Consequences Pose Risks for Mideast Policy
Obama Breaks His Silence, Vows to Work for Peace Deal

By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, January 7, 2009; A10

... One of Obama's biggest challenges will be to craft diplomatic
solutions that do not have unintended consequences. Good intentions go
only so far in the Middle East, and today's battles often can be
traced to choices made by the Israeli government or the Bush
administration that ended up backfiring.

In the 1980s, for instance, the Israeli government decided to weaken
the secular Fatah movement headed by Palestine Liberation Organization
Chairman Yasser Arafat by promoting the rise of Islamic parties as a
counterweight, on the theory that Islamic groups would not have the
same nationalistic impulses.

So Fatah's social networks were dismantled by the Israeli government,
but it went easy on Islamic charitable networks. This decision fueled
the rise of Hamas as a political force, with its network of health
clinics and social services that far exceeded the abilities of the
often-corrupt Fatah movement.

... Israel now wants to make a peace deal with Mahmoud Abbas, the
Palestinian Authority president who heads Fatah but has no control
over Gaza. So one of the Israeli aims in Gaza today is to weaken Hamas
enough that it no longer can be a political rival to Fatah in Gaza --
precisely the opposite of what Israel hoped to achieve decades ago
with its efforts to encourage the rise of Islamic groups.

"This is not like a regime-change operation, but at the end of the
day, the restoration of the Palestinian Authority back to Gaza should
be on the agenda as a whole," said Jeremy Issacharoff, deputy chief of
mission at the Israeli Embassy in Washington.

Similarly, the Bush administration encouraged Israel to withdraw from
Gaza and demolish its settlements there, arguing that it was a step
forward on peace. But, as a condition, then-Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon in 2004 demanded a letter from President Bush in which
the United States conceded two critical peace issues on settlements
and refugees to Israel. The Israeli government later cited the letter
as giving implicit permission to continue some settlement expansion
during peace talks brokered late in the Bush administration,
undermining those efforts.

The Bush administration also did not effectively push Israel to
negotiate its 2005 withdrawal from Gaza with Abbas, who had just been
elected president after Arafat died. Abbas wanted to demonstrate that
he could negotiate with the Israelis, but Jerusalem withdrew from Gaza
unilaterally, as had been the plan when Arafat was still alive.

Ghaith al-Omari, a former top Abbas aide, remembers bitterly that
Hamas strung up a huge banner after Israeli troops departed: "Three
Years of Intifada Beat Ten Years of Negotiations."

"Hamas took all the credit for the withdrawal," Omari said. "It was a
clear strategic mistake."

Then the United States pushed for legislative elections in the
Palestinian territories in early 2006, hoping for a demonstration of
democracy on the march in the Middle East. The Israelis tried to sound
a warning about including Hamas on the election list. In October 2005,
then-Justice Minister Tzipi Livni (now foreign minister) flew to
Washington to plead that Hamas not be permitted to run, only to be
told by U.S. officials: "Don't worry, Hamas won't win."

Hamas defeated Fatah, instantly elevating its status and spawning the
crisis that led to today's conflict. Hamas eventually took over [sic]
all of Gaza, giving it the ability to terrorize Israeli cities with
increasingly sophisticated rockets.

Now, some experts say, the seeds of more conflict will be planted
without careful diplomacy by the incoming U.S. administration. Abbas,
who was at the United Nations yesterday pleading for an immediate
cease-fire, had seen his popularity rise in recent months, but the
Israeli invasion has once again turned Hamas into Arab heroes. Arab
leaders in Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia -- who hold no fondness for
Hamas -- face growing pressure at home to condemn Israel as
Palestinian deaths climb.

"The Gaza crisis has weakened all those on the Arab side who would be
Obama's partners," said Martin Indyk, author of "Innocent Abroad," a
just-published memoir of serving as a peace negotiator in the Clinton
administration. "Obama will have to mobilize Arab leaders in support
of a major effort" to resolve the conflict. Otherwise, he said, groups
such as Hamas -- who are threatened by Obama's popularity in the Arab
world -- "will brand him as the same as George Bush."

To avoid previous pitfalls, Indyk said, "you have to stay flexible.
You cannot know how the actions of the superpower will affect the
leaders of the region. You push on one door -- and another door will
open."

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to