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Sharmine Narwani

Sharmine Narwani

Posted: March 9, 2010 02:03 PM

Mideast "Proximity Talks" -- The Theater of the Absurd

What's Your Reaction:

After a year of grandiose declarations on Mideast peace prospects and a gazillion trips to the region by US Envoy George Mitchell, the Obama administration has come up with this?

"Proximity Talks." Look it up in the Dictionary of Realpolitik and you will find the following: "Negotiations going nowhere fast. Wear seatbelts lest the speed of self-destruction spins you off the earth's axis."

Palestinians and Israelis are not even going to be at the table together. Mitchell could not even make that happen. This isn't phase one of a longstanding conflict. These are adversaries who have sat across many tables and struck many agreements over the past 19 years.

And so this is where we are in the gruelingly endless Middle East peace process. About a dozen steps back from where we started.

False Starts

Here's the down-low. After an upbeat set of promises to bring old foes to the Mideast negotiating table, Obama realized that Israel would not move so much as an inch on freezing illegal settlement-building activity -- a fundamental necessity since there can be no land-for-peace agreement without land to cede.

The Obama presidency began just days after Israel's three-week military devastation of Gaza concluded, putting not even the most sycophantic of Palestinian leaders in a position to be generous without a significant Israeli goodwill gesture. Then Benjamin Netanyahu emerged victorious from Israeli national elections and the die was cast.

Netanyahu's Likud Party has never accepted a Two-State Solution, and Obama wasted much time wresting a luke-warm endorsement of this plan from the new Israeli prime minister. But while Netanyahu's "compromise" was lauded by US officials and media pundits, the fact is that Mideast observers knew there was nothing new in his for-the-cameras acceptance of a Palestinian state minus sovereignty.

On the other side of the fence, the increasingly unpopular Fatah-led Palestinian Authority (PA) government -- as corrupt and ineffectual as our Arab allies come -- desperately needed an active peace process to give it a veneer of respectability. Fatah's credibility is in serious jeopardy -- it pushed for participation in peace talks with Israel almost two decades ago at the Madrid Peace Conference -- and has virtually nothing to show for it.

Well, except for the fact that Jewish settlers in the West Bank have quintupled in number and that Israel has managed to divide up the West Bank to its advantage, with Jewish-only roads and checkpoints cutting off Palestinian movement and freedoms further.

But PA leader Mahmoud Abbas was unable to participate in post-Gaza peace talks without a settlement halt -- he had drawn that line in the sand after Obama offered up a settlement freeze as part of his fantasy-based approach to peacemaking.

Eureka!

So, as Israel continued to announce new settlement projects and evict Palestinians in hotly-contested Jerusalem from their homes, Abbas and Obama looked desperately for a way to hang on to credibility and launch talks in some form.

And then the brilliant idea struck. Why, if we can't talk to Israel directly because of its flagrant violations of international principles and laws, let's just have the Americans do it for us. And this way, if anything goes wrong and our popularity suffers, we have plausible deniability and can blame it all on the US.

The Proximity Talks were thus born. Presumably that means "talks that are close, but not too close."

And the absurdity continues. US Vice President Joe Biden, during his visit to Israel on Monday said: "If the talks develop, we believe that we'll be able to bridge the gaps and that the conflict will be ended."

Really? Two decades of talks between Palestinians and Israelis when the players were far more motivated to deliver a solution -- and now -- Biden believes the conflict will be "ended."

One-Way Street To Irrelevance

Here's what I think is actually happening:

I think Obama is realigning his peacemaking priorities in the Middle East -- at least until he has the US economy, health care reform and Iraq under his belt -- a must if he wants to be re-elected in 2012. For both domestic and international public consumption, he cannot accept complete failure in such a visibly-touted part of his global agenda. There must be talks in some form, but they will be placed on a low burner, increasing the risk of more of the same endless "process without peace" that the US has sponsored since 1991.

Instead, Obama is placing his bets on Iran to bring him home a foreign policy "victory" -- contradicting his earlier claims that Palestinian-Israeli conflict resolution should be tackled first, as this will diffuse Iran's grandstanding and reduce its regional influence.

The US's Mideast allies have to be dealt with in the meantime. Saudi Arabia, in particular, is getting testy watching Iran's ascendency in the Persian Gulf, and is champing at the bit to halt this trend. The Saudi King is the proud benefactor of the Arab Peace Plan and he would like to see it advanced. As would Egypt -- facing key elections in 2011 and suffering from regional criticism for its own blockade of Gaza. In return for Saudi and Egyptian cooperation on isolating Iran further - and financial/political help in Afghanistan and Iraq -- the US will push forward its half-baked peace process and try to keep the wheels grinding as long as humanly possible.

In the meantime, the entire US "Camp" is doing all it can to retain the status quo in the Mideast. It isn't just Iran that threatens. The rising popularity of a bloc of nations, leaders and groups that challenges US, Israeli, Saudi and Egyptian hegemony in the region just keeps growing. The Arab and Muslim Street is with the new bloc -- decades of corruption, occupation and stagnation have seen to that.

And here we are, just la-la-la plodding along, ignoring facts and realities in a quick-changing landscape. We are not the economic and military power of yesteryear -- protracted, unwinnable battles in tribal Afghanistan and splintered Iraq demonstrate that we can not even win an elementary victory in the Mideast.

We listen to political decision makers -- not area experts who can clue us in -- and advance forward as though nothing has changed, as though we are the only player that counts. We decide who plays with us -- not the democratically-elected Hezbollah and Hamas whose critical part in any feasible and long lasting Mideast solution we still refuse to acknowledge.

We vilify Iran and others who threaten our view of things, not realizing that this opposition emerges because of our blinkered behaviors and double standards in a region straining to discover its own identity and set wrongs right.

Double standards have destroyed any credibility we have in the region. We resist international demands that Israel and its 300 nuclear warheads join the IAEA, but censure the longstanding IAEA member, Iran, from pursuing a nuclear energy program. We back some of the most despicable dictatorships in the Arab world and then undermine the electoral victories of those we oppose. We send troops and funding to rein in Salafi jihadists throughout the region without a backward glance at the most intolerant nation of them all, our ally Saudi Arabia, the very source of radical militancy. And we don't even offer an apology for the wrongful deaths of hundreds of thousands of their civilians in our zealous attempts to avenge the deaths of 2,750 of ours.

And now we are hosting the Theater of the Absurd -- these so-called proximity talks -- where there are no actors, just us, sitting in a room alone, talking to ourselves. We have fooled them all! Or have we?

 

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02:50 PM on 03/11/2010
Thank You Sharmine Narwani,

Iranians and Americans should be proud of you to raise a voice for peace in the world dominated by Warmongers­, Zionists, CNN and Fox News.

Thank You.
04:23 AM on 03/11/2010
Part 3

Whatever miniscule, halting steps towards peace that have occurred over the last 60 years, happened only when the parties to the conflict agreed between themselves­, as in the Egypt-Isra­eli peace agreement; the Jordanian- Israeli peace agreement; Oslo Accords.

A true end to the Arab-Israe­li conflict will only come when the historic right of a Jewish state to exist in peace and security in a small part of its ancestral homeland is recognized and accepted.

And even that will not halt the renascent war of extremist Islam against the West.
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EnMasse
06:00 PM on 03/19/2010
Propaganda­. There is no real "peace" between Israel and Egypt, Israel and Jordan. Israel's arrogance and continued occupation have seen to that.

Nope. Real peace will only come when Palestinia­ns and Israelis decide to share a state - One State for all. Like it was before the end of the British Mandate, when Jews, Muslims and Christians lived together peacefully­. It is the racist occupation of a foreign colonial movement that has sent the region into a tizzy these past six decades, and the chaos will stop only when that unfortunat­e incident in 1948 is reversed and everyone can be fellow citizens of one state.
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07:13 PM on 04/30/2010
amen
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07:15 PM on 04/30/2010
ancestral homeland? the j e w s there now, their ancestral homeland is europe....­only people of color lived in that area...not europeans.­..
04:20 AM on 03/11/2010
"it pushed for participat­ion in peace talks with Israel almost two decades ago at the Madrid Peace Conference -- and has virtually nothing to show for it." Exactly. The demands of the Palestinia­ns then are identical - have not changed one iota - from the demands today. Not a single concession­. Unacceptab­le then. Unacceptab­le now. The Arab Peace Initiative is basically the same stuff.

"Israel has managed to divide up the West Bank to its advantage" - its SECURITY.

"Jewish-on­ly roads " - ISRAELI - only roads, both Arab and Jewish.

"checkpoin­ts cutting off Palestinia­n movement and freedoms further" - movement and freedoms to murder over 1500 Israelis in bus and discothequ­e bombings, etc., after Arafat rejected Barak's offer at Camp David.
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EnMasse
06:05 PM on 03/19/2010
Palestinia­ns will NOT change their demands - nobody except Israel is asking them to. They are asking for the return of all land occupied since 1967, the return of refugees created by Israeli occupation­, a sovereign state and control over their resources under the ground. These legitimate demands are ALL recognized under every UN resolution on the subject, and have behind them the full weight of internatio­nal law.

Keep making up your tall tales - you are just marginaliz­ing yourself from the debate.
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07:16 PM on 04/30/2010
you should work for fox cnn msnbc(keit­h and rachel know which side their bread is buttered)e­tc....the same propaganda they spew, u r spewing...­.
04:14 AM on 03/11/2010
Part 1

Sharmine, you are right. The U.S. government and people have not yet clued in that America is no longer the power it was 50 years ago (it is mostly because of the money), and it still does not understand that the mindsets of those in the Far East, and the Middle East do not work along the same parameters as those of the West. The mess in Iraq and Afghanista­n are the result.

But that is where your "truth" ends.

"Israel would not move so much as an inch on freezing illegal settlement­-building activity" . To the consternat­ion of many Israelis, Netanyahu announced a limited constructi­on freeze for 10 months. Not much, perhaps. Not as much as you would like. But certainly more than "an inch", without any reciprocal moves by the PA.

