The president insisted at the
U.N. that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict must be resolved through direct
talks, but he has little leverage with Netanyahu and Abbas.
By Philip J. Crowley
President Barack Obama approaches the podium before addressing the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2011., Jason DeCrow / AP Photo
President
Obama reiterated at the United Nations this week that the solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict rests not through a U.N. resolution (which the
U.S. will veto) but through direct negotiation. While he’s right, the reality
is, you can’t get there from here, at least not any time soon.
There
literally is a roadmap to peace, but the parties are not currently prepared to
make the trip. They lack the political will, and the President the leverage, to
get a serious negotiation started, much less reaching the ultimate destination,
an actual agreement.
The
United States, for most of this year, has tried to create the right conditions
for negotiations to resume. The fact is, they don’t exist. There is no rapport
or trust between Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu. And President Obama does not have a strong enough
relationship with either man, particularly Netanyahu, to bridge that gap.
For
more than a decade, politics, not substance, has been the primary obstacle to
progress. The so-called final status issues—borders, security, refugees and
Jerusalem—are complex and emotional, with competing histories and narratives on
all sides, but broad parameters of a peace agreement are known.
Two
states would be formed based, as Obama outlined in May, on the 1967
borders—with adjustments. The states would share Jerusalem as a capital, under
international oversight. The vast majority of Palestinian refugees would
“return” to the new Palestinian state, or stay where they are. Since the
abilities of Palestinian security forces would be limited, an international
force would provide security assurances to both sides.
In
an actual negotiation, all sides would get something meaningful, and give up something
meaningful. Therein lies the fundamental problem. The current leaders do not
have sufficient political capital to achieve the deal outlined above.
Stung
by regional politics surrounding the Goldstone Report in 2009 and a false start
to negotiations last year, Abbas has made specific demands for a return to
direct talks: terms of reference, which the Obama attempted to satisfy with his
speech in May, and a settlement freeze in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Netanyahu granted a partial freeze once, but is unlikely to do so again,
certainly not for free.
Abbas
lost faith in the Obama administration after it failed to persuade Netanyahu to
extend the settlement moratorium. He knows his request for statehood and/or
elevated observer status at the U.N. is not a substitute for direct
negotiations. But he has already gained some additional leverage over the
process, particularly as countries such as France and Russia break with the
United States.
Given
the evaporation of the peace camp on the Israeli left, the only political
pressure on Netanyahu comes from within his coalition—from Avigdor Lieberman on
his right. Over time, the prime minister has made a convincing argument that
further steps outside direct talks, such as another settlement freeze, risk
bringing down the government. Its replacement would be even less willing to
negotiate. Thus, absent a meaningful “get” such as acknowledgement of Israel as
a Jewish state, which the Palestinians will not give in advance of
negotiations, Netanyahu will continue to say the right things but stand pat.
There
are valid concerns that, should the Palestinians mount an effective nonviolent
campaign based on rights rather than resistance, Israel may be further isolated
or delegitimized. However, given everything happening in the region, this
appears to be a risk Netanyahu is willing to take. For the moment, he already
has what he needs, the public assurance of a U.S. veto.
Obama’s
U.N. speech was primarily about domestic and international damage control. What
started two years ago as smart policy—Middle East peace is what American
presidents do—has lately created political risk. Already criticized across the
political spectrum for being too hard on Israel, the president was obviously
constrained, not wanting to jeopardize a key constituency, or give prospective
opponents a valuable wedge issue as the 2012 election approaches.
The
U.N. speech shored up his domestic political base, but at a cost. Whatever
happens, the credibility of the United States has been damaged. The extent will
depend on whether the U.S. is forced to actually exercise its veto of
Palestinian statehood.
Regardless,
one fact is clear. Wherever the peace process travels from here, the U.S. no
longer is its navigator. Right now, no one is.
-This commentary was published in The Daily Beast on 23/09/2011
-Philip J. (P.J.) Crowley is the 2011-2012 Omar Bradley Chair for Strategic Leadership at Dickinson College, Penn State University Dickinson School of Law and School of International Affairs, and the Army War College. He served as the assistant secretary of state for public affairs and spokesman for the United States Department of State from May 2009 until March 2011
-Philip J. (P.J.) Crowley is the 2011-2012 Omar Bradley Chair for Strategic Leadership at Dickinson College, Penn State University Dickinson School of Law and School of International Affairs, and the Army War College. He served as the assistant secretary of state for public affairs and spokesman for the United States Department of State from May 2009 until March 2011
No comments:
Post a Comment