-Caveat Lector-

Subject: PEACEWATCH #309: ASSESSING POWELL'S TRIP TO ISRAEL AND THE
PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY


> THE WASHINGTON INSTITUTE'S SPECIAL REPORTS ON THE ARAB-ISRAELI PEACE
PROCESS
> Number Three Hundred and Nine February 27, 2001
>
> ASSESSING POWELL'S TRIP TO ISRAEL AND THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY
>
> By David Makovsky
>
> While the main purpose of Secretary of State Colin Powell's first foray
into
> the Middle East was to discuss Iraq, he also visited Israel and the
> Palestinian Authority and injected a dose of what some would call
> "evenhandedness"--giving each both something to be pleased about and
> something to be unnerved about.
>
> Powell did not please Israelis completely as he did not specifically
endorse
> Israel's policy of closures to handle the intifada, and he used
Palestinian
> terminology in calling for a "lifting of the siege." Moreover, he did not
> assign blame for the ongoing violence, nor did he distinguish between the
> types of killing. Israel says there is a difference between, on the one
> hand, selectively targeting Hamas, Hizballah, or Tanzim activists who are
> responsible for killing innocent civilians and, on the other hand, the
> actions of a Palestinian bus driver who plowed into a bus stop full of
> unsuspecting travelers.  Israeli officials privately --so far not
publicly,
> in order not to offend Powell--term such an approach of failing to
> distinguish between these acts as one of moral equivalence. At the same
> time, the Palestinians could not be happy that Powell accepted Israeli
> sequencing in the peace process, whereby he declared a reduction of
violence
> was a precondition for resumption of peace negotiations. This position was
> at odds with the Clinton administration, and the Barak government for that
> matter, which pressed talks further despite the ongoing violence. Taken
> together, these two principles could show the embryonic form of the Bush
> administration's policy on the peace process: siding with the Palestinians
> on economic--and perhaps even symbolic--matters, while siding with Israel
on
> the proper context of diplomacy. Some of the main points of the Powell
visit
> include:
>
> Evenhandedness
> While the intifada is heading into its sixth month, Israel has viewed the
> Palestinian violence as an illegitimate effort orchestrated by the
> Palestinian Authority (PA) to use force as a means to alter negotiating
> terms for final status negotiations. In recent weeks, Israel has
reportedly
> brought substantial evidence to the CIA and other branches of the U.S.
> government to back up its contention that the PA stands behind the
killings.
> On the other hand, the PA has publicly claimed that the intifada is a
> popular uprising that expresses frustration with Israeli occupation. The
two
> sides differ both on motives and source of the violence, and even on
whether
> the killings of the two sides are comparable.
>
> Powell apparently decided to avoid all these issues of contention. During
> his Middle East trip, Powell consistently bemoaned the ongoing violence,
but
> never went beyond his call for both sides to avoid an "escalation of
> violence." The Palestinians view this as a victory that they hope
represents
> a departure from the policies of the Clinton administration, which they
have
> called "one sided."
>
> Furthermore, Powell made clear that he was not happy with Israel's closure
> policy in the territories, and in honor of Powell's arrival, Israel lifted
> some check-posts that divided the Gaza Strip. (The check-posts were
imposed
> last week after mortar shells were fired at a Jewish settlement in Gaza.)
At
> his joint press conference with Chairman Yasir Arafat, Powell said, "I
also
> want to express my deep concern for the dire economic situation that
> everyday Palestinians must bear. . . We discussed how it is necessary to
> lift the siege as soon as possible so that economic activity can begin
again
> in the region." Israel has imported 30,000 foreign workers over the last
few
> months to make up for the shortage of Palestinian workers.
>
> Lowering Violence as a Precondition for Negotiations
> Yet, Powell did not just side with Palestinians. Speaking to reporters on
> the plane to Kuwait on Monday, Powell made clear in blunt remarks that he
> accepts Israeli prime minister-elect Ariel Sharon's condition that peace
> talks must be preceded by Palestinian efforts to quell intifada violence.
> Powell said peacemaking "does begin with a lowering of the violence. We
are
> at the beginning of a long hallway. . . and at the end is the negotiations
> for peace."  He added, "it's going to be some time before they can get
back
> to the negotiations, it seems to me." Powell said a reduction in violence
is
> "really the sine qua non to moving forward." During his visit, Powell
> repeatedly called for a restarting of security cooperation between Israel
> and the Palestinians.
>
> In contrast, the Palestinians have actively opposed any conditionality
> between halting violence and resuming peace talks. The Palestinians have
> also insisted that talks must resume where they left off with the Clinton
> administration, as Arafat himself said in a joint press conference with
> Powell in Ramallah, However, Powell indicated in an interview with CNN the
> Clinton ideas left with Clinton.
>
> Informed sources report that Powell privately told Israeli officials that
> while Clinton's proposals cannot be the starting point for negotiations,
it
> is also be true that the two sides cannot go back to "zero." He also said
> that the ideas for moving the negotiations forward need to come from the
> region, not the United States. Yet, it remains unclear if this will be a
> viable model, given that Sharon and Arafat have differing visions of the
> peace process.
>
> Powell Not Seeking to Release PA Funds
> While there is no doubt that Powell favors an easing of economic
conditions
> in the Palestinian territories, at the same time, Powell told reporters
that
> he did not ask Sharon to release an estimated $57 million in Palestinian
tax
> revenues since Sharon has made clear that he does not want to release the
> sum so long as there is a "rising spiral of violence." (Sharon announced
> that money will only be released if Arafat unequivocally makes a public
> statement calling for the end of violence, the Palestinians halt
incitement,
> and there is a renewal of security cooperation between the two sides.)
While
> some commentators have focused on the taxes Israel needs to transfer to
the
> PA, it should also be noted that the revenue involved in this transfer is
> largely a function of the number of Palestinian workers in Israel, and
this
> number has dropped dramatically during the intifada.
>
> Powell's Assessments of Sharon and Arafat. In assessing Sharon, Powell
> suggested he was pleasantly surprised. He declared, "I found [Sharon] very
> reflective, very thoughtful, very engaged on the issues."  He added, "the
> prime minister-elect understands . . . that he has taken upon his
shoulders
> great responsibility, not only for the people of Israel but the people of
> the region." When asked if he though Arafat was as "open-minded," Powell
> declared, "Arafat held to positions he has held to all along. The
> conversation was brisk on a number of occasions. We had a good
discussion."
>
> Americans Care about the Mideast
> The fact that Powell's first trip abroad was to the Middle East reflects
> deeper American public concern with the Middle East. While Powell's
comments
> during his Senate confirmation hearings suggest that the Bush
administration
> may not want to prioritize the Middle East peace process, a poll taken by
> Gallup earlier this month suggests that 83 percent (as opposed to 77
percent
> last July) of Americans believe that "development of a peaceful solution
to
> the Israeli-Palestinian situation" should be an American foreign policy
> priority. In the same poll, 63 percent of Americans have a favorable view
of
> Israel, which is almost triple the amount of support that Americans have
for
> the Palestinian Authority, 22 percent. Curiously, support for Israel in
> recent months, despite the West Bank clashes. According to Gallup poll
taken
> earlier this month, Americans sympathies run with Israel rather than the
> Palestinians by a margin of 51 to 16, which is wider than the 41 to 11
> margin from a poll taken in mid-October.
>
> David Makovsky is a senior fellow at The Washington Institute for Near
East
> Policy.

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