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"Hard Mideast Truths" by Roger Cohen
From time to time, the
Palestine Center distributes
articles it believes will enhance understanding
of the Palestinian political
reality. The following article by Roger Cohen
was published in the The New York Times
on 11
February 2010. To view
this article online, please go to http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/12/opinion/12iht-edcohen.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss.
"Hard Mideast Truths "
By Roger
Cohen
For over a century
now, Zionism and Arab nationalism have failed
to find an accommodation in the Holy Land. Both
movements attempted to fill the space left by
collapsed empire, and it has been left to the
quasi-empire, the United States, to try to coax
them to peaceful coexistence. The attempt has
failed.
President Barack
Obama came to office more than a year ago
promising new thinking, outreach to the Muslim
world, and relentless focus on
Israel-Palestine. But nice speeches have given
way to sullen stalemate. I am told Obama and
the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
have a zero-chemistry relationship.
Domestic U.S.
politics constrain innovative thought — even
open debate — on the process without end that
is the peace search. As Aaron David Miller, who
long labored in the trenches of that process,
once observed, the United States ends up as
“Israel’s lawyer” rather than an honest broker.
The upside for an American congressman in
speaking out for Palestine is
nonexistent.
I don’t see these
constraints shifting much, but the need for
Obama to honor his election promise grows. The
conflict gnaws at U.S. security, eats away at
whatever remote possibility of a two-state
solution is left, clouds Israel’s future,
scatters Palestinians and devours every attempt
to bridge the West and Islam.
Here’s what I
believe. Centuries of persecution culminating
in the Holocaust created a moral imperative for
a Jewish homeland, Israel, and demand of
America that it safeguard that nation in the
breach.
But past
persecution of the Jews cannot be a license to
subjugate another people, the Palestinians. Nor
can the solemn U.S. promise to stand by Israel
be a blank check to the Jewish state when its
policies undermine stated American
aims.
One such Israeli
policy is the relentless settlement of the West
Bank. Two decades ago, James Baker, then
secretary of state, declared, “Forswear
annexation; stop settlement activity.”
Fast-forward 20 years to Barack Obama in Cairo:
“The United States does not accept the
legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements.”
In the interim the number of settlers almost
quadrupled from about 78,000 in 1990 to around
300,000 last year.
Since Obama spoke,
Netanyahu, while promising an almost-freeze,
has been planting saplings in settlements and
declaring them part of Israel for “eternity.”
In a normal relationship between allies — of
the kind I think America and Israel should have
— there would be consequences for such
defiance. In the special relationship between
the United States and Israel there are
none.
The U.S. objective
is a two-state peace. But day by day, square
meter by square meter, the physical space for
the second state, Palestine, is disappearing.
Can the Gaza sardine can and fractured
labyrinth of the West Bank now be seen as
anything but a grotesque caricature of a
putative state? America has allowed this
self-defeating process to advance to near
irreversibility.
In fact, it has
helped fund it. The settlements are expensive,
as is the security fence (hated “separation
wall” to the Palestinians) that is itself an
annexation mechanism. According to a recent
report by the Congressional Research Service,
U.S. aid to Israel totaled $28.9 billion over
the past decade, a sum that dwarfs aid to any
other nation and amounts to four times the
total gross domestic product of
Haiti.
It makes sense for
America to assure Israel’s security. It does
not make sense for America to bankroll Israeli
policies that undermine U.S. strategic
objectives.
This, too, I
believe: Through violence, anti-Semitic
incitation, and annihilationist threats,
Palestinian factions have contributed mightily
to the absence of peace and made it harder for
America to adopt the balance required. But the
impressive recent work of Prime Minister Salam
Fayyad in the West Bank shows that Palestinian
responsibility is no oxymoron and demands of
Israel a response less abject than creeping
annexation.
And this: the
“existential threat” to Israel is overplayed.
It is no feeble David facing an Arab (or
Arab-Persian) Goliath. Armed with a formidable
nuclear deterrent, Israel is by far the
strongest state in the region. Room exists for
America to step back and apply pressure without
compromising Israeli security.
And this: Obama
needs to work harder on overcoming Palestinian
division, a prerequisite for peace, rather than
playing the no-credible-interlocutor Israeli
game. The Hamas charter is vile. But the
breakthrough Oslo accords were negotiated in
1993, three years before the Palestine
Liberation Organization revoked the
annihilationist clauses in its charter. When
Arafat and Rabin shook hands on the White House
lawn, that destroy-Israel charter was intact.
Things change through negotiation, not
otherwise. If there are Taliban elements worth
engaging, are there really no such elements in
the broad movements that are Hamas and
Hezbollah?
If there are not
two states there will be one state between the
river and the sea and very soon there will be
more Palestinian Arabs in it than Jews. What
then will become of the Zionist
dream?
It’s time for Obama
to ask such tough questions in public and
demand of Israel that it work in practice to
share the land rather than divide and rule
it.
Roger
Cohen
is a columnist for The
New York Times.
The
views
expressed in this article are those of the
author and do not necessarily
reflect
those of The Jerusalem
Fund.