The High Price of Obama’s Mideast Peace Push. By John Bolton.
The high price of Obama’s Mideast peace push. By John Bolton. New York Post, January 7, 2014.
Bolton:
The
breaking news that al Qaeda has captured Fallujah and Ramadi raises the
question whether America’s sacrifices in Iraq were made in vain. It also
highlights the utter inadequacy of President Obama’s Middle East policy,
especially his disregard for critical regional threats.
Instead,
Obama has focused on Israeli-Palestinian issues, essentially to no avail.
Despite Secretary of State John Kerry’s repeated visits, including one just
ended, the “peace process” has seen no significant movement.
Proponents
of “peace processing” ignore this reality, asserting that the process itself
has an inherent value, and that real movement comes only when deadlines loom
and decision-makers realize “it’s now or never” to “take risks for peace” and
achieve “a peace for the brave.” And when all else fails, peace processers say,
“What have we got to lose?”
Such
rhetoric might be appealing initially, but it is in fact utterly hollow. The
entirely predictable unraveling of Obama’s current effort is neither novel nor
surprising. What is surprising is the near-religious faith peace processers
still profess, despite the overwhelming contrary evidence. It’s therefore
critical to note the negative consequences of their approach — because there is
indeed much to lose by continuing to follow their strategy.
Diplomacy,
like all human activity, has costs as well as benefits. The obsessive focus on
Israeli-Palestinian issues incurs what economists call “opportunity costs” —
namely, the lost opportunity to concentrate on other issues of greater
importance or where there are better chances for progress. This is a decidedly
serious problem.
The
most immediate costs fall on the parties themselves, especially Palestinians,
used and abused for decades not by Israel, but by Middle Eastern radicals
who’ve made “Palestine” the point of their attack against Israel’s very
existence.
With
attention diverted from repeated failures to create legitimate, representative
institutions of governance, Palestinians have been left with a corrupt,
ineffective Palestinian Authority, no functioning economy, few useful economic
skills, precious little foreign investment and a dependency existence fostered
by UN and other relief programs.
The
vaunted “international community” should feel only shame for emphasizing the
mirage of “Palestine” instead of the basic economic aspirations of individual
Palestinians.
As a
result of all this, there is simply no Palestinian entity that can make and
implement the kinds of commitments necessary to sustain a true peace agreement.
This is the basic reason why the current Obama-Kerry effort must inevitably
fail.
Individual
Palestinian leaders may perform responsibly, not simply grasping for wealth and
power, but they alone can’t provide adequate assurances of sustaining any
agreement over time.
Israel,
in turn, faces even graver problems, notably Iran’s nuclear-weapons program,
resurgent terrorism and the failure of the Arab Spring. Every hour spent
talking to Secretary Kerry about West Bank apartment construction is an hour
not spent addressing these more serious issues.
US time
and resources are also being diverted from other, more-pressing international
problems, not least of which are elsewhere in the Middle East. Iran’s
nuclear-weapons program is not merely or even primarily Israel’s problem, it is
America’s. Unfortunately, Obama’s administration is making the same mistake as
its predecessors by trying (and failing) to negotiate Iran out of its nuclear
ambitions.
But
even beyond that, Obama’s misjudgments and inattention are imperiling the
entire region. Libya is dissolving partly because Obama lost interest once
Khadafy was overthrown, leading to the Sept. 11, 2012, murders in Benghazi,
which remain unavenged and unresolved 16 months later. Syria is not only in chaos, but so too is
Obama’s Syria policy, incoherent to the point of embarrassment for almost three
years.
There
is turmoil across North Africa as Islamic extremists and militants threaten
existing governments. South Sudan is collapsing in civil war and others seem
destined to follow. And, again, there is al Qaeda’s resurgence in Iraq.
More
globally, of course, are the serious problems of Chinese territorial
aggrandizement in Asia; Russian efforts to re-establish hegemony in Ukraine,
the Caucasus and other former Soviet states, as well as North Korea’s
threatening nuclear-weapons program.
The
list is long. For Obama to focus on Israel-Palestinian issues to the effective
exclusion of others more pressing in the short run and more consequential in
the long run therefore imposes high costs on the United States and future
administrations.
Finally,
there is always the danger that, as the “peace process” deadline approaches,
the White House will try to impose a solution on Israel. If so, some will
undoubtedly hail it as representing success for Obama’s efforts, but that would
be pure propaganda.
The
parties must themselves not only want peace, as former Secretary of State Jim
Baker repeatedly emphasized, but they must also both be capable of it. Until
those conditions are met, peace processing is not just wasteful but potentially
dangerous.