t
is now a well-grounded fact that Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas is not interested in a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict • All sides want the peace talks to continue, but also know
that they will not lead to anything.
Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a
past meeting in Washington
|
Photo credit: AP |
When a senior official very close to Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was asked this week to give the reason why
the talks with the Palestinians collapsed -- for the time being, at
least -- he began to recount a decisive meeting that the prime minister
held with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas approximately
five years ago.
According to the high-ranking official,
Netanyahu offered Abbas the option of holding marathon talks, face to
face, "until we reach an agreement." Netanyahu looked Abbas in the eye
and said, "I am serious." But, according to the source, Abbas said he
was willing to begin a process, but not to reach the end of the conflict
and the end of demands. The high-ranking official hit the opinion of
many on the mark: Abbas is not interested in a solution. If that was
once a cautious assessment, it is now a well-grounded fact. The trust of
the prime minister and the rest of the high-ranking officials in Abbas
and his establishment is close to zero.
* * *
It is impossible to examine the ongoing crisis
this week without looking backward. In 2009, during his second term in
office, Netanyahu said in the Bar-Ilan speech that he was willing to
implement the two-state solution, moved toward a construction freeze in
the settlements, released terrorists, ratified the principle of land
swaps and sketched the borders of the Palestinian state. From this, one
might have concluded that he had also agreed to concessions deep inside
the Jordan Valley region and in isolated communities on the mountain
strip.
And Abbas? He kept to his positions, stating
that he was faithful mainly to the bottom line: the establishment of a
Palestinian state with land swaps, the division of Jerusalem, with no
concessions regarding the refugees or recognition of the State of Israel
as the home for the Jewish people.
Despite his stubborn refusal, if that is so,
Abbas is the big winner of the past week. U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry blamed Israel for the talks' failure. Even if he did not mean it,
and even if the officials of the State Department hurried to repair the
damage, it is obvious to everyone that the damage has already been done.
While Kerry knows that Abbas is not the most faithful party to the
peace process, he views Israel as the stronger country and the one able
to bring about change, but refuses to close a deal.
Kerry said that Netanyahu had not fulfilled
his commitments or followed through on the government's decision to
release the 26 prisoners in the fourth installment. So Abbas can feel
completely free to embark on the next step, from which there is no way
back -- a request to join 15 international U.N. conventions.
Abbas arrived in Cairo this past Wednesday and
updated the members of the Arab League on the new option that had been
created: 150 international organizations and groups in the U.N. that
could be joined. If Israel should stop transferring tax revenues or the
United States should stop its support, the Arab League will serve as a
safety net. To this stormy atmosphere should be added the fact that on
the same day, Israel issued a tender for 708 housing units in
Jerusalem's Gilo neighborhood, a fact that pained the Palestinians.
Their usual statement to the Americans about construction over the Green
Line and in Jerusalem is: "It is an unhelpful act."
According to the Americans, Netanyahu pulled
the political rope a bit too much in the wake of internal political
constraints within the Likud and Habayit Hayehudi. He decided not to
carry out the fourth installment as long as there was no Palestinian
commitment to continue the talks. Economy and Trade Minister Naftali
Bennett, the chairman of Habayit Hayehudi, likened Abbas this week to a
merchant who runs off with the goods that he was supposed to provide,
but demands the final payment. Israeli officials explain that Kerry was
actually the one who was supposed to make sure that the talks would
continue. But Kerry failed, and in his frustration, he looked for
someone to blame.
Despite his failure, Kerry conceptualized the
crisis situation properly: the parties could be led to water, but could
not be made to drink. And maybe that is the whole story. In Jerusalem
and Ramallah, the level of trust in the other side is zero, but the
sides continue to try to gain time. Not because anyone expects
developments or an agreement, but to have quiet and maintain the current
situation.
What Lieberman wants
Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon loves his job.
One can see on his face how much he enjoys it. He visits army bases or
ground maneuvers every week. Ya'alon did something new this week, and
called for the abandonment of the conception that we must continue the
talks with the Palestinians. "I am not a prophet of doom. I am a
realist," he said. "Unfortunately, I find myself saying 'I told you so'
again and again. For eight months, Abu Mazen [Abbas] has been saying
that he has no intention of recognizing Israel as the Jewish people's
national home, giving up the right of return or holding talks about the
end of the conflict and the end of the demands.
"That is why I have been shouting for 20 years
that every time the Palestinians need to make decisions, they run away
and try to blame us. On the festival of liberation, we need to liberate
ourselves from the intellectual slavery of irrelevant concepts about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and understand the essence of the
conflict, and deal with it accordingly."
A situation assessment regarding how to act
during the later talks took place at the White House on Wednesday. U.S.
President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden attended. After the
meeting, Kerry met with Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who was
visiting New York and Washington. Lieberman did not change his mind
about Abbas either, and like Ya'alon, he spoke his mind freely. "We need
to tell the truth: the Palestinians in general and Abu Mazen in
particular are not interested in reaching an agreement with us."
And diplomatic and political circles in
Jerusalem wonder what Lieberman really wants after he announced that a
Russian-speaking prime minister was a realistic option. But regarding
Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, the head of the Israeli negotiating team,
there is no question about the political turmoil. Everyone is in
complete agreement that she, like Abbas, is interested in buying time by
holding profound talks on the subject "until the conditions are right."
What Livni and Lieberman have in common is that,
according to all the polls, if elections were to be held now, both would
win a similar number of seats -- about five. Now, as the failure of the
talks seems closer than ever, Livni raises the possibility once more of
"direct talks between the leaders," which was raised in former Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert's government as well. Livni was there, too. Then,
as now, "the process did not come to fruition." And opposite all of them
is Habayit Hayehudi, announcing with an ongoing smile: We came to work
and to build, and as long as the building goes on, the sky is the limit.
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