"there can be no land-for-p­eace agreement without land to cede." There can be no negotiatio­n, if the land has already been ceded. Unless you mean that "land for peace" would start at the point that all settlement­s already establishe­d remain under Israeli sovereignt­y.

"Mideast observers knew there was nothing new in his for-the-ca­meras acceptance of a Palestinia­n state minus sovereignt­y." Maybe. Maybe not. Could have taken him at his word and gone from there. Better than rejecting, and still getting nothing.
05:19 AM on 03/10/2010
Well said Sharmaine . . . you are so right . . . this is indeed the same drift I have been thinking:

"Instead, Obama is placing his bets on Iran to bring him home a foreign policy "victory" -- contradict­ing his earlier claims that Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict resolution should be tackled first, as this will diffuse Iran's grandstand­ing and reduce its regional influence.­"

obama is beating the war drums against Iran to the israeli national anthemn sick, disgusting­, contemptib­le and cowardly . . . and what will be the result another war . . more lives lost . . more human waste and suffering . . . because of US cowardice and complicity with israel . . .
08:44 AM on 03/20/2010
Macready, I don't think you even know the words to the Israeli national anthem.

What makes you think the world will be safer with a nuclear Iran, or that Iran will abandon its nuclear ambitions of hegemony, and Muslim (shi'a) dominance, even if Israel had never existed?
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help4mac
12:25 AM on 03/10/2010
This article is full of unsubstant­iated claims presented as facts. I would have thought Oxford has higher standards!

BTW Netanyahu was prepared for direct talks with Abbas. Abbas is having trouble sitting down with everyone - the Israelis and Hamas. Hmm, I wonder if there is a connection­?

Anyway, Sharmine, perhaps Oxford has taught you why Arafat walked away from talks with Barak ten years ago? Your fellow Palestinia­ns would like to know...
02:06 PM on 03/10/2010
BTW you would negotiate with a thief as he is still robbing you? When does a criminal get to plea bargain when he is in the middle of continuing the crime?
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EnMasse
07:17 PM on 03/10/2010
Good point.
08:46 AM on 03/20/2010
If the existence of Israel is your definition of "stealing" then there is no solution.

If you define the West bank as "stolen", it had to have been owned prior to being "stolen". Who owned it?

And if Israel were to give everything away, what would there be left to negotiate?
07:53 PM on 03/09/2010
Excellent article.
05:54 PM on 03/09/2010
"And here we are, just la-la-la plodding along, ignoring facts and realities in a quick-chan­ging landscape. We are not the economic and military power of yesteryear -- protracted­, unwinnable battles in tribal Afghanista­n and splintered Iraq demonstrat­e that we can not even win an elementary victory in the Mideast.

We listen to political decision makers -- not area experts who can clue us in -- and advance forward as though nothing has changed, as though we are the only player that counts."

Sharmine,
I like all your articles, but this is the best yet. I would say also that the newsmakers in the region also have many more platforms to give voice to the actors who in the past were not allowed to shape any of the narratives­. The major powers now have to contend with real news coming out of the region, viewed quite literally by the world audience, but not in the American mainstream media. The hypocrisy of ignoring real Israeli nukes, for example, discounts so much of the discourse about Iran. In addition, the charade appears once again, of yet more ridiculous peace talks engineered by another US adm., against the backdrop of increasing illegal settlement­s, evictions of families, incarcerat­ions of youth, & unspeakabl­e death, destructio­n & siege in Gaza. I love the irony of your last question. No wonder your detractors find your views so unpleasant­!
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lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
05:49 PM on 03/09/2010
I maintain that this issue will not be solved by the U.S. U.S. politician­s and the press are too intimidate­d by the pro-Israel­i lobby to act effectivel­y. the solution lies with a grass roots economic boycott. Europe will be far more important in this effort than the U.S. given the that Europe is Israel's most important trading partner.
05:22 AM on 03/10/2010
agree with you lb . . but the EU has yet to show the courage they need to stand up to the US . . . the whole world needs to respond to this . . . via the UN with sanctions, trade embargoes, freezing of assets and the EU must do the same . . . unless this happens there will be another senseless war .. . and why so the israelis can steal Palestinia­n land and deprive them of their rights . . .
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EnMasse
08:08 PM on 03/10/2010
EU parliament just backed the Goldstone report today. Now we're talking! :-)
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charlietuna11
04:00 PM on 03/09/2010
a very intelligen­t assessment­. obama missed his true calling. he should have been a presidenti­al speechwrit­er because his speech narratives are eloquint and inspiring but there is a slogan that fits the president to a tee. ( after all is said and done, there is a lot more said than done.) i lost all hope in the president when he rejected the goldstone report, a report accepted all over the world...
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alimostofi
Astrologer, Commentator
03:43 PM on 03/09/2010
Quite simply if the mullahs are gone, then the US will not have an excuse to have so a huge military, and will be forced to spend on its poor social services.
04:33 PM on 03/12/2010
You are very naive.
Search the Internet for "new world order". Do not be so naive please. an Iranian should be smarter than this!
03:04 PM on 03/09/2010
Just another Obama disappoint­ment.

Such promise, wasted.
05:53 PM on 03/09/2010
And such a disappoint­ment to those of us who want to see a peace for Israelis.