http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/09/AR2010040903263.html


<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/09/AR2010040903263.html>[image:
washingtonpost.com]

To achieve Mideast peace, Obama must make a bold Mideast trip*
*
*By Zbigniew Brzezinski and Stephen Solarz*
*

Sunday, April 11, 2010*

**

*More than three decades ago, Israeli statesman Moshe Dayan, speaking about
an Egyptian town that controlled Israel's only outlet to the Red Sea,
declared that he would rather have Sharm el-Sheikh without peace than peace
without Sharm el-Sheikh. Had his views prevailed, Israel and Egypt would
still be in a state of war. Today, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, with
his pronouncements about the eternal and undivided capital of Israel, is
conveying an updated version of Dayan's credo -- that he would rather have
all of Jerusalem without peace than peace without all of Jerusalem.*

*This is unfortunate, because a comprehensive peace agreement is in the
interest of all parties. It is in the U.S. national interest because the
occupation of the West Bank and the enforced isolation of the Gaza Strip
increases Muslim resentment toward the United States, making it harder for
the Obama administration to pursue its diplomatic and military objectives in
the region. Peace is in the interest of Israel; its own defense minister,
Ehud Barak, recently said that the absence of a two-state solution is the
greatest threat to Israel's future, greater even than an Iranian bomb. And
an agreement is in the interest of the Palestinians, who deserve to live in
peace and with the dignity of statehood.*

*However, a routine unveiling of a U.S. peace proposal,**as is reportedly
under 
consideration*<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/06/AR2010040602663.html>
*, will not suffice. Only a bold and dramatic gesture in a historically
significant setting can generate the political and psychological momentum
needed for a major breakthrough. Anwar Sadat's courageous journey to
Jerusalem three decades ago accomplished just that, paving the way for the
Camp David accords between Israel and Egypt.*

*Similarly, President Obama should travel to the Knesset in Jerusalem and
the Palestinian Legislative Council in Ramallah to call upon both sides to
negotiate a final status agreement based on a specific framework for peace.
He should do so in the company of Arab leaders and members of the Quartet,
the diplomatic grouping of the United States, Russia, the European Union and
the United Nations that is involved in the peace process. A subsequent
speech by Obama in Jerusalem's Old City, addressed to all the people in the
region and evocative of his**Cairo speech to the Muslim
world*<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/04/AR2009060401024.html>
* in June 2009, could be the culminating event in this journey for peace.*

*Such an effort would play to Obama's strengths: He personalizes politics
and seeks to exploit rhetoric and dramatic settings to shatter impasses,
project a compelling vision of the future and infuse confidence in his
audience.*

*The basic outlines of a durable and comprehensive peace plan that Obama
could propose are known to all:*

*First, a solution to the refugee problem involving compensation and
resettlement in the Palestinian state but not in Israel. This is a bitter
pill for the Palestinians, but Israel cannot be expected to commit political
suicide for the sake of peace.*

*Second, genuine sharing of Jerusalem as the capital of each state, and some
international arrangement for the Old City. This is a bitter pill for the
Israelis, for it means accepting that the Arab neighborhoods of East
Jerusalem will become the capital of Palestine.*

*Third, a territorial settlement based on the 1967 borders, with mutual and
equal adjustments to allow the incorporation of the largest West Bank
settlements into Israel.*

*And fourth, a demilitarized Palestinian state with U.S. or NATO troops
along the Jordan River to provide Israel greater security.*

*Most of these parameters have been endorsed in the Arab peace plan of 2002
and by the Quartet. And the essential elements have also been embraced by
Barak and another former Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert.*

*For the Israelis, who are skeptical about the willingness of the
Palestinians and Arabs to make peace with them, such a bold initiative by
Obama would provide a dramatic demonstration of the prospects for real
peace, making it easier for Israel's political leadership to make the
necessary compromises.*
*
*

*For the Palestinians, it would provide political cover to accept a
resolution precluding the return of any appreciable number of refugees to
Israel. Palestinian leaders surely know that no peace agreement will be
possible without forgoing what many of their people have come to regard as a
sacred principle: the right of return. The leadership can only make such a
shift in the context of an overall pact that creates a viable Palestinian
state with East Jerusalem as its capital -- and that is supported by other
Arab countries.*

*For the Arabs, it would legitimize their own diplomatic initiative,
embodied in the peace plan put forward by the Arab League eight years ago.
Moreover, their support for Obama in the effort would be a vital
contribution to the resolution of the conflict.*

*Finally, for Obama himself, such a move would be a diplomatic and political
triumph. Bringing Arab leaders and the Quartet with him to Jerusalem and
Ramallah to endorse his plan would be seen as a powerful example of
leadership in coping with the protracted conflict. Since it is inconceivable
that the Israeli government would refuse Obama's offer to bring Arab leaders
and the Quartet to its capital, most of the American friends of Israel could
be expected to welcome the move as well.*

*Of course, the proposal could be rejected out of hand. If the Israelis or
the Palestinians refuse to accept this basic formula as the point of
departure for negotiations, the Obama administration must be prepared to
pursue its initiative by different means -- it cannot be caught flat-footed,
as it was when Netanyahu**rejected Obama's demands for a settlement
freeze*<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/09/AR2010030900497.html>
* and the Arabs evaded his proposals for confidence-building initiatives.*

*Accordingly, the administration must convey to the parties that if the
offer is rejected by either or both, the United States will seek the U.N.
Security Council's endorsement of this framework for peace, thus generating
worldwide pressure on the recalcitrant party.*

*
It is time, though almost too late, for all parties -- Israelis,
Palestinians, Americans -- to make a historic decision to turn the two-state
solution into a two-state reality. But for that to happen, Obama must pursue
a far-sighted strategy with historic audacity.Fortunately, public opinion
polls in Israel have indicated that while most Israelis would like to keep a
united Jerusalem, they would rather have peace without all of Jerusalem than
a united Jerusalem without peace. Similarly, although the Palestinians are
divided and the extremists of Hamas control the Gaza Strip, the majority of
Palestinians favor a two-state solution, and their leadership in Ramallah is
publicly committed to such an outcome.*

*Zbigniew Brzezinski served as national security adviser for President Jimmy
Carter and is a trustee at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies. Stephen Solarz, a former U.S. congressman from New York, is a
member of the board of the International Crisis Group.*

**

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