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REMARKS BY PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER
In Recognition of the 20th Anniversary of the Camp David Accords
October 25, 1998
University of Maryland, College Park
It is always nice to hear a good introduction – and particularly
from someone who is so close and such a cherished friend as
Jehan Sadat. In thinking about what I was going to say today, I decided
not to write a text but just to reminisce about some of
the things that have been important to me in dealing with this vitally important
subject.
But I came today not because of entreaties, and not because of my respect
for Jehan Sadat, not even because of my respect
for this great university. I came for a different purpose and wanted to
come last year. The first year I was in office, I met
sixty-eight foreign leaders, some who came to the White House on formal
occasions, and others when I visited the United
Nations in New York. And in the next three years I met a number of others.
This is my seventeenth year as a professor at
Emory University. I have given a lot of lectures in that time, and I have
been asked a lot of questions. One of the most
frequent questions is: Who is the greatest leader you have ever met in your
life? And I have only had one answer: President
Anwar Sadat of Egypt.
I first met Anwar Sadat just a few months after I became president. I had
taught Sunday school for many years -- I taught this
morning before I left my home -- and I had a deep religious interest in
the Holy Land. I had learned as a candidate and as a
new president the importance of the Middle East to me personally, to those
who share faith in God, and to those who are
concerned about the integrity and the future peace of my own country.
There was an alignment of forces in the Middle East that was very disturbing.
The powerful Soviet Union in the depths of
the Cold War aligned with certain groups, and our country aligned with others.
I felt it incumbent upon me to cast aside any
restraints regarding political popularity or the risk of failure and began
to seek a way to bring peace to the region. I began to
meet with Middle East leaders. I was distressed when I met with then Prime
Minister Rabin of Israel who was extremely
cautious. I then met with King Hussein of Jordan, President Assad from Syria,
and Crown Prince Fahd from Saudi Arabia. It
was not encouraging, the totality of it.
Then President Anwar Sadat came to meet with me. We had our normal conference
-- one side filled with Americans and the
other with Egyptians – followed by a banquet in the evening with some
entertainment. Afterwards I felt a strange rapport with
that man that has been almost unequaled in my life. I invited Anwar to go
upstairs with me, to a place in the White House
where very few people visit, to the second floor where the families live.
He went up with me. Our little daughter Amy was
asleep, and I woke her up and said, "Amy, I want you to meet a new
friend." And President Sadat met my daughter. We then
went and sat on the corner of a sofa, and I began to explain to him my dreams
of peace in the Middle East. I found a
receptivity that I had not experienced anywhere else, and I began to recognize
the attributes that made him great. He was
calm, self-assured, and had a far-sighted awareness of global interrelatedness.
It was obvious that he was bold and did not
lack political courage. We explored some ideas. There were some things he
said would never happen in his lifetime. He said
we might see Israeli ships going through the Suez Canal, but there would
never be an exchange of ambassadors.
After he left I knew – and made a public statement saying - that
a bright shining light came into my life with the visit of this
singular man. I asked Anwar Sadat to help me break the ice that had frozen
over as a result of four wars between Egypt and
Israel in the last twenty-five years. Later, when I had not made any progress
after a very conservative Menachem Begin was
elected Prime minister of Israel, Sadat said he would like to do something
that was bold. I encouraged him. His first thought
was to invite the five permanent members of the United Nations Security
council to come together promote peace in the
Middle East. I said there was no way to invite all five – the U.S.,
Soviet Union, China, France, and Great Britain – that it
would just complicate the issue.
We exchanged ideas again, and in September he said that he would be willing
to go to Jerusalem. He announced this
publicly after he had consulted with me, and I strongly approved. I contacted
Menachem Begin, who responded to me with an
invitation for Sadat to come, and he went.
It was a momentous event. The First Baptist Church in Washington where
I attended services, adjourned early so I could go
home and watch Sadat’s speech. It was a harsh speech, laying down
the maximum demands of the Arab world. However, it
was not important what he said; it was where he said it. Then - through
me – he invited Menachem Begin to join him in
Egyptian territory, which turned out to be a disaster. The two men were
totally incompatible. They were only together about
twenty minutes and stormed away from each other in a spirit of anger.
