestinian
political system has become increasingly permeable -- Syria has proved
time and again its nuisance and spoiling capacity. If Damascus feels
marginalized and snubbed, it will do what it can to torpedo progress
between the Israelis and the Palestinians; that likely will entail
promoting violence from among a plethora of militant groups and engaging
in unhelpful diplomacy in the Arab diplomatic arena.
Conversely, U.S. engagement
with Syria -- and support for a resumption of Israeli-Syrian negotiations
-- should give Damascus reason to curb hostile activities by its allies,
many of whom are heavily dependent on Syrian support. In this context, the
Bush administration's decision to discourage Israel from dealing with
Syria is both unprecedented (never before has the United States stood in
the way of an Arab country's call for unconditional peace talks) and
unwise. For Israel to achieve comprehensive normalization with all Arab
states, it will need to achieve comprehensive peace with all its Arab
neighbors. That, inevitably, will have to include Syria.
9. Pay strategic attention
to events on the ground.
Managing everyday issues and immediate Israeli and Palestinian concerns on
the ground should not be a substitute for pursuing a comprehensive
agreement. Checkpoints, closures, the existence of armed Palestinian
militias -- all are a function of the existing political context, and none
can be genuinely solved without transforming that context through a
permanent-status arrangement. At the same time, these issues have a way of
forcing themselves on to the agenda, undermining the credibility of any
political process while reducing the willingness or ability of actors to
move.
In short, developments on the
ground should neither be ignored nor invoked to stymie negotiations.
Instead, strategic U.S. intervention on the most damaging day-to-day
issues should complement the pursuit of a permanent political settlement.
10. Make this peace a
presidential priority.
Dealing with the Arab-Israeli conflict is never cost-free -- not
domestically, given the sensitivities and emotions involved, and not
internationally, given the closeness of America's alliance with Israel and
the complexity of America's relationship with the Arab world. For that
reason, a decision must be made to invest serious political capital, and
that decision can only be made and conveyed by the president.
Presidential engagement does
not necessarily mean daily presidential involvement. Some have argued that
President Clinton invested himself too much in the Arab-Israeli
negotiations, that his exhaustive knowledge of and enthusiasm for the
minutest details of the talks ultimately devalued him when -- as at Camp
David -- the stakes became higher and his leverage more necessary. That
may or may not be the case. What cannot be doubted is that unless and
until the American president is convinced that tackling the Arab-Israeli
conflict is central to U.S. interests, that America's standing in the
region and capacity to curb the growth of radicalism depend in large part
on American efforts to resolve it, and that our efforts will be worth the
unavoidable political costs, nothing will happen. That is to say, nothing
good, nothing lasting, and nothing safe.
Daniel Levy
is a senior fellow at the New America Foundation and the Century
Foundation. He served as an adviser in the Israeli prime minister's office
and an Israeli negotiator at the "Oslo B" and Taba negotiations.
Ghaith al-Omari
is a senior research fellow at the New America Foundation. He was an
adviser to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and a Palestinian
negotiator from the late 1990s until last year.
Robert
Malley is
the Middle East program director at the International Crisis Group. He was
a special adviser to President Clinton on Arab-Israeli affairs and a
member of the American team at Camp David.