February 6, 2014 | Eli E. Hertz
The weight of the evidence of so many scholars, observers, pollsters and monitors make it almost impossible to mitigate, not to mention ignore the enormity of finding a solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
When
one grasps the duration of the conflict and its roots, when one fully
faces the depth of animosity towards Israel and the antisemitism that
permeates the Arab world from the political, religious and intellectual
elites down to the grass roots, the sheer magnitude of the challenge for
peacemakers becomes painfully apparent.
When
one admits the implications of Palestinian society’s behavior – the
repetitive pattern of over 90 years of rejectionism on the diplomatic
front and a penchant for terrorism against civilians, the ‘readiness’ of
Arabs for co-existence and the chances of a breakthrough assume their
true proportions.
The
unwillingness to accept Israel as a legitimate non-Muslim political
entity is epitomized by the Palestinians asymmetrical demands for the
Right of Return of all Palestinian refugees to the Jewish state coupled
with a demand that the West Bank and Gaza be cleansed of all Jews.
So, where do we go from here? Is there no way out?
One cannot artificially narrow the scope of the conflict. One cannot duck the tough issues – whether in the
Palestinian camp or the Arab world as a whole. Western leadership that
is ‘Staying above the conflict’ out of fear that demanding Arabs to
‘walk the talk’ will jeopardize one’s status as an honest broker has not
and will not bring peace.
True peace cannot be based on a lie:
There has never been ‘a cycle of violence’. Resorting to such neutral
terminology requires the United States to acquiesce to and perpetuate a
gross misrepresentation of reality. Putting Israel and its neighbors on
the same footing totally ignores the asymmetry of the history of the
conflict and something as fundamental as ‘cause and effect’. The truth
is – one side has been the aggressor time-after-time. The Arabs have
been the initiators of more than five major wars, political and economic
boycotts and unbridled incitement. The Palestinians have launched
wave-after-wave of terrorism against Israelis and other Jews and made
hate the fuel that directs and runs their society. All this began before
there was a State of Israel, before there was an ‘occupation’ and it
continues unabated to this day.
In
response to these onslaughts, Israel has not demanded reparations for
the horrific causalities it has sustained in its fight for survival
against repeated Arab aggression; it has only asked that it be allowed
to live in peace with recognized and defendable borders and to develop
according to its own Jewish ethos. This is hardly an excessive demand.
Attempts
to cajole the Arabs to seek compromise and failure to put a price on
intransigence and intolerable behavior has only perpetuated the
conflict; encouraged further bloodshed and hardened Arab demands. It’s
time to call a spade a spade and demand some concrete ‘concessions’ from
the Arabs, not just Israel.
American
leaders need to have the courage to change course – to admit that
without reciprocity and responsibility on the part of the entire Arab
camp, there can be no genuine peace. It is time to demand that the Arab
states own up to their complicity in the conflict and demonstrate in
practice that they are dedicated to reconciliation and an end to the
conflict. If the Arabs are serious about peace what is needed is deeds,
not more words – beginning with an end to state-sponsored incitement and
an end to using refugees as a weapon.
Minimizing the Conflict Doesn’t Work. One of the historic flaws of past peace-making efforts is that they have been artificially limited in scope. Only a few decades ago attempts at ending the Arab Israeli conflict focused on bringing the Arab states to the negotiating table, assuming the Arab states could then dictate realities to the Palestinians. Then came Oslo. It took the opposite approach – assuming that the Palestinians hold the key to peace in the Middle East – that if an accommodation between Jews and Arabs in Israel, and the Territories can be reached, everything else will fall into place. Both paths artificially reduce the conflict to ‘manageable size’, while true peace hinges on a comprehensive settlement both in terms of the parties and the issues.
For a real peace to evolved, it must encompass the entire Arab world,
not just Palestinians vs. Israel. Comprehensive means one cannot leave
rejectionists and extremists – be they Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia or
Hezbollah and Hamas – free to follow their own anti-Israel agendas and
call it ‘peace.’ Moderate Arab states do not have to embrace Israel as a
bosom buddy, but comprehensive peace does
mean squarely facing a host of unsettled issues peacemakers prefer to
turn a blind eye to as long as there is no open warfare. Among the
substantive issues that can no longer be ignored:
· Arab countries of the Middle East – the ‘outer rim’ and close neighbors continue to arm themselves with weapons designed to destroy Israel – including weapons of mass destruction.
·
The Arab world remains a global hub for antisemitism and a hotbed of
vicious incitement and demonization of Israel. Even those with peace
treaties with Israel continue to reject Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state or pursue polities that will ensure Israel remains a Jewish state.
