Kissinger explains what its all about

Henry A. Kissinger the master of international relations and real politique has some interesting things to say in Bold script, weak actors about the Rice’s new thrust in the peace process. Since he was also the originator of the “shrink Israel ” policy we must pay attention.

The secretary of state has shown determination and ingenuity to bring matters to this point. Her next challenge will be to steer the process so as to avoid the risk of what happened at Camp David in 2000, when Israeli and PLO leaders sought an agreement only to see it blow up into a new crisis that continues to this day.

What is unique about the Annapolis conference is that the outcome is to be agreed in advance. What remains uncertain is the ability to implement it.

The process is being driven by the assumption that the parties can be led to accept by the end of November – or have already tacitly accepted – the so-called Taba Plan of 2000, developed in the wake of the abortive Camp David meeting by technically non-official negotiators.

It provides for Israeli withdrawal to essentially the 1967 borders (with minor rectifications), retaining only the settlements around Jerusalem but narrowing the corridor between two principal Israeli cities, Haifa and Tel Aviv, to about 20 miles. The to-be-created Palestinian state would be compensated by some equivalent Israeli territory, probably in the underpopulated Negev.

Israel seems prepared to agree to an unrestricted return of refugees to the Palestinian state but adamantly refuses any return to Israel. Plausible reports have the Israeli government willing to cede the Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem (as yet undefined) as the capital of a Palestinian state.

If matters are indeed brought to this point, it would reflect a revolutionary change of perceptions on both sides.

This much we know but what about the big picture?

The intifada and the global momentum of radical Islamism have brought home to the Israeli public and leadership that their state is threatened by four new and growing dangers:

    first, an altered security environment in which the principal threat is from groups with no defined geography and operating from small, mobile bases;

    second, the demographic challenge because the alternative to a two-state solution could become a single state in which the Jewish population turns into a minority;

    third, the existential threat of nuclear proliferation, especially from Iran; and

    finally, an international environment in which Israel finds itself increasingly isolated because of the growing perception in Western Europe and in small but influential circles in the United States that Israel’s alleged intransigence is the cause of Arab hostility to the West.

At the same time, the emerging fear of Iran has caused a reordering of priorities in the Arab world. For the moderate Sunni states, the danger of a dominant Iran has emerged as their principal preoccupation.

The confluence of American, Arab, Israeli and European concerns encourages the hope that an agreement between Israel and its Arab neighbors would ease, or even eliminate, their common fears.

Will diplomacy be able to deliver on these expectations?

Now that is the question and Kissinger knows better than anyone, the challenge and the probabilities.

The interlocutors on both sides have extremely shaky domestic positions. The governing coalition in Israel has collapsed, and the approval ratings of the Cabinet are at a historic low. The definition of a Palestinian partner has so far proved elusive. Gaza is governed by Hamas, which is unwilling to recognize the legitimacy of Israel, not to speak of the specific terms under negotiation. Who then takes responsibility for Gaza? And it is unclear how much of the West Bank population Abbas can speak for.

He’s got that right but what about the Arab states?

Several Arab states have declared their willingness to recognize Israel once it returns to the 1967 borders. But recognition of the existence of a state has historically been treated as a factual, not a policy, matter. A key question, therefore, becomes exactly what is meant by ‘recognition.’ Will the moderate Arab states place pressure on Hamas to accept the premises of the peace process? Or will the fashionable pressure for ‘engagement’ with Hamas turn into an alibi for evading that necessity?

Are the moderate Arab states prepared to expand and strengthen the small group committed to genuine co-existence? Will recognition of Israel bring an end to the unrelenting media, governmental and educational campaign in Arab countries that presents Israel as an illegitimate, imperialist, almost criminal interloper in the region?

Several moderate Arab states have been extraordinarily reluctant to come to Annapolis. If they appear, will they treat their presence as their principal contribution for which one-sided pressure on Israel is deemed an appropriate concession?

If that wasn’t enough.

Even more portentous will be the profound implications for the balance of forces within the Arab world. Moderates there will be less praised for their achievement than accused of having betrayed the Arab cause.

The U.S. will be able to sustain the proposed course only if it is prepared to extend long-term support to its Arab partners against the foreseeable onslaught.

Thus the US in pursuing the peace process understands that it is part of a larger puzzle involving the maintenance of US hegemony in the ME.

The peace process will therefore merge with the generic conflicts of the Middle East. The Annapolis conference cannot be the end of a process; rather, it should lay the groundwork of a new, potentially hopeful phase that will continue into future administrations.

But it should not be driven by the U.S. political calendar. If either America’s Arab or Israeli friends are asked to take on more than they are able to withstand, there’s the risk of another, even larger blow-up.

He ends with a warning.

The secretary of state is surely right in insisting that the Olmert-Abbas talks avoid the ritualistic adjectives of previous efforts still awaiting definition after decades, such as the ‘just’ and ‘lasting’ peace within ‘secure’ and ‘recognized’ borders of UN Security Council Resolution 242 and the appeal to a ‘just, fair and realistic’ solution of the refugee problem called for by the road map.

Specific agreements regarding enforcement and guarantees are also essential – an especially delicate matter when demilitarization and resistance to terrorism are imposed on an emerging sovereign entity.

American leadership on realistic parameters with Israel and moderate Arab countries is an essential precondition to success in Annapolis. In its absence, deadlock and American isolation beckon.

The strength of the forces of moderation depends on the standing of America in the region and not only with respect to Palestine. No more in Palestine than in Iraq can American influence be fostered by an image of retreat. All the peoples of the region, friend or foe, will be judging the sum total of America’s purposes and its steadfastness in pursuit of them.

Oy, I got a headache.

Henry A. Kissinger heads the consulting firm Kissinger & Associates. This article was distributed by Tribune Media Services.

October 24, 2007 | 5 Comments »

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5 Comments / 5 Comments

  1. Is he doing the usual diplomatic thing of talking a lot without actually saying anything, or is he trying to slide a foundation under the building that has already been built? I am having a hard time trying to figure out what he is trying to achieve by this press release (or article, or whatever). They are trying to implement the original partition plan for sure, but what’s the purpose of this epistle?

  2. Anyone who suggest that the weakening of Jewish territorial positions is good for peace has other goals in mind besides peace for the Jews.

  3. This coming from a man who in 1973 refused to arm Israel because,”They need to get a bloody nose!” He is a true self-hating Jew a putz or as Meir referred to him the bar mitzvah boy!

  4. Lets face it contrary to popular myth of Only strong leaders can make peace or war, I submit the the exact opposite is the truth,. A Strong leader can say NO THANK YOU! NO! I do not think so! SOME OTHER TIME! OR OVER MY DEAD BODY! Weak leaders with no public support in a democracy rely only on spin, manipulation and subverting , all institutions of Government to stay in office. as their reasoning goes a good peace process can last a year or two and he will then be insulated against overthrow as all the Left and left of center will support a believable peace process.

  5. Shalom Ted,

    This sounds somewhat new to me; a demarcated corridor between Haifa and Tel Aviv ? Are the lines of communication to Gamla discussed anywhere ?

    Are we naive enough to think a Gaza Jerusalem corridor, sotto voce, is not plotted out on the new maps?

    Count Bernadotte’s initial partition plan of 1948 comes to mind.

    Territorial adjustments for the Arabs in the “undeveloped Negav” isolates Elath.

    I am interested in any public official statements on overflight rights and who holds sovereignty of Gaza’s territorial sea.

    I thought Henry Kissinger was Jewish…but, then again, so was Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan. Kaplan was excommunicated by the orthodox in 1945. Kaplan laughed.

    In lieu of aspirin (invented by a Jew, Arthur Eichengrun, 1897), I’ll rely on anti-nausa preparations.

    Kol tuv,

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