Later, I decided that the only way to break this deadlock was to invite
both men to come to meet with me at Camp David. I
hand-wrote long letters to both of them, and they both agreed. And they
arrived there, and I talked to both men. Before that I
had a deep psycho-analysis of each man presented to me - very thick books.
I never let Jehan read the one about her husband.
But they turned out to be quite accurate. After studying those books, I
knew both men. Sadat thought about complicated
matters in a broad strategic, bold, aggressive, global fashion. Begin was
just the opposite. He thought about things in a more
detailed way. How would they affect the people that had supported him? How
would they affect his own interests inside
Israel? When I deliberately put pressure on both men, Sadat would respond
to escape my pressure by talking about broad
generalities. Menachem Begin would become involved in minutia, particularly
in semantics - wondering about what does this
word mean, what does that word mean?
I brought them together; however, as had been the case with the visit in
Egypt, they were incompatible. I tried for three days
to get them to talk about the future. All they could talk about was the
past. And so for the last ten days at Camp David, I never
let them see each other. Begin sat in his cabin. Sadat sat in his cabin.
They ate at different times, different places. I kept them
very carefully apart, and I went back and forth between them. While I was
with Menachem Begin, Sadat was resting. While I
was with Anwar Sadat, Begin was resting. And we kept going and made some
progress.
Within that interim period we went to the Civil War battlefield at Gettysburg
one day, and I made them both agree not to talk
about the Middle East or about anything that happened since 1865. I sat
between the two men in the limousine. We got to
Gettysburg, and Sadat, all of his generals, and all of the Israeli generals
knew the battle details – I was really amazed.
However, Menachem Begin did not know anything about the battle. We had Shelby
Foot with us, an expert on the Civil War.
And so Begin was a little embarrassing to me, not having learned about Gettysburg.
But when we arrived at the point where
Abraham Lincoln had made his address, Menachem Begin recited it word-for-
word. A nice event – that I will never forget.
Then we went back to work, not very successfully at first. Assistants were
negotiating. I was primarily by myself with those
two men and those whom they designated. One day we made the mistake of letting
Moshe Dayan go and speak to Sadat. Ezer
Weizman who was here last year was a friend of Sadat as you know. Moshe
Dayan, who did not know Sadat well, outlined
to him a harsh summary of Israel’s demands and said, "We will
not make any concessions!" I was in a meeting in my cabin
with my secretary of state and defense secretary. And I was informed that
Sadat had packed his backs and called for his
helicopter to remove him from Camp David. I was distressed because Sadat
had promised me he would not leave.
I was wearing blue jeans, and so I put on more formal clothes. I went over
to the window, and I looked out over the mountain
side and said a silent prayer. Then I went over and confronted Sadat. It
was the only harsh confrontation we ever had. I told
him that he had betrayed me and broken his promise to me -- that if he left
Camp David and left me and the Israelis there, the
condemnation of the world would be on him. And eventually he decided to
stay. He only made two demands of me and my
negotiation role. One was that we have a comprehensive agreement on behalf
of the Palestinians -- which is there. I hope all
of you will read what was agreed in Camp David. And secondly, that all Israeli
troops, all Israeli citizens had to leave
Egyptian territory in the Sinai desert. Those were the only two. He said:
"Anything else you negotiate, my good friend Jimmy
(as he always said), I will accept it."
There was a general consensus at Camp David that Sadat trusted me too much
and that Begin did not trust me enough. Sadat
was the most forthcoming member of the Egyptian delegation. Begin was the
most reluctant member of the Israeli delegation.
We have gotten to the eleventh day. We had a breakdown because Menachem
Begin had taken an oath before God that he
would never dismantle an Israeli settlement. And one of Sadat’s unchangeable
demands was that all Israelis had to be
removed from Sinai dessert. There was one in Yamit, a little settlement,
about 3,000 people in the Sinai dessert. That was
the fatal obstacle.
