George Mitchell has returned from his first foray to the Middle East. He will now study his initial findings, await the results of Israel's election, and then revisit the region at month's end.
I have deep respect for Mitchell's work. And while he gives me hope, I still find it hard to be optimistic about prospects for Middle East peace. The accumulated failures of the past have taken a significant toll on all involved. Entrenched divisions, hardened attitudes, and bad behavior define the political landscape on both the Israeli and Arab sides. Internal Arab rifts are well-known, with the intra-Palestinian divide now spilling over and being reflected in competing camps that shape the politics of the broader region.
The problems in Israel are no less acute. As this week's election will demonstrate, the center of Israeli politics has moved rightward. Pre-election polls show Likud and Kadima vying for the lead, followed by Yisrael Beiteinu and Labor (a mere shadow of its former self) competing for third place.
What a lineup!
Likud and its leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, are too well-known. In 1996 he telegraphed his intention to "make a clean break and end the Oslo process" - and he did just that. He left office in 1998 under a cloud of scandal only to return a decade later - older wine in an older bottle - still averse to ceding West Bank land and East Jerusalem to the Palestinians, but declaring his intention to make "economic peace" instead. In any other country, the Yisrael Beiteinu of Avigdor Lieberman would be seen as racist; but, with a strong base of support among Russian-immigrant voters, who have long complained of being marginalized, this party - with its agenda of "transferring" Arabs - will do well, and be able to secure significant cabinet posts in a new government.
Kadima and Labor, who together form the current government will, in all probability, not win enough seats to return. And while both are seen in the U.S. as the parties who agree to withdraw from Palestinian territories, their performance over the last several years has not reassured Palestinians of their peaceful intent.
While all this is playing out on the surface of Israeli politics, more insidious developments occur on a deeper level. Like an aggressive malignancy, settlements in the West Bank continue to grow, spreading out both within and beyond Israel's intrusive wall/barrier. As a spectacular segment on 60 Minutes (a popular U.S. television program) made clear a few weeks back, the size and location of the settlements, and the fierce intensity of the settler movement, have all but made a two-state solution impossible.
A full picture of this sad state of affairs was revealed recently in the Israeli press. An official military tally of West Bank settlements, established that 75% of all settlement developments are, even by Israeli law, "unauthorized," having been built on Palestinian-owned land without government permits. On reviewing the report, an Israeli lawyer remarked that it only reinforced his view that an extra-governmental settler regime operates outside the law beyond the control of Israeli authorities, whether from the right or the left.
And so it is, with Israel moving to the right, confounded by a settler movement that is a law unto itself, and with Palestinians and the Arab world deeply divided, it is difficult to be optimistic. But I can be hopeful that, with the appointment of George Mitchell, the region is getting what may very well be its last best chance at securing peace and a two state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In his successful effort in achieving Irish peace, Mitchell confronted not only a deep divide between the nationalist and unionist groups in Northern Ireland, but also intense rivalries between militant and more moderate forces within each camp. In Ireland, Mitchell also had to deal with eight centuries of spilled blood and memories of ethnic cleansing and near-genocidal famine. There were also widely divergent views of what could constitute Irish peace, with neither side accepting the legitimacy of the other. Many thought it impossible to thread that needle.
But what Mitchell and other skilled negotiators knew, was that success required the absence of onerous preconditions, creative problem-solving, goodwill, and tremendous patience. In Ireland, it required fifteen years, from the Good Friday Accords to the capstone agreement that sealed the process.
