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A
Different Light Gives Arafat's Acts New Meaning
By Shibley Telhami
Los Angeles Times
October 22, 2000
Many
on the Israeli left and in the U.S. peace movement have
turned sharply right. Two assumptions are driving the
mood. First, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak gave all
he could, but Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat didn't
want peace since he didn't budge on the Haram al Sharif/Temple
Mount. Second, Arafat is employing violence either to
end the negotiations or to extract unreasonable
concessions from Barak. Heart-wrenching scenes of
Israeli soldiers being lynched and a Palestinian boy
shot in the arms of his father have accelerated the turn
to the right.
The
conclusion: Publicly blame Arafat, as if blame provides
vindication and enables Arafat to give more. This is a
grave mistake.
Consider
the frustration with Arafat. The expectation at the outset
of the negotiations was that Arafat could compromise on
the Haram al Sharif/Temple Mount, but he chose not to.
This proves, to some, that he didn't want peace. The fact
that Arafat made bold concessions on difficult issues like
Jewish settlements is a minor inconvenience in the way of
this logic.
Yet
there is a much simpler explanation that is uncomfortable
for the peace camp: Arafat knew that Haram al Sharif was
the "reddest line" for Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims and
could transform the conflict from a manageable nationalist
into a militant-religious conflict that threatens him,
Barak and the prospects of peace.
Yet to
admit this now would lead some in the peace camp into one
of two uncomfortable conclusions: Either the conflict was
unripe for the comprehensive resolution they advocated
because Barak could not give what Arafat needed, or the
peace camp should have reexamined the insistence that
Israel have equal sovereign control over the site. In
either case, the blame for failure would be spread much
more widely than just Arafat, who argued at the outset
that the time was not ripe for a deal.
Every
proposal put on the table for the Haram al Sharif/Temple
Mount provided at least symmetrical sovereign control for
Israel: Israeli sovereignty, "dual sovereignty," "divine
sovereignty" and "U.N. sovereignty." Postponement of the
issue would have, in effect, left Israel as the de facto
sovereign power. Barak's insistence on at least symmetry
was reasonable given that he believed his constituency
could accept nothing less.
But in
reality, the situation on the Haram al Sharif/Temple Mount
has not been symmetrical, either legally or functionally.
While the site is holy to Jews and Muslims, it has housed
the two most important and frequented Palestinian mosques
and has been controlled by the Waqf, or Islamic trust.
Legally, Haram al Sharif was part of the territories that
Israel seized in the 1967 war. For Jews, the Western Wall
has been, in effect, an open synagogue, where Jews prayed
and remembered the Second Temple. Although the Western
Wall was under Jordanian control until 1967, Arafat agreed
that it would remain under Israeli sovereignty.
Making
matters difficult for Barak's case was the Israeli opening
position on Jerusalem, which called for separating
political from religious aspects. The Palestinians were
able to turn this around: If religion is taken out of it,
what are the legal claims for Israeli sovereignty over the
Haram al Sharif/Temple Mount? But these were taboo issues
for much of the peace camp, in the same way that the
contemplation of anything less than Palestinian
sovereignty seemed taboo to Arafat. Blame is always easier
than looking deep inside.
Blame is
made easier by another frustration with Arafat: How could
he allow the violence to escalate as it did? This
frustration is bolstered by unfortunate statements made by
Arafat's aides about the utility of violence for
negotiations. This is made worse if one assumes, as some
in the peace camp did, that Arafat could have given more
on Jerusalem but was supporting violence to extract
unreasonable concessions.
Suppose,
however, that Arafat believed he could not give more?
Suppose he felt that the U.S. and Israel were maneuvering
to demonstrate that he is weak and had no option but to
accept what he knew he couldn't. In that case, his
condoning the escalation may have been in part to "signal"
what might come against him and against Israel if
negotiations fail, including unleashing religious passions
that are harder to control than nationalist passions.
This
scenario would put his moves in a different light, not too
different from Barak's moves. Barak, for example, also
used force strategically. Certainly he used it to defend
his soldiers. But the attacks on Arafat's quarters and the
overwhelming force used against stone throwers was in part
intended to address an Israeli fear that Arabs now think
that Israel is weak. Barak was thus sending a message that
Israel was powerful and had military options if things
fell apart. As he put it, no one will respect you if you
are too weak, not even your own people.
In the
same way, Arafat himself appeared weak to his people on
the eve of Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon's visit,
a mocking target for Hamas. Every funeral that followed
made him appear more impotent. Once one accepts that
Arafat could not compromise on Haram al Sharif, then his
behavior takes on a different meaning.
There
remains an alternative to moving into devastating ethnic
and religious conflict no one can win--but not through
negotiations as usual. If a peace option is to be put on
the table, it has to be in the form of a detailed American
proposal, with European backing, that builds on Camp David
and on what has been learned since.
It could
fail. Yet it also could give moderates a chance to make
one last stand to stave off a ruinous outcome.
Shibley Telhami, a Professor of Government and Politics at
the University of Maryland, Is a Senior Fellow at the
Brookings Institution.
Copyright © 2000,
Los Angeles Times
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