Begin had decided to leave. I had decided to leave, and so had Sadat. Begin
asked me to sign a photograph of the three of us
for his grandchildren. My secretary brought me eight photographs, and she
had also discovered the names of Begin’s
grandchildren. So instead of just signing Jimmy Carter, I put "With
Love to" and wrote the name of every one of his
grandchildren. I took them over to his cabin. He was hardly speaking to
me. I knocked at the door and went in. I handed him
the photographs, a stack of them. He said, "Thank you, Mr. President"
and turned around, dismissing me in effect. And he
looked down and he read the first photograph, and he called out the name
of his granddaughter. And then one by one he read
out the names of his grandchildren. Tears ran down his cheeks, and when
I saw them I also cried. And he said, "Why don’t
we try one more time?"
I went back to my cabin with a man named Aharon Barak who had been designated
to be Attorney General of Israel. He is
now the chief justice of the Supreme Court. Barak and I worked out a proposal
to submit to Begin in effect saying, "You do
not have to violate your oath. You do not have anything to do with dismantling
your settlement. We will let the Israeli
Knesset make the decision, yes or no. And you do not have any reason to
vote." And to make a long story short, we concluded
the agreement. And then later with about an eighty-five percent vote, the
Knesset agreed to dismantle the settlement in Yamit.
That was the high point.
After that things broke down again, and I could not get the Israelis to
carry out the commitments that had been made. My
interpretation and Sadat’s interpretation was that Begin had agreed
not to build any more settlements until the peace
agreement was concluded. Begin, in my opinion, (he disputed this), violated
that commitment and said he only agreed to wait
three months. So the settlements began to be built again. I decided to go
to Egypt and Israel in March of 1979. I called Sadat
in advance, and he said, "Anything you propose, I will accept it."
When I got to Israel, Begin was totally adamant against
making any further concessions, and he and I had a terrible confrontation.
All the members of his cabinet including Sharon agreed with my proposal,
but Prime Minister Begin did not. The last day I
was to be there, Prime Minister Begin and his wife came up to my and Rosalynn’s
suite in the King David Hotel. We went
down to the lobby to meet them. Our elevator got stuck six feet above the
floor. It took them about twenty minutes with a big
crow bar to tear open the door of the elevator. We did not know if God had
his hands in the episode or not, but Begin finally
agreed. I went back to the airport in Cairo, and we announced that a peace
treaty had been concluded. We signed it a few
days later.
Next spring it will have been twenty years. Not a single person has been
killed. And not a single word of that peace treaty
has been violated. And it has been a testament that it is possible for Arabs
and Israelis who have despised each other and
killed each other and have been at war with each other can indeed find peace
so that it is permanently beneficial to both
sides.
Then came another long empty period when nothing was done, frustrations
grew, and violence erupted. Then there came a
time of secret negotiations by the Norwegians. There was a social science
group who went to Gaza to study the problems of
Palestinians who were living in occupied territory in Gaza. They became
trusted by the Palestinians, and as academics they
reached out to the Israelis too. First a very low level of government increased
upward. I was in Vienna, Austria, at a human
rights conference in June of 1993, and Shimon Peres told me about the secret
talks. He said the United States did not know
about them. Later Chairman Arafat also told me about the talks. I was in
the northern part of Yemen when I got a call that
Arafat had flown into the capital and needed to see me urgently. I left
my visit and flew down to the capital. With his eyes
filled with tears, Arafat told me they had reached agreement and that the
biggest problem for Rabin was to notify the
secretary of state of the United States, whose government had not been involved.
They rented a Lear jet in Geneva and flew
to Los Angeles and informed Warren Christopher that the Oslo agreement had
been signed.
There was a ceremony on the South lawn. Some of you were there. I was there,
sitting on the front row and my wife on the
third row. Behind her were former secretaries of state. And sitting beside
her was the foreign secretary of Norway who had
negotiated the agreement. His name was never mentioned. Two years later
he died at the age of forty-four. This signing was a
high point. And then began the low points with Rabin’s assassination,
and violence by the Palestinian militants which
resulted in Netanyahu’s election.
And then the long dry spell interrupted recently by President Clinton who
brought the leaders to the Wye Plantation. You
know the result which has basically put back on track the peace process.
It is not quite back where it was before Rabin’s
assassination, but there is hope. Anyone dealing with the Middle East has
to be an optimist. I am. Jehan is. Sadat was. Many
others. I am optimistic not as a naive foolish person. But I am optimistic
because I know the Israelis, and the Lebanese, and
the Syrians, and the Jordanians, and the Palestinians, and the Egyptians.
