COMMENTARY
Sharon-Bush Plan Isn't the Last Word
Palestinians, wrongly left out of these talks, still have
room to bargain.
By Dennis Ross
April 16, 2004
In diplomacy, there are times when process and substance take on equal importance.
Ideas that might be acceptable, or at least tolerable, if presented one
way become wholly unacceptable when presented another way.
That may help explain some of the backlash against President Bush's announcement
Wednesday that the U.S. would endorse Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's
unilateral plans for the West Bank and Gaza Strip. By failing to include
the Palestinians in the discussions, Bush clearly ruffled feathers.
But did he dramatically transform Washington's positions on peace, as the
Palestinians are now saying? Did he surrender the United States' traditional
role as an honest broker by tilting overwhelmingly to the Israeli side?
Did he close off the possibility of future Israeli-Palestinian negotiations
by determining the outcome in advance?
I think not. A closer look at what Bush actually committed to suggests that
the U.S. is neither precluding future negotiations nor determining their
outcome.
In his letter to Sharon, while explaining that Israel should not have to
fully withdraw to the 1949 armistice lines but should be allowed instead
to maintain sovereignty over several Jewish "population centers" in the
West Bank, the president stated clearly that "any final status agreement
will only be achieved on the basis of mutually agreed changes that reflect
these realities." That means that although the U.S. may have an opinion
on the subject, there can be no final borders drawn without Palestinian
approval. Palestinians will be free to insist on arrangements, including
territorial compensation, to make a final agreement acceptable to them.
Similarly, Bush expressed his belief that a "just, fair and realistic" solution
would require refugees to be settled in a future Palestinian state rather
than in Israel — but he never suggested that there should not be negotiations
on the subject. His statement, which frankly reflects a reality that many
people on both sides already acknowledge privately, is simply an American
judgment on the direction those talks should take. In that sense, it is
similar to Bush's earlier call for an independent Palestinian state —
not American policy prior to this administration — which reflected
his belief that there would be no solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
without the creation of such a state.
So if there's still plenty of room for negotiation, why are the Palestinians
so angry? Simply put, the Palestinians feel they've been excluded from the
process.
And they're right. The U.S.-Israeli letters were worked out without any
parallel talks with the Palestinians. Such discussions — focusing
on how the Palestinians could take advantage of Sharon's plan to evacuate
the Gaza settlements — could have tempered their response. Palestinians
might still have had concerns, but at least their leaders could have pointed
to their own discussions with the administration and explained that they
would be seeking clarifications and assurances that Palestinian aspirations
could still be achieved through negotiations.
That would have made it easier to move forward from here. Building on the
Sharon initiative is critical. For the last three years, we have been locked
in a frozen situation of warfare between Israelis and Palestinians. There
has been no peace process, only a dialogue of violence. The Sharon initiative
at least creates the possibility for unfreezing the situation. By withdrawing
from Gaza and evacuating settlements there, and in some cases in the West
Bank, an opening is created for Palestinians to assume control in the areas
from which Israel departs.
Either Americans can help shape this new reality in a way that strengthens
Palestinians who believe in peaceful coexistence, or we can stand aside,
let the Israelis throw the keys over the fence and hope for the best after
the withdrawal. If that happens, we may find that Hamas gains in strength,
taking credit for the Israeli withdrawal — a confirmation that violence
pays off.
Surely, if there is to be any hope of ending the conflict, that must not
happen. In the months ahead, those Palestinians who don't seek a radical
Islamist future must rise to the challenge, assuming responsibility for
security and good government, and working — with our help —
to ensure that Israel's withdrawal helps their position. The stakes now
are very high for all of us.
Dennis Ross, director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy,
is a former U.S. envoy to the Middle East.
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
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