by David M. Weinberg
Michael Herzog is not a right-wing ideologue, and when his narrative undermines core beliefs of the global "consensus" against Israel regarding the diplomatic process -- and it does -- this should be noted.
Because the news is 
elsewhere, few have bothered to pay attention to the insider expose on 
the "Kerry peace process" published in The American Interest late last 
month by Brig. Gen. (res.) Michael Herzog. This is unfortunate, since 
Herzog blows many peace process myths to smithereens, and reveals both 
the artifice of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and the 
chicanery of former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
Herzog is a veteran 
Israeli peace processer, having participated in most of Israel's 
negotiations with the Palestinians, Syrians and Jordanians since 1993. 
He processed peace, or tried to, for Prime Ministers Yitzhak Rabin, Ehud
 Barak, Ehud Olmert and Benjamin Netanyahu, and worked closely with 
Tzipi Livni too. He was part of the Wye, Camp David, Taba, Annapolis and
 Kerry rounds of negotiation. He is also the brother of Zionist Union 
leader and Labor Party chairman Yitzhak Herzog.
So Herzog is not a 
right-wing ideologue, and when his narrative undermines core beliefs of 
the global "consensus" against Israel regarding the diplomatic process 
-- and it does -- this should be noted.
Herzog details the ups 
and down of the process led in 2013-2014 by Kerry, and layers this on 
the background of both public and secret talks that had been held 
previously. While he tries to be politically correct -- apportioning 
some blame on all sides for the failure of the effort, crediting Kerry 
for his commitment, and adhering to doctrine about two states being the 
"only" solution possible -- Herzog nevertheless bulldozes a ton of stale
 assumptions and false narratives.
Firstly, Herzog tells 
us that, contrary to what just about every world leader seems to think, 
Prime Minister Netanyahu was extraordinarily serious about negotiating 
peace with the Palestinian Authority, and he made significant 
concessions in the process; so much so, that he still dares not admit 
the details to the Israeli public and to his current coalition partners.
It is nevertheless 
clear from Herzog's telling (and from previous pieces, such as the 2014 
New Republic expose by Ben Birnbaum and Amir Tibon) that Netanyahu was 
ready to withdraw from vast tracts of Judea and Samaria to facilitate 
Palestinian statehood, venturing "well outside his natural comfort 
zone."
Secondly, Herzog makes 
it clear that Abbas did not really want an agreement of any sort, 
period. He was in the process to cry on the shoulders of then U.S. 
President Barack Obama and Kerry about Palestinian rights; to pocket 
concessions from Israel without being willing himself to compromise on 
any concrete issue or sign on any dotted lines; and to ensure failure of
 the talks with blame heaped on Israel, and thus justify breaking 
previous Palestinian commitments.
Abbas pretended to 
negotiate before "losing interest"; used Hamas to doom the talks; and 
ran to international institutions to criminalize and isolate Israel with
 failed talks as his excuse. He still expects the international 
community to "deliver" Israeli withdrawals on a silver platter, without 
tying the hands of the Palestinian state to any concrete end-game 
commitments.
Thirdly, Herzog makes 
it clear that it is simply not true -- not even remotely -- that the 
parameters for a settlement between Israel and Palestinians are 
"well-known," "clear," "obvious," and "within easy reach" if only brave 
leaders step forward. 
"Unlike some simplistic
 notions out there," writes Herzog, and despite 20 years of Oslo-era 
peace processing, "the gaps are significant and widened by the weight of
 history, religion, emotions, and domestic politics."
Fourthly, the most 
interesting and disturbing of Herzog's revelations relate to the 
disastrous negotiating dynamics dictated by John Kerry.
To begin with, Kerry 
drove the notion that there was a constant need to reward Abbas for 
coming to, and staying at, the negotiating table. This fed Palestinian 
appetites, and allowed Abbas to continually blackmail the U.S. and 
Israel for concessions and sweeteners (like the release of Palestinian 
terrorists from Israel jails).