·
Arab countries presumably at peace with Israel have increasingly
crossed the line between a ‘cold peace’ and unacceptable behavior. Using
Palestinians as a ‘proxy,’ and encouraging Palestinian terrorism and
impractical demands of Israel, can hardly pass for ‘peace.’
Sweeping Tough Problems Under the Carpet or ‘Saving them for Later’ Breeds Dangerous Illusions.
A comprehensive peace must avoid the pitfall of Oslo, Wye, Mitchell,
Tenet, Zuni, Camp David II, and the Road Map, accords that suffered from
the ultimate of anomalies. More than a decade of negotiations and
interim agreements ‘drained the peace process of content’ while at the
same time ‘gaining momentum.’ A momentum that resulted in an
unprecedented wave of terrorism with over 1,500 Israelis murdered.
How does it work?
Time-and-again the tough issues – the ‘land mines’ on the road to peace
with the Palestinians, have been ‘conveniently overlooked.’ Every time
an issue of substance has resurfaced, the parties have pass over the
loaded ‘land mine’ to prevent an impasse that would bring down the peace
process … carefully reburying these time bombs ‘down the road.’
Thus,
the peace process ‘went forward,’ interim agreement after interim
agreement, until all the land mines, such as Jerusalem and the Right of
Return, came to rest – ready and waiting to explode ‘on the threshold of
peace.’ The folly was assuming that the
so-called momentum created by the ‘process’ would ultimately allow the
parties to jump over these barriers in the last minute of the game at
Camp David when Arafat and Barak came to hammer out a final status
agreement in July 2000. That did not happen, could not happen, because
objectively, in terms of substance
, for seven years, the process of conflict resolution between
Palestinians and Jews has been confined to small increments and a host
of issues of marginal importance.
Illusion of process and progress. This has been the core essence of Oslo: the peace process’ most lasting legacy has been the creation of an illusion of ‘process’. The illusion of
‘progress’ has not merely left Washington and Jerusalem disappointed.
It was responsible for raising the ‘Return’ expectations among
Palestinians to a fever pitch.
This mistake should not be repeated. Yet,
today other forms of ‘removing the land mines and burying them further
down the road’ continue to surface: One is the road map which makes a
Palestinian state a forgone conclusion, independent of solving the
refugee problem and final borders – one of the latest ‘creative
solutions’ being floated in the marketplace of ideas. A road maps for
further strife down the road, not reconciliation. The ten year Oslo
experiment in limited Palestinian autonomy
under the Palestinian Authority has produced but another Arab
dictatorial polity rift with civil rights violations that is as much a
danger to its people as its neighbors; an independent Palestinian state will create just the kind of rogue state that the United States is in the process of eliminating elsewhere.
Peace-makers must deal with the fundamentals – including the substantive issues that concern both
Israelis and Palestinians and those that concern the Arab world as a
whole. A world that has been left in abeyance or swept under the carpet.
If these substantive issues cannot be solved, one must accept this
reality – not call it peace.
·
The barrier to peace is not borders or territory. It is the refusal of
the Arabs to accept the legitimacy of Israel as a Jewish state and the
right of Israel to resist solutions that are designed to compromise its
‘Jewish nature.’
· The Palestinian-Israeli conflict is the core of a much larger conflict between Israel and the Arab world. One cannot settle for less than an integrated
solution – one that spans the entire Arab world of which the
Palestinians are only a part. The objective of peacemakers cannot be
less than a genuine ‘just and lasting peace,’ not cosmetic stop-gap
measure that require Israel to make concessions while leaving explosive
issues ready to flare up in the future.
·
Israel did not start this conflict nor does it perpetrate it, unless
one accepts the premise that Jews have no right to be in their ancient
homeland and should all go back to Poland and Baghdad. Incitement must
end. Hatred can’t be left to fester while pretending to ‘cement a
peace.’ Resolution of both Arab and Israeli refugee problem must be a
pillar of any genuine peace process.
Israelis
accept that there must be a compromise. They seek ‘accommodation’
although they are deeply divided over the extent of concessions and
risk-taking Israel should agree to. Palestinians, on the other hand, do
not seek accommodation but ‘justice’ – a quality which they frame in
absolute terms, refusing to even consider that their adversaries – the
Israelis – might also have ‘just rights’ that need to be addressed.
Arab
states must accept a solution to the conflict that do not undermine
Israel’s right to live as a Jewish state. Acceptance of Israel’s
Jewishness requires the Arab states play an active and positive role in
resettling the Arab refugees they helped to create – resettling them
within the vast area of the Middle East.
What
has stymied a solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict is the
unwillingness of Arabs as a whole and Palestinians in particular to
recognize the legitimacy of Jewish claims and rights, along side Arab
claims and rights – a breakthrough without which there can be no talk of
ending the conflict.
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