Does John Kerry’s Peace Process Have a Chance? By Aaron David Miller.
Does John Kerry’s peace process have a chance? By Aaron David Miller. Politico, August 1, 2013.
Israeli-Palestinian talks won’t fix the Middle East’s problems. By Ian Bremmer. Reuters, July 31, 2013.
Mideast peace deal seems far off. By Dan Perry. AP, July 29, 2013.
Israel, Palestinians deeply divided despite renewed peace talks. By Allyn Fisher-Ilan and Ali Sawafta. Reuters, July 31, 2013.
Miller:
In the
history of the world, nobody ever washed a rental car.
As the
champagne corks pop at Foggy Bottom celebrating Secretary of State John Kerry’s
hard-earned success in launching Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, he’d be well
advised to keep this piece of homespun philosophy in mind.
People
really care only about what they own. And right now, Kerry has more ownership
of this effort than Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, or U.S. President Barack Obama, for that
matter.
It is
an inconvenient truth. But having started this process, the United States will
be on the hook for trying to finish it. If it’s not prepared for that, the
negotiations will fail. And the idea of a two-state solution will remain just
that: an idea.
To
reach this point, Kerry has combined his own relentless and willfulness (six
trips to the region in four months) with something else: Neither Abbas nor
Netanyahu wants to say no to America’s top diplomat and take the blame for the
collapse of the process. James Baker, one of Kerry’s most successful
predecessors, used this tactic effectively – threatening to leave a proverbial
dead cat on Israel’s and the Arabs’ doorstep if they refused to attend the
Madrid peace conference in 1991. Kerry’s effort is also aided by the fact that
both Abbas and Netanyahu worry that without a process of some kind, events on
the ground could easily deteriorate.
These
factors proved sufficient to get them back to negotiations, but more will be
required to keep them there, let alone to reach an accord. Right now, neither
has enough incentives, disincentives, and an urgent desire or need to move
forward boldly. The gaps on both process and substance are wide, and the
mistrust deep. Abbas wants a comprehensive effort to resolve all the core
issues; Netanyahu knows his politics and ideology can’t handle one and would
prefer to go slow. If you took Kerry out of the picture, there would not even
be talks about talks.
In
fact, the process Kerry has launched is backwards. Unlike the Egyptian-Israel
breakthrough that led to Anwar Sadat’s historic visit to Jerusalem or the
Israeli-Palestinian one in Oslo, some tough decisions were made by the parties
themselves long before the United States got involved. Unfortunately, right
now, the U.S. owns this one more than the parties do. And there’s a good
chance, given the gaps and mistrust on each side, that owning it themselves
will be much tougher than anyone imagined. It would be nice to assume that once
involved in talks, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators will just sit down, work
out the details themselves, and take the necessary steps on the ground that
will create a better environment at the table. And bucked up by all kinds of
bells and whistles – prisoner releases and economic aid for the Palestinians
and security assistance and Arab state recognition for Israel – they’ll somehow
find one another and come to own the negotiating process.
But who
are we kidding? This is the Arab-Israeli conflict. What can go wrong will go
wrong. And because there’s still very little traction right now in the talks,
the U.S. will need to be all over them like a cheap suit. This is not an ideal
situation. It would have been better had real urgency brought Mahmoud Abbas and
Bibi Netanyahu together rather than John Kerry.
That
doesn’t mean Kerry is doomed to fail. But if he is to succeed, not only will
the two sides have to own up, Kerry too will need to readjust his thinking and
consider a more active strategy.
Laying out parameters: Right
now, as far as we know, there are no agreed terms of reference governing the
talks. If these negotiations were happening a decade ago, you might not need
any, particularly if the process focused on interim issues. But this is a
major-league peace process, dedicated to the end game. Without some kind of
parameters to guide the talks — say, June 1967 borders with mutually agreed
swaps or an agreement that Jerusalem will be the capital of two states — the
negotiations will wander and likely break down.
U.S. bridging proposals: These,
too, will be necessary. The two sides may well succeed in narrowing the gaps.
But more than likely they will be unable to close them. It will take U.S. ideas
and bridging proposals to move matters along. And these U.S. ideas must take
into account the needs and requirements of both sides. The last time we tried
this, at Camp David in July 2000, American proposals were much more to Israel’s
liking.
The president’s role: Then
there’s Barack Obama, a risk-averse president whose priority isn’t the Middle
East but the American middle class. If a deal is to be done, it will have to
entail a major role for Obama and a tough struggle with Abbas, but particularly
with Netanyahu over issues such as borders and the final status of Jerusalem,
where the American position is much closer to the Palestinians than to the
Israelis. (On security and refugees, the Americans are closer to Israel). Will
the president want to undermine his carefully calculated “reset” with Israel
earlier this year for a risky bet on Middle East peace? Legacy pulls hard. But
legacy cuts both ways: You can be the hero and the goat, too.
Is some
kind of Israeli-Palestinian agreement possible? Perhaps. But it will take the
kind of leadership, courage, and commitment that we haven’t seen from any
member of the Big Three – yet.