A Primer for the Arab Summit in Beirut (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS) Vol. 1, No. 21 03/26/02)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/art/brief1-21.htm
JCPA-Jerusalem Center Public Affairs
JCPA-Jerusalem Center Public Affairs Articles-Index-Top
Publishers-Index-Top
The Arab summit must not alter the only agreed terms of reference
for the Arab-Israeli peace process -- UN Security Council Resolution
242.
The whole debate over whether Israel allows PLO Chairman Yasser
Arafat to travel to the Arab summit meeting in Beirut presupposes
that this gathering could potentially improve the chances of
restoring Arab-Israeli peace negotiations. In this sense, American
advocates of Arafat attending are hoping that the resulting
environment would be productive and yield moderate resolutions that
would encourage new bilateral diplomacy. Israelis who have
reservations about Arafat´s leaving for Lebanon are skeptical about
the potentially positive effects of the summit, in addition to their
criticism of Arafat´s failure to stop terrorism and implement the
Tenet cease-fire proposals.
The Arab summit´s resolutions will only be finally known when the
Beirut meetings conclude. Nonetheless, draft language has appeared in
the Arab press based on the proposal of Crown Prince Abdallah bin Abd
al-Aziz of Saudi Arabia and the preparatory meetings of the Arab
foreign ministers. From these reports several trends are already
apparent:
An Effort to Dilute UN Security Council Resolution 242
UN Security Council Resolution 242 was painstakingly drafted by the
British ambassador to the United Nations, Lord Caradon, in the fall
of 1967 after the Six Day War. The withdrawal clause in the
resolution called on Israel to withdraw from "territories" occupied
in the recent conflict and not from "all the territories."
Additionally it called for the establishment of "secure and
recognized boundaries." A Soviet effort to include the word "all"
before the word "territories" was rebuffed, so that the legislative
intent of the resolution was crystal clear, at the time. Indeed,
Britain´s Foreign Secretary, at the time, George Brown stated three
years later that, according to Resolution 242, Israel was not
expected to withdraw from "all the territories." The U.S. ambassador
to the UN in 1967, Arthur Goldberg, added another dimension when he
wrote: "I never described Jerusalem as occupied
territory....Resolution 242 in no way refers to Jerusalem, and this
omission was deliberate" (Letter to the Editor, New York Times, March
6, 1980). Resolution 242 was adopted unanimously by the Security
Council, and has since become the foundation of every Arab-Israeli
peace agreement.
An Arab summit statement calling on Israel to execute a "complete
withdrawal" to the June 4, 1967, lines would involve a dilution of
Resolution 242. The net result for Israel might be characterized
as "242-minus." It would compromise Israel´s right to "secure and
recognized boundaries" or "defensible borders" that has been the
hallmark of U.S. policy from the time of Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger through Secretary of State Warren Christopher. Rather than
representing progress, this language of "complete withdrawal" would
be a regression in the peace process, by tying the hands of Arab
parties willing to consider territorial compromise in the future.
Normalization or Normal Relations
The main new idea that New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman
originally reported about the thinking of Saudi Crown Prince Abdallah
was his willingness to use the term "normalization" of relations
between Israel and the Arab world. Israelis have long sought
normalization, modeling their concept of peace on the Franco-German
experience in Europe where the deep interdependence of societies has
made a reversion to hostile relations between France and Germany
unthinkable. Arab foreign ministers, including Egyptians, have
preferred the terminology of "normal relations," that means nothing
more than the exchange of ambassadors. Egypt has translated this
concept into a cold peace, by which it has even withdrawn its
ambassador but maintains its embassy in Tel Aviv. In
short, "normalization" produces a peace that is hard to reverse,
while "normal relations" can be easily changed. The language of "end
of conflict" would be helpful, but it cannot be a substitute for
normalization.
But even normalization cannot serve as a substitute for defensible
boundaries: peacemaking cannot rely on intentions alone, but rather
must be structured to take into account military capabilities. Even
so, according to initial indications, the Arab summit will not adopt
Abdallah´s reported language of "normalization." If that is the case,
then there will be little new that will come out of Beirut.
Renunciation of Terrorism
It is essential that a new Arab consensus arise renouncing terrorism
as a political instrument in accordance with UN Security Council
Resolution 1373. It would be helpful if the Arab summit explicitly
supported the Tenet cease-fire proposals and the Mitchell Committee´s
call for an unconditional cease-fire. Unfortunately, Arab ambassadors
at the UN have sought to justify terrorism as legitimate "resistance
to occupation." A shift away from this formal line of argument at the
UN would be a welcome change, but there are no indications that the
Arab states are moving in this direction.
Refugees
Language stating that a "fair solution" to the refugee issue must be
reached or an "agreed solution" is necessary would be an improvement
over the unrealistic call for a "right of return" to Israel itself.
Yet the establishment of an international refugee resettlement fund
would be the best indication that the Arab states are serious about
resolving this issue.
It is probably unrealistic to expect any real peace breakthroughs at
the Beirut Arab summit in any case. Historically, ground-breaking
developments in Arab-Israeli diplomacy have emanated from direct
bilateral contacts between Israel and various Arab parties -- and not
through multilateral Arab summit meetings where the lowest common
denominator prevails. U.S. and Israeli negotiators should
realistically judge the success of the summit by the extent that it
does not weaken the agreed terms of reference of negotiations in the
past, particularly UN Security Council Resolution 242. (www.jcpa.org.
© Copyright. 03/28/02)
Return to Top
MATERIAL REPRODUCED FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY