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Message for
Israel: Leadership Needed
By Shibley Telhami
Baltimore Sun
March 18, 2001
JERUSALEM -- Dear Prime Minister Sharon:
As you begin your term as prime minister of Israel, you
face one of the most important turning points in the
history of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict: Things will
either get a lot better or a lot worse, but they are
unlikely to remain the same. You still hold most of the
cards.
You have been elected by the largest majority in
Israel's history and have skillfully formed a national
unity government. This gives you an outstanding
opportunity to choose between allowing your past to repeat
itself or to use it as a lever to propel your nation
toward a historic deal with the Palestinians.
A deal will, of course, also depend on the
Palestinians. But there is much that you, as the leader of
a powerful state whose forces remain in control of much of
the Palestinian territories, can do. Certainly, there is
much to avoid.
It is a mistake to believe that the current conflict is
primarily with Yasser Arafat personally, regardless of
strategic mistakes the Palestinians may have made (and,
like former Prime Minister Ehud Barak, they have made
many). Even if Mr. Arafat believed the use of violence is
useful in negotiations, the roots of the Intifada have
more to do with the despair of a Palestinian population
that has never known full freedom and independence and
that has suffered unbearable humiliation during the past
three decades.
Many Palestinians, far from being Mr. Arafat's
soldiers, are his opponents. Israeli acts of collective
punishment and economic blockades will only intensify
their resolve. Many may blame Mr. Arafat for perceived
impotence, but their fury will continue to be aimed at
Israel.
Although Israelis perceive the Intifada as an
aggressive act intended to coerce them into making
concessions, the Palestinians perceive it as a right of a
people under occupation to demonstrate that, weak as they
are, they are willing to pay a high price to get what they
believe they deserve.
And although Israelis perceive their tough measures in
the Palestinian territories as a way of redressing their
fear that Arabs now think Israel is weak, Palestinians see
them as an indication of Israel's determination to force
them into submission. It's a vicious cycle that cannot be
broken without acