by Yoram Ettinger
Apparently, Kerry takes lightly the failure of the Palestinian leadership to pass any of the crucial tests of its commitment to peaceful coexistence
The term "suspension of
 disbelief" refers to the well-intentioned subordination of documented 
facts and common sense to zeal and wishful thinking, sacrificing 
long-term realism on the altar of oversimplification and short-term 
gratification and convenience.
U.S. Secretary of State
 John Kerry's Dec. 28 speech was replete with suspension of disbelief 
and totally inconsistent with the reality in the Middle East. But it was
 consistent with his 31-year foreign policy track record.
Kerry was the top 
frequent-flying senator to Damascus, allowing his own idyllic vision of 
the globe and his hosts' duplicitous rhetoric to cloud reality. He 
contended that first Hafez Assad and then Bashar Assad -- two of the 
most ferocious, cold-blooded dictators in the world -- were constructive
 leaders, referring to Bashar Assad as a generous reformer and a man of 
his word, even while the Syrian president was terrorizing his people and
 facilitating the infiltration into Iraq of Islamic terrorists whose aim
 was to murder Americans. 
In his 1997 book "The 
New War," Kerry demonstrated an inclination to dismiss the writing on 
the wall when in conflict with wishful thinking: "Terrorist 
organizations with specific political agendas may be encouraged and 
emboldened by Yasser Arafat's transformation from outlaw to statesman." 
In March 2011, Kerry 
stated: "My judgment is that Syria will move, Syria will change as it 
embraces a legitimate relationship with the U.S. and the West." Indeed, 
Syria has changed. But, contrary to Kerry's assessment, not in a good 
way, with hundreds of thousands of people killed and millions displaced 
and made refugees.
In 2012, Kerry 
contended that the Arab Street was transitioning toward democracy, "the 
most important geo-strategic shift since the fall of the Berlin Wall." 
He referred to the Arab uprisings as an "Arab Spring" and to the regime 
changes in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Yemen as youth and Facebook 
revolutions. Kerry supported regime change in Libya, which has 
transformed Libya into a leading global platform of Islamic terrorism.
Kerry's road map to peace has stumbled over some critical pitfalls that he has refused to see.
In his latest speech, 
Kerry maintained that the crux of the failure to conclude a peace 
agreement has been lack of trust, saying: "Negotiations [between Israel 
and the Palestinian Authority] did not fail because gaps were too wide, 
but because the level of trust was too low." 
Apparently, Kerry takes
 lightly the failure of the Palestinian leadership to pass any of the 
crucial tests of its commitment to peaceful coexistence -- in 1993 (Oslo
 Accords), 2000 (Prime Minister Ehud Barak's unprecedented proposals) 
and 2005 (the uprooting of all Jewish settlements from Gaza) -- by 
responding to unparalleled Israeli territorial and diplomatic 
concessions with a dramatic escalation of hate education and terrorism. 
The Palestinians' notorious hate education and incitement have resulted 
in an effective production line of terrorists, and are the most 
authentic reflection of the Palestinian strategic goal. 
Contrary to Kerry's 
observation, the crux of the failure has been the inherent nature of the
 Palestinian leadership, highlighted by its long-term track record from 
the 19th century until today: from waves of anti-Jewish terrorism 
through the collaborations with Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union and East 
European Communist regimes, Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini, Iraq's Saddam 
Hussein, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, and Islamic, Asian, African, 
European and Latin American terror organizations.
While Palestinian 
leaders are welcome by the U.S. State Department with a "red carpet," 
Arab leaders welcome them with "shabby rugs" in response to the 
Palestinian violent back-stabbing of Arab hosts (Egypt, Syria, Jordan, 
Lebanon and, most painfully, Kuwait in 1990). 
Kerry stated that "the 
two-state solution is the only way to achieve a just and lasting peace 
between Israelis and Palestinians" and that the U.N. vote "was about 
preserving the two-state solution" and was in accordance with U.S. 
values. 
However, the track 
record of the Palestinian leadership certifies that a Palestinian state 
would be another rogue, violent regime, undermining U.S. values and 
national security, adding fuel to the regional fire, constituting a 
lethal threat to the vulnerable pro-U.S. Hashemite regime in Jordan -- 
with potential spillover into Saudi Arabia and the pro-U.S. Gulf states 
-- undermining stability in Egypt, upgrading the potential of a 
pro-ayatollah bloc from Teheran to Ramallah, providing port facilities 
to the Russian (and possibly Chinese and Iranian) navy in the Eastern 
Mediterranean, and adding another anti-U.S. vote at the already 
anti-U.S. United Nations.
Once again, Kerry is 
attempting to scare the Jewish state into reckless concessions, implying
 that the only way to preserve a Jewish majority is by conceding Jewish 
geography (the mountain ridges of Judea and Samaria). Once again, he was
 restating inauthentic, manipulated Palestinian statistics, and ignoring
 the demographic reality in the combined area of Judea, Samaria and 
pre-1967 Israel: a growing 66% Jewish majority, unprecedented 
Westernization of the Arab population, and a robust Jewish demographic 
(fertility and net-migration). 
Kerry also misled the 
public when he claimed that U.N. Security Council Resolution 242 "called
 for the withdrawal of Israel from territory that it occupied in 1967 in
 return for peace and secure borders." Kerry failed to indicate that 
this resolution did not stipulate "all the territories"; that Israel had
 already complied with the resolution by conceding 90% of the territory 
when it evacuated the entire Sinai Peninsula; and that Israel fought a 
pre-emptive defensive war in 1967. He failed to mention that in 1988 
Jordan waived its claim to sovereignty over Judea and Samaria (which was
 recognized only by Britain and Pakistan); and that Israel possesses the
 best legal title over the area based on Articles 77 and 80 of the U.N. 
Charter, which upholds the 1922 League of Nations Mandate for Palestine,
 which aimed to establish a Jewish national home.
While Kerry attempts to
 coax Israel into reliance on security arrangements and guarantees, he 
fails to indicate that such tools are characterized by non-specificity, 
non-automaticity and ample escape routes that may doom Israel on a rainy
 day. The NATO treaty does not commit the U.S. to anything more than 
considering steps on behalf of an attacked NATO member "as it deems 
necessary." In 1954, President Dwight Eisenhower concluded a defense 
treaty with Taiwan, which was annulled by President Jimmy Carter with 
the support of Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court.
The U.S.'s and Israel's
 national security, and the pursuit of peace, require a long-term, 
tenacious commitment to realism, not oversimplification, short-term 
convenience and suspension of disbelief. The critical errors of the past
 have doomed a litany of well-meaning peace initiatives.
Yoram Ettinger
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=18047
Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.



