Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations Will Require Public Support. By James Zogby.
Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations Will Require Public Support. By James Zogby. The Huffington Post, August 3, 2013.
Zogby:
There
is an intimate relationship between Israeli and Palestinian public opinion and
the successful outcome of any peace negotiations. In the end, no matter how
clever or skillfully arranged the formula for compromise, it must pass the test
of being accepted by both sides.
When we
have polled both Israeli and Palestinian publics in order to see where
compromise can be found, our efforts come up short. Too often what we find is
that the most Israelis indicate a willingness to give in any peace agreement
falls far short of the Palestinian minimum requirements for a just settlement.
The negotiators, if they are worth their salt, know this. They, therefore,
address each issue not merely as an abstract problem to be solved, but as a
matter which must, in the end, be accepted by their respective publics.
Concretizing this imperative, both Israeli and Palestinian leaderships have
pledged to submit the product of the negotiations to a referendum. This makes
it especially clear that both societies must be ready and willing to endorse
any compromise arrangement for peace.
Ignoring
the vital role that will be played by public opinion in this process,
therefore, can doom the entire effort from the start.
Peace,
like any political compromise, must be grounded in the possible. As I have
noted, our polling establishes that, at this point, peace does not appear to be
possible. Paralleling the negotiations, the real work that must be done is to
expand the range of the possible by changing public attitudes on both sides.