ICG: Current Peace Process Based on Delusions, Will Never Bring Peace (JEWISH PRESS) By: Jacob Edelist 05/09/12)
Source: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/icg-current-peace-process-based-on-delusions-will-never-bring-peace/2012/05/08/?hpcr
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A report titled “The Emperor Has No Clothes: Palestinians and the End
of the Peace Process” was issued this week by the International
Crisis Group, asking: “Does anybody still believe in the Middle East
Peace Process?”
The bottom line of the report appears at the end of its executive
summary: the current process, even if it yields some local
progress, “will not bring about a durable and lasting peace. The
first step in breaking what has become an injurious addiction to a
futile process is to recognize that it is so – to acknowledge, at
long last, that the emperor has no clothes.”
The International Crisis Group is an independent, non-profit, non-
governmental organization committed to preventing and resolving
deadly conflict. Its president and CEO, Canadian Louise Arbour,
served as the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights from
2004 to 2008.
Pointing out that nineteen years after Oslo and thirteen years after
a final settlement was supposed to be reached, current prospects for
a two-state solution are “as dim as ever,” the report says that “the
international community mechanically goes through the motions, with
as little energy as conviction,” and that “the parties most directly
concerned, the Israeli and Palestinian people, appear long ago to
have lost hope.”
Who is to blame? Take your pick: the U.S. presidential campaign, the
Arab Spring, Israel’s focus on Iran and Europe’s financial trouble
have all joined to instill a hiatus of the peace process, according
to the report.
Surprisingly, though, the IOG report seems to think that such a
hiatus is badly needed, providing an opportunity to reconsider basic
pillars of the process.
Obviously, the report doesn’t go so far as to discard the two-state
solution, because it believes that “no other option can possibly
attract mutual assent.” It also doesn’t recommend giving up on
negotiations altogether, “for no outcome will be imposed from
outside.”
What the report does suggest is “to incorporate new issues and
constituencies; rethink Palestinian strategy to alter the balance of
power; and put in place a more effective international architecture.”
The report does not question the popular view that Israel would have
given the Palestinian their own state long ago, if only the latter
ever agreed to take Yes for an answer. It puts the blame on the
Palestinian leadership’s lack of vision and “irresoluteness,” but
argues that they probably couldn’t behave differently.
“Whatever it (the PA) chooses to do would carry a potentially heavy
price and at best uncertain gain. Negotiations are viewed by a
majority of Palestinians as a fool’s errand, so a decision to resume
without fulfillment of Abbas’s demands (settlement freeze and agreed
terms of reference) could be costly for his movement’s future. His
hesitation is all the stronger now that he has persuaded himself that
Prime Minister Netanyahu’s positions are incompatible with a two-
state solution.”
Still, the report continues, “a decisive Palestinian move at the UN
(whether at the General Assembly or in seeking agency membership)
likely would prompt a cut-off in U.S. aid and suspension of tax
clearance revenue transfers by Israel. A joint government with Hamas
could trigger similar consequences without assurance that elections
could be held or territorial unity between the West Bank and Gaza
restored. Getting rid of the PA could backfire badly, leaving many
public employees and their families penniless while also leading to
painful Israeli counter-measures.”
The report is essentially calling the peace process fraudulent: “The
inescapable truth, almost two decades into the peace process, is that
all actors are now engaged in a game of make-believe: that a
resumption of talks in the current context can lead to success; that
an agreement can be reached within a short timeframe; that the
Quartet is an effective mediator; that the Palestinian leadership is
serious about reconciliation, or the UN, or popular resistance, or
disbanding the PA.” (© 2012 JewishPress. 05/09/12)
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