by Elliott Abrams
Secretary of State
Kerry continues his "peace-process" efforts at hammering out a
comprehensive deal, or at least a framework deal, between Israelis and
Palestinians.
Two recent articles are reminders that he is unlikely to succeed. In the first,
the Arab League says it rejects a continued Israeli troop presence on
the eastern border of a future state of Palestine, a proposal
Palestinians say was floated by the U.S. earlier this month. Arab League
chief Nabil Al-Arabi said Saturday no peace deal would work with
Israeli presence in a Palestinian state.
Why is this critical? Because Palestinian president Abbas is hiding behind the Arab League, as the second article shows:
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas informed the Arab League
about the upcoming proposal, saying it would contain U.S. suggestions
regarding the borders of the future Palestinian state, Mohammad Sbeih,
secretary-general of Palestinian affairs at the Arab League, said. Abbas
told the League that "once he receives the American proposal he will
not respond but will present it to Arab nations to make a joint
decision."
In other words, Abbas
will not anger Kerry by saying "no." He will have the Arab League say
no, and then he can tell Kerry "my hands are tied". That second article,
from the Palestinian new agency Ma'an, also sets out Abbas’s views:
-- Abbas would accept a
Palestinian state with the entirety of East Jerusalem as its capital,
with limited land swaps so long as the lands being traded were of equal
value.
-- He would accept an incremental withdrawal of Israeli troops from Palestinian land, allowing them up to three years to leave.
-- He would reject the
idea of any permanent Israeli military presence in the Jordan Valley,
but would welcome an international peacekeeping presence.
-- He would refuse to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.
-- He would reject any interim agreement, calling instead for a final solution.
-- He would reject any
proposal that required Palestine to be an unarmed state, but said he
would not get involved in an "arms race".
Perhaps those are
negotiating positions, meant to be abandoned as soon as real talks
begin, but I doubt it -- and that is why a comprehensive deal between
Israel and the PLO is not in the cards. For example when Abbas talks of
"the entirety of East Jerusalem" he includes areas that Israel will not
give up -- and perhaps he even means the Western Wall and Jewish Quarter
of Jerusalem, which were, after all, part of Jordanian-ruled Jerusalem
until 1967. If he rejects an interim agreement, he is rejecting the only
kind of deal that’s realistic today. And as to Palestinian arms, it has
been agreed for many years that a Palestinian state would have to be
"demilitarized."
It is not clear what
that means, nor what he means by rejecting "unarmed." It has long been
understood that the state would have police forces and something
equivalent to a national gendarmerie, but would not have an air force or
an army with heavy weaponry -- and would not have military alliances
with other states that could threaten Israel.
The only good news here
is Abbas’s statement that while Israel could not have a "permanent"
military presence in the Jordan Valley, he appears to understand that
withdrawal will not be immediate. Abbas suggests three years; Secretary
Kerry has apparently suggested 10 or 15. Of greater interest are the
news stories reporting that it was not Israel but Jordan that convinced
Kerry that the IDF must stay that long to protect the security of
Israel, Jordan, and the new state of Palestine. It must have been a
wake-up call for Kerry to hear that line not in Jerusalem, but in Amman.
Kerry is apparently
seeking a sort of "framework agreement," meaning that he understands a
comprehensive agreement is currently impossible but the Palestinians
won’t accept an interim agreement. In my view a framework agreement is a
bad choice. Here is why: In a final agreement, both sides make
extremely difficult concessions and compromises but get a lot for it.
The Palestinians, in theory, get their sovereign state, and the Israelis
get peace with all the Arab states and an end to the conflict and all
claims made against them. In a framework agreement, the concessions and
compromises are announced so the political cost is very high -- but
neither side gets anything for it.
They pay the price but
get no reward for doing so. Why would any political leader go for that?
It has been suggested that if Kerry outlines a framework agreement and
both sides reject it (i.e. say they cannot accept it in its entirety),
the European Union will introduce the text as a United Nations
resolution. That is plausible, but where does that get anyone? Not one
step closer to peace.
From "Pressure Points" by Elliot Abrams. Reprinted with permission from the Council on Foreign Relations.
Elliott Abrams is a
senior fellow for Middle East Studies at the Council on Foreign
Relations. This piece can be found on
Abrams' blog "Pressure Points" here.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=6761
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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