I know that the Israeli mothers want peace. And the
Palestinian mothers want peace. And the Lebanese, and the Syrian, and the
Jordanian mothers want peace. The obstacles are
the politicians. They do not have the courage to honor the demands and the
prayers of the mothers. I made this same statement
in a speech to the Knesset back in those days. I do not know what is going
to happen in the future. I am inclined to be
cautiously optimistic. Those of us in this room who have demonstrated an
interest in the process need to be involved.
However mighty, some with authority, some without authority. All of us have
some degree of influence.
We need to support President Clinton in his efforts. I sent him a congratulatory
letter the day before yesterday. We need to
strengthen the Jewish community in this country who are deeply concerned
about the security of the honored land. We need to
be conversant with the suffering of the Palestinian people who have dreams.
And we need to resurrect in times of doubt, the
image of the greatest leader I have ever met. His name has been given to
this lecture series: Anwar Sadat.
C.D. Mote, Jr., President of the University of Maryland:
Thank you very much, President Carter, for the inspiration and guidance
you have given us all and for this opportunity to
sense your personal history of this period that is so critical to all of
us. It has really been a treat for us to hear you and also to
be guided by you.
President Carter has graciously agreed to respond to questions submitted
by a distinguished panel of participants at a
conference held at College Park this past Friday and Saturday. The theme
of the conference was Major Unilateral
Concessions in International Bargaining: A Conference on the Occasion of
the Twentieth Anniversary of the Camp David
Accords.
Professor Telhami, would you please relay the questions from the panel?
Shibley Telhami, Anwar Sadat Chair for Peace and Development:
The first question is from Professor Saad al-Din Ibrahim from the Ibn Khaldun
Center for Development in Cairo, Egypt.
Many Egyptian insiders to the Camp David negotiations in 1978 were led
to believe that you, Mr. President, were going to
enlist the Saudi’s support to the Camp David Accords which never materialized.
What is the truth to this claim?
President Carter: Well, this in the past, I think, has been a secret that
has not been known by anyone except me and then
Crown Prince Fahd, now King Fahd. Before we went to Camp David, I met with
Crown Prince Fahd. He encouraged me to
go and said he wished every success. When I left Israel in the spring of
1979 and flew to the airport in Cairo and go
President Sadat’s final approval of the exact text of the treaty and
got into Air Force One to fly back to the States, the first
message I got was from Saudi Arabia. It said: We are deeply pleased at the
success you had and the peace treaty that we
hope will bring an end of violence in our region.
The Saudis were quite close to me as President. When I had a problem with
oil, when I had a problem later on with the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Christmas week of 1979, they were there
to help me. The grievous aftermath of the peace
treaty though was that almost unanimously in the Arab world there was a
condemnation of Sadat and a boycott of Egypt itself.
Only three Arab leaders refrained from that condemnation: King Hassan of
Morocco, President Nimeiry of Sudan, and Sultan
Qabus of Oman. Everyone else publicly condemned the statement.
So as is often the case in politics, there is a difference in public statements
and the private assurances. So I can let you know
that I had private assurances of encouragement from the Saudis to proceed.
But publicly they joined in with other Arab
leaders who objected.
I cannot claim that we did not make some mistakes in the way Camp David
was conducted. It was complicated enough for
me. Some people have said, "Why didn’t you invite King Hussein
of Jordan? King Hussein would not have come. "Why
didn’t you invite some Palestinians?" Had Palestinians been there
officially, Begin would not have come. So we had to – I
had to make a judgment about how restrictive we should be. But to answer
your question, I can assure you - and the
documents are at the Carter Library in Atlanta - that we had strong support
privately from the Saudis, even though they did
join in with other Arab countries in condemning the peace agreement after
it was reached.
Shibley Telhami: The second question, Mr. President, is from Professor
Asher Arian of the Haifa University in Israel.
Do you now think that your efforts at Camp David helped you or hurt you
in the 1980 presidential campaign? What element in
the negotiation are you now sorry you did not press harder to obtain?
President Carter: In March of 1977, before I had ever met Begin or Sadat,
I made a speech in Massachusetts. And I called for
a homeland for the Palestinian people, to end their long period of suffering.
