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Piece Conference
By Barry Rubin
In what is being described as a semi-official leak, the contents of a White House letter to Israel has been published saying what the Obama Administration will offer that country if it extends the moratorium on building inside West Bank settlements. The specific proposals reveal once again how the White House doesn’t quite seem to understand the situation.
First and foremost, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu couldn’t continue the freeze on building because there isn’t enough support in his coalition for doing so. Thus, minor U.S. offers don’t change that fact in any way.
Second, the main underlying problem is lack of confidence that the Palestinian Authority (PA) wants peace with Israel, is willing to compromise, or will implement any of its promises in future. Again, these offers don’t relate to that fact.
When we consider the specifics, these points all become clearer. There are five points:
First, the administration offers not to ask for an extension of the freeze for more than two months. Why two months, why not three or four? Why not two weeks?
Hmm, readers, what is happening within two months? The U.S. election! The implication is that the Obama Administration is offering Israel the following basic deal: Make us look good until the vote and we will give you a pay-off.
That’s it. Because the only alternative view is that the United States believes that the once-every-two-week talks will make such dramatic progress in two months that both Israel and the Palestinians will be on the verge of peace or an end to the freeze won’t matter.
Is that credible? No. And so when press reports say that the White House is angry that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the offer we can well understand why this is so. It certainly isn't going to pressure the PA to give in, which is the other alternative.The collapse of the peace talks on the verge of the November elections don't make it look good, and the administration cannot do anything to Israel until later.
Second, the United States agrees that it would support measures to prevent the smuggling of weapons and terrorists into Israel after a Palestinian state is established. This is interpreted as allowing for several years Israeli forces to stay in the Jordan valley.
This is nice but Israel knows that the PA would never agree and that the U.S. government isn’t going to do a lot of arm twisting to get it to change its position. Moreover, this would set up a situation in which an isolated Israeli force would be subject to attack by terrorists and international condemnation when it had to intercept or kill terrorists.
While not exactly the same thing, the United States and the “international community” promised to stop cross-border weapons’ smuggling into Lebanon in 2006 and four years later not a single weapon has been intercepted. True, in this case Israeli troops would be doing the work but the skepticism of their getting international support remains.
Third, the letter promises the U.S. government would veto any UN Security Council resolution against Israel for the next year. This is insulting. Historically, the United States has watered-down, blocked, or vetoed such resolutions. So this “concession” in fact takes back a previous policy. It signals to Israeli leaders that the current administration isn’t exactly reliable. And, of course, it suggests that after the year is over Washington will not veto such resolutions, a big step backward.
Fourth, the administration pledges to talk with Israel and Arab states about a, "regional security architecture." Wow, that can be expected to yield precisely…zero.
And finally, the United States will sell more weapons to Israel after there is a peace agreement and the creation of a Palestinian state. Well, that’s pretty obvious, isn’t it? Again, suggesting that this would happen if Israel freezes construction for two months also simultaneously suggests that it won’t happen otherwise. Like the veto point, it actually withdraws something Israel was previously expecting.
According to the Makovsky article, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu politely pointed out that when the United States originally demanded the freeze it promised that it would secure concessions from Arab states. This didn’t happen. It also promised that the Palestinians would be responsive and fulfill their commitments. That didn’t happen either. Indeed, they refused to negotiate until the last minute and then did so, partly, just to get the freeze extended still further.
He’s right. But it isn’t his job to point out what I’m telling you couldn’t be more obvious: this is a deal motivated by domestic political benefit for the administration, not the strategic interests of the United States or the cause of peace.
Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest books are The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). The website of the GLORIA Center is at http://www.gloria-center.org and of his blog, Rubin Reports, http://www.rubinreports.blogspot.com.