COMMENTARY
U.S. Must Define Peace Terms
Next step is to set
parameters for a settlement in the Mideast.
By EDWARD P. DJEREJIAN
and SHIBLEY TELHAMI
Edward P. Djerejian, director of the James A. Baker III Institute for
Public Policy at Rice University, is a former U.S. ambassador to Syria
and Israel. Shibley Telhami is a professor of government an
May 10 2002
Events of the past few weeks have changed the diplomatic picture for the
United States and rendered incremental diplomacy in the Middle East nearly
impossible.
The Bush administration has made some important moves in defining a clear
American position on issues of final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. It has endorsed the concept of a viable Palestinian state based
on U.N. resolutions and has supported the Mitchell commission report calling
for an end to terrorism and violence and a freeze on Israeli settlements.
It has supported the Saudi initiative calling for normal peaceful relations
between Israel and Arab states once Israel withdraws from the occupied
territories.
We must now take the next step: articulating the parameters or framework
for a final settlement. Such an approach can succeed only if the president
makes the case to the American people that Arab-Israeli peacemaking is
central to U.S. interests. As has been evident from the recent suicide
bombings and the death and destruction in the West Bank, the consequences
of further escalation include regional instability, tension among the
United States, Arab and Muslim countries and Europe, and serious obstacles
to the global war on terrorism and to Iraq policy. Nothing short of bold
diplomacy can turn the tide.
This process could begin with securing the endorsement of the U.N. Security
Council for a proposed framework, which could be followed by inviting
Arab and Israeli leaders to an international conference to determine the
details of a plan within a mutually agreed-on time frame. Many details
still would have to be negotiated, but the prospects of success would
be significantly enhanced once the endgame was known.
Although there is no guarantee that Israeli and Arab leaders would come,
they would face a unified international position if they did not. More
important, they would face their publics. Most Israelis and Palestinians
want a peaceful deal but still support violent means because they don't
see a peaceful solution on the horizon.
Today, the American public sees foreign policy as a priority issue and
is fully mobilized behind President Bush's campaign against terrorism.
Recent national opinion surveys indicate that a U.S. majority believes
that the Palestinian-Israeli issue has become more important since Sept.
11, supports administration involvement in Mideast peace efforts and supports
the call for an international conference. Given the bloodshed in the past
few weeks, the international community--particularly Arab governments
and Europeans--greatly fears the consequences of escalation and thus would
rally behind peacemaking efforts.
The Israeli and the Palestinian leadership must accept the reality that
there will be no end to the conflict unless each side gives up part of
its national dream. For the Palestinians, this would mean forgoing actual
return of a significant number of refugees to territories within Israel's
1967 borders. The Israelis would have to let go of the vision of "Judea
and Samaria" ("Greater Israel") and give up Israeli settlements in the
West Bank and Gaza. The Palestinian dream would destroy the Jewish nature
of the Israeli state, and the Israeli dream would prohibit the establishment
of a truly independent and geographically contiguous and viable Palestinian
state.
The parameters of a comprehensive settlement have been delineated since
1967 in U.N. resolutions and U.S. initiatives, through Democratic and
Republican administrations, and especially beginning with the Madrid peace
conference of 1991. The parties themselves made significant progress in
direct negotiations, including those at Taba, Egypt, in 2000 and 2001.
By making the case to the American people and taking the lead in articulating
the framework of a final settlement toward which Israelis, Palestinians,
Syrians and Lebanese can aspire, the Bush administration
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