This was a statement that was quite controversial
at the time. When we concluded the Camp David Accords, it had mixed reviews
among Jewish leaders in the United States
and also in Israel. When I visited Israel later, some of the people who
had become top leaders there thought I betrayed Israel
by my apparent affinity for the Palestinians. And one minister of defense,
a very influential man, told me that I gave away the
Sinai which should be under the control of Israel, and I returned Egypt’s
oil wells which should have been retained for
Israel. So there were mixed feelings about that.
I might say that almost invariably in any sort of political issue, the
ones that feel most intensely are the ones who tend to
prevail. And the ones who are just in general for peace or in general for
progress are quite often moderate in their beliefs.
They are not willing to sacrifice to bring about what’s nice. We see
this quite often in our country, for instance, with gun
control. The overwhelming majority of Americans feel that AK-47s ought not
to be sold to people through a gun shop. But
when a vote comes in the Congress, or in a city government, or a state legislature
the intensity of the National Rifle
Association prevails and the guns, the machine guns are still being sold
that way.
I am not being critical. I hate to avoid the question. In 1980 when I ran
for reelection as president, I was the first Democrat
since Franklin Roosevelt who did not get a majority vote among the American
Jewish community. By then the glory of the
peace treaty at Camp David had dissipated, and the threat of loosing territory
in the West Bank and Gaza, the threat of a
possible independent Palestinian entity or government was genuinely fearsome
to many Israelis and to those who supported
them over here. So I would say at the time we signed the peace treaty there
was an almost unanimous favorable response, but
over a period of time it dissipated. I would say in general the incumbent
government of Israel draws support in this country
from the Jewish community. And I think that is the way it ought to be. And
that is probably the way I would feel if I were
Jewish and were concerned about Israel being in danger. I think that makes
negotiations very difficult. It made it difficult for
me. It made it very difficult for President Reagan and Bush and now for
President Clinton.
The genuine and I would say legitimate fear of Israelis is that their security
may be frittered away because there is not much
trust on either side as you well know. The Israelis do not trust the Palestinians.
The Palestinians do not trust the Israelis. And
there is evidence on both sides because Netanyahu cannot control settlers,
some of whom will now be forced to leave
territory that they believe in the depth of their hearts and souls is ordained
to them by God almighty. There could not be a
more deep commitment in human beings’ hearts. And there are Palestinians,
members of the PLO, Hamas, who are deeply
convinced that Sadat and Arafat have betrayed the cause of the Palestinians
and that any peace agreement with the Israelis is
counterproductive.
I overanswered the question. But the point is, I do not have any blame
for anyone who has deep feelings, you might say, on all
four sides: the Israelis pro and con peace, the Palestinians pro and con
peace. You can make justifiable arguments in every
case. I wrote a book about this. It is called Blood of Abraham. I think
a very provocative title. We are all descendants of
Abraham. Those of us who are Christians, those of us who are Jews, and those
of us who are Arabs. And what I did was to
go to Israel and talk to members of the Likud and also members of Labor.
I went into the West Bank and Gaza and talked to
Palestinians who were basically moderate and basically fervent. I went to
Lebanon when the war was still on. Shells were
bursting around the president’s palace while I was talking to him.
I went to Assad in Syria three or four times. I went to meet
with the Jordanians and the Egyptians. And I wrote a book describing not
my interpretations but what they felt about the
Mid-East peace process. It is an interesting book. If you study this subject
you might want to take a look at it. But I
understand, I believe, the complexities and the deep feelings and the justifiable
fears that exist over there in the Holy Land.
And so we should not feel an element of hatred or animosity toward someone
who disagrees with us. That is the root and the
cause of continuous strife. We cannot recognize that our enemies are human
beings and they might have some justifiable
reasons for disagreeing with us. So, I hope that in the future we can all
be more moderate.
Shibley Telhami: Thank you. Last question, Mr. President, from Carol Gordon.
Over the past two days, we have been
discussing the Camp David Accords and the effect of major unilateral concessions
such as that made by President Sadat. The
issue of trust or lack of trust and the question of how unilateral concessions
help build trust has been emphasized. Can you
compare the relationship between Begin and Sadat with that of Arafat and
Netanyahu, especially regarding the level of trust
and mistrust between them?