Then when the talks 
reached a stalemate, Kerry's approach was again to reward the 
Palestinians for their obduracy (by moving American goalposts on the 
issues and begging Abbas to stay engaged), and to punish Israel for its 
flexibility (by pressuring Netanyahu for more sweeteners and concrete 
concessions).
In fact, according to 
Herzog, Israel began to realize that Kerry was negotiating mainly with 
and against Israel, while conducting substantially no such parallel 
process with Abbas. When the crunch came and it was finally time to prod
 Abbas into accepting a proposed U.S. framework for continuing the 
talks, "it was too little too late. Abu Mazen (Abbas) has shut down ... 
no longer interested or invested in the process."
In other words, the 
gullible Kerry "discovered" only at the end of the process that Abbas 
had been stringing him along with no intention of budging.
(Herzog also charges 
Kerry with near-messianic hubris, bull-in-a-china-shop behavior, 
mismanagement, and deliberate misrepresentation of Israeli positions; 
all fodder for future analysis. And in my view, Herzog does so much too 
softly).
Fifth, up against Abbas
 in "shutdown mode," Obama and Kerry offered-up significant concessions 
to Abbas in a desperate attempt to re-engage him.
This involved "new 
ideas and formulations that departed from traditional official U.S. 
positions and tilted towards Abbas' positions (including an explicit 
confirmation of a Palestinian capital in Jerusalem and equivalent land 
swaps) -- positions that were never shared with Israel."
What happened next? 
Abbas walked away without acceding to America's entreaties, knowing full
 well that Obama would never blame him for failure of the process, and 
knowing that America's new positions were essentially in his pocket.
And then, sure enough, 
Kerry enunciated these moves away from Israel as official Obama 
administration policy, when he harangued Israel (and not the 
Palestinians) in an overwrought 70-minute sermon at the State Department
 in December.
Sixth and perhaps most 
importantly, Herzog lays bare American unfairness to Israel on the 
settlement issue. When he testified before Congress, Kerry publicly 
blamed Israeli housing starts in the territories for the failure of his 
negotiating effort. I worked so hard to bring peace, he wailed, and then
 poof, the entire effort went up in smoke because of Netanyahu's damned 
settlements.
Kerry's venality here 
is plain. Herzog makes it clear that Netanyahu never promised to freeze 
settlement construction for the duration of the talks. On the contrary: 
Israel had fully informed Kerry it would announce construction of up to 
1,500 housing units beyond the Green Line to coincide with every phase 
of terrorist releases. This was the price of getting the very 
controversial and dangerous prisoner releases through the Israeli 
cabinet.
In other words, having 
improperly promised Abbas and foisted upon Israel these prisoner 
releases, Kerry knew that some construction in settlement blocs adjacent
 to the 1967 line (in areas that even Palestinian maps in previous 
negotiations indicated would be part of Israel) would follow. Abbas knew
 this too, and they both went along with this. So, settlements certainly
 were not the main reason behind the failure of the talks, Herzog 
writes. And yet, Kerry's "poof" vindictively and falsely pinned the 
failure on settlement activity; an American crime against Israel that 
has skewed the global diplomatic narrative ever since.
In the end, Herzog's 
essay is more than an impeachment of Obama and Kerry. It is an 
indictment of the overall Oslo paradigm (even though Herzog won't say 
this himself).
His essay makes it 
obvious that, alas, the Palestinian Authority under Abbas is not a 
"willing or capable" peace partner for the visible future; isn't truly 
seeking an end of conflict and all outstanding claims; and its 
bottom-line is nowhere near that of even the most flexible Israeli 
government.
Therefore, it is time for a new approach in dealing with the conflict. 
"The sea changes in 
relations between major Arab states and Israel," concludes Herzog, allow
 for emergence of a solution strategy "in a broader regional context."
David M. Weinberg
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=18577
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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