Even with this record, success, or even progress, is not assured. That is why I cannot be optimistic. But I can be hopeful, because Mitchell's skill combined with the full support of the U.S. President, provide the region with its last best chance.
|
|
Israel Bans Arab Parties From Coming Election
JERUSALEM — Israel on Monday banned Arab political parties from running in next month's parliamentary elections, drawing accusations of racism by an Arab lawmaker who...
|
|
|
Israeli Election: Netanyahu Says Iran Nukes Trumps Global Economy
DAVOS, Switzerland — Israeli election front-runner Benjamin Netanyahu told a session of the World Economic Forum on Thursday that preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons...
|
|
|
Israel Rules Out Hamas Contacts, Threatens Force
HERZLIYA, Israel — Israel's foreign minister threatened Monday to keep hitting Hamas as long as it attacks Israel, ruling out negotiations with the Islamic rulers...
|
|
|
Avigdor Lieberman, Hard Man Of The Right, Is Israel's Kingmaker In Waiting
Avigdor Lieberman, the far-right politician campaigning on a platform that Israeli Arabs should pledge loyalty to the state or lose their right to vote, has...
|
|
Israel's Election Day: Not a Change We Can Believe In
All three of Israel's candidates for Prime Minister belong to an era that should be receding behind us, not popping up in our ballot boxes again and again.
|
|
Israel Election: What Does It Mean to You?
Israelis head to the polls on February 10th to vote in a new government. As the crisis in Gaza demonstrates, Israeli politics affect the world....
|
|
Israeli Elections: Do They Really Matter?
In the end, regardless of who wins, Obama's domestic priorities, bad peace process options, and Israel's inherent caution are unlikely to generate any wild surprises.
|
|
Give Us Netanyahu. Please.
Give us Netanyahu. Please. His re-ascension will help Americans realize that the false choice approach the Bush administration had been taking in Israel-Palestine affairs was flawed.
|
|
Israel Is About to Make a Misjudgement as Disastrous as Gaza
In a few days, it looks likely to re-elect Benjamin Netanyahu as Prime Minister once again. This is a man calling for the violent re-occupation of Gaza to "liquidate" its elected government.
|
|
Israel's Election: Not Our Problem
Dovish types prepared to go into mourning over the coming right-wing victory should bear history in mind when the election results come in next week. Things aren't always what they seem.
|
|
Israeli Elections: Terror as Top Concern
With less than a week to go before elections in Israel, the three main rivals are locked in fierce debate not about whether the devastating war in Gaza went too far, but whether it went far enough.
|
|
It's Prime Minister Netanyahu
Tuesday, the right wing coalition won a clear majority. It is, I believe, inevitable that President Peres will give Netanyahu the first shot at forming a government and that Bibi will succeed.
|
|
Netanyahu: Better for America, Better For Israel
It will be easier for President Obama to deal with Netanyahu than with the almost equally hawkish Tzipi Livni because Livni seems dedicated to ending the conflict.
|
|
What Hamas Has Wrought
The crucial point about Hamas that is always overlooked is that at every point in their interaction with Israel and peace-seeking Palestinians, they have chosen the path of armed aggression.
|
|
Palestinians Unsure Which Israeli Leader Will Keep Gaza and the West Bank United
While the results of the coming Israeli elections are important, the most important new element in the formula is the new administration in Washington.
|
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
Brother Jim, what is the sound of one hand clapping?
I'd like to know why is Zogby push polling republican talking points and attacks on the Obama administration and the recovery bill? Corporate shills?
Mr Zogby, as long as one side is armed illegally to the teeth and the other not then you can forget EVER having "peace"
"In any other country, the Yisrael Beiteinu of Avigdor Lieberman would be seen as racist.."
Good heavens, don't stop with just one name. They're ALL racist; Israel being a constitutionally racist nation. It's Israel's raison d'etre.
Funny..since 20% of the population of Israel is ARAB! So is 20% of the Knesset! Are al the Arab nations.then, also racist because Jews cannot participate in their governmets?? Stop the old line propaganda,Sparky!! How many Jews can live in peace in Arab Towns??? NONE! How many Jews are in the PA?? NONE?? So...........who is the racist people??? THE ARABS!!! These are irrefutable FACTS!!
How come 20% of the Knesset aren't Arabs, if Israel is a democracy?
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or connect with