[NYTr] Annapolis - Mission Impossible?

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Nov 26 04:56:38 EST 2007


sent by Steven L. Robinson - activ-l 
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/article3196246.ece

[Query whether it is the "profound ignorence" [see quote below]of the
convenor of the Annapolis conference that is responsible for the support
that this summit meeting finds among US apologists for Israeli
policies. -SR]

The Independent - Nov 26, 2007

Mission impossible?

By Rupert Cornwell in Washington

This week will see George Bush make his first, and almost certainly his
only, major attempt to bring an end to the world's most intractable
conflict. As participants gather for tomorrow's Middle East conference
in Annapolis, Maryland, the spotlight is on the Israelis, the
Palestinians, the Syrians and the Saudis - but the most important
consideration lies closer to home: how will President Bush fare in a
belated attempt to play peacemaker.

The reasons propelling the various parties to attend the conference are
well known. They include the common domestic weaknesses of Ehud Olmert,
the Israeli Prime Minister, the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, and
Mr Bush himself. For all three, a genuine and concerted push for peace
would improve their standing at home.

For Mr Bush especially, and his Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
major progress in their remaining year or so in office would put a
positive gloss on a "legacy" that now consists primarily of the debacle
in Iraq, and the huge strategic victory the 2003 invasion presented to
Iran. Indeed, Tehran's growing power in the region, feared by Israel
and moderate Sunni Arab states alike, is a main reason why the
gathering is taking place.

At the same time, US negotiators hope that the very number of Arab
countries attending (16 in all as well as the Arab League) will be seen
by Israel as an assurance that any deal with the Palestinians that does
ultimately emerge from the process initiated at Annapolis will have
broad Arab backing - hastening final acceptance in the region of the
legitimacy of the Jewish state.

But if the moment is unusually propitious for negotiation, never have
the obstacles to a peace deal been higher. It was not clear yesterday
whether even a joint document would be agreed. The Saudi foreign
minister is refusing to shake hands with the Israelis.

With Hamas in control of the Gaza Strip, the Palestinians are divided.
Mr Abbas speaks for only part of his people; without Hamas' backing,
any deal he does strike could be meaningless. Weakened at home, Mr
Olmert will have to show real courage to make concessions that will be
bitterly opposed by the settler movement and his religious coalition
partners.

At best, what will emerge is a declaration that both sides want a
settlement, based on resolution of the familiar "final status" issues:
Israeli settlements and the borders between the states, the right of
return for Palestinian refugees, and Jerusalem.

But not only are these issues are as divisive and intractable as ever.
They are at the mercy of small, more immediate, disputes. What, for
instance, precisely constitutes a freeze on settlements, which Mr
Olmert may announce this week in general terms? If such problems are
ever ironed out, it can only be with the unremitting involvement of the
US. That in turn will become clear not at Annapolis, but in the weeks
and months of painstaking negotiation that must follow.

Nothing in Mr Bush's foreign policy record offers great encouragement.
His 'chairman of the board' managerial style consists of making bold
statements and laying out broad strategy. Rejecting charges that the US
has ignored the conflict, White House aides point out that he was the
first President to call publicly (in mid-2002) for an independent
Palestinian state. Thereafter however, he confided after his one direct
foray into Middle East peace-making - the unproductive 'Red Sea Summit'
between Mr Abbas and Ariel Sharon, Mr Olmert's predecessor, in June
2003 - he saw his job as "riding herd" on the process, without sinking
into a Clintonian morass of detail. Alas, in the Middle East, the devil
all too often is in the detail.

Thus Mr Bush needs to throw his weight behind the new peace efforts; not
just through the intermediary of Ms Rice, however close to him she is,
but personally - and constantly. Follow-through has never been his
strength, be it in the absence of planning for post-invasion Iraq, or
in the failure to make sure the proper aid was reaching New Orleans
after Hurricane Katrina.

Second, many doubt he will put enough pressure on the Israelis to make
the painful concessions needed for a settlement to be credible in the
eyes of the Palestinians. Mr Bush may be the most instinctively
pro-Israeli President ever (though he has yet to visit Israel in his
near-seven years in office). Those inclinations have only been
reinforced by the 'war on terror'.

Soon after the September 11 attacks, Mr Sharon convinced him that
Palestinian attacks on Israel were part and parcel of the global
struggle with militant radical Islam. As a result, the onus hitherto
has always been on the Palestinians to show progress on security,
before anything was required of Israel.

Making matters worse was Mr Bush's lack of knowledge and sense of
history. Flynt Everett, once the top adviser to Ms Rice on Middle East
matters, but now a strong critic of the President, last week related
how at a 2002 meeting in the White House situation room, he heard Mr
Bush say that as soon as the Palestinians had a democratically elected
government, their leadership would be "less hung-up" on issues like
borders and the status of Jerusalem.

Mr Everett was astounded. It was, he told the Washington Post last week,
"one of the most profoundly ignorant statements anyone has ever uttered
on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."

Belatedly, the Bush mindset seems to be changing. Moreover Ms Rice, who
has visited the region repeatedly to urge a visible 'horizon,' not empty
promises, for Palestinian aspirations, has more clout in the Oval Office
than her hapless predecessor Colin Powell, whose efforts to push
Palestinian-Israeli peace efforts were always thwarted by Dick Cheney
and Donald Rumsfeld. Mr Rumsfeld may be gone, the vice-President
remains, even more unpopular than his boss, but still vastly
influential.




More information about the NYTr mailing list