And if you may allow me, Mr. President, since this is the last question
to take the liberty of asking you to elaborate on a
statement that related to trust, both here and in your book, which was:
"Sadat trusted me too much." What do you mean by
that, Mr. President?
President Carter: Do I have my choice between those two questions?
Well, you know, professors could go on for days trying to analyze the difference
between Netanyahu and Begin. And I am
reluctant to be completely frank in my opinion. You know, the TV cameras
go on. But I will say that Begin, I always thought,
made the most courageous decisions at Camp David. He had the most to loose
when he went back home. Because not only
had he made an oath that he would not dismantle an Israeli settlement, but
he had led the most militant element of the Jewish
society when they were still under the domination of Great Britain and had
even committed acts of violence, which is well
known. But he was a man of great courage. And I would guess that he had
probably the highest intelligence of any man I have
ever known. He was a semanticist. He dealt in the meaning of words. Very
effectively, I might say. When I proposed in my
handwritten notes, which are available for you to look at, that the Palestinians
be granted autonomy, he said: "Insert full, full
autonomy." So I wrote in "full" at Begin’s request.
Unfortunately, they were not given any authority or autonomy afterwards
for a long time.
Prime Minister Netanyahu is constrained I think by his own deep beliefs
and also by his alliance with elements in Israeli
political society that are more reluctant than he is to make steps to implement
the Oslo agreement. And I think that he at Wye
Plantation had to make the most courageous decision. It did not require
a lot of courage on the part of President Clinton to go
there and to negotiate. Even a failure would not have been devastating.
But it took a lot of courage which I admire deeply to
make the concessions that Netanyahu has made.
I would say that Sadat was totally different from Chairman Arafat. Sadat
was bold, authoritative, and self-confident,
independent, strategic in his thoughts. Chairman Arafat is not blessed with
those attributes of boldness and independence. He
has to deal with and has dealt for decades with a very fragile organization
of disparate points of view. His continuing as a
chairman is predicated on his balancing all those conflicting opinions in
trying to reach compromises that will retain his
authority. Sadat did not have to worry about that. Sadat was, I think, overly
immune to the condemnation of those within the
Arab world who disagreed with him. I used to argue with him about that.
He was impervious to this, which may be one of the
causes of his assassination. So I think you can see that the four men are
quite different. And I am not trying to exult any above
the others, except I have already told you how I feel about Sadat. But I
have great admiration for Chairman Arafat, with
whom I have spent many hours, and who came to me as soon as there was an
opportunity and said to me, "I wish we had
accepted all the terms of the Camp David Accords. We would have been much
better off had we done it at the time."
The other part of your question. Sadat was as good a friend as I ever had
personally. Rosalynn and Jehan are close friends.
My children are friends with Sadat’s children. My grandchildren are
friends of Sadat’s grandchildren. He came down to
Plains to visit me in my little home town, six-hundred people, just a few
months before he gave his life for peace. And when I
went to Egypt I went to his little home town. And I walked through the streets
and talked to some of his neighbors. There was
an element of mutual trust and accommodation and rapport of a political
and human nature that was possibly unprecedented
between two leaders of nations.
When I got to Camp David as I mentioned earlier, Sadat told me, this is
strange to say: "Mr. President, my good friend
Jimmy," he always said, "anything that you propose, I will accept.
Except I have two demands. I want a comprehensive
agreement for the Palestinians that all the Israeli forces would be withdrawn
from the Westbank and Gaza." All that is in the
Camp David Accord. "And the other thing is, every Israeli has to leave
Egyptian territory. If they want to come back later and
live there with my approval I will arrange that but they have to leave.
And with those two exceptions it is okay."
And as I said earlier, I am repeating myself to answer the question, Sadat
was by far the most forthcoming member of the
Egyptian delegation. Some of his top assistants resigned in protest because
they felt that Sadat was too forthcoming, that he
trusted me too much. And as I said earlier, Prime Minister Begin, I felt,
did not trust me enough. I do not say that in a critical
fashion. But Ezer Weizman, Moshe Dayan, Aharon Barak and other members of
the Israeli delegation trusted me a lot more
than did Prime Minister Begin.
So the feeling of trust was mutual, and I am glad that he trusted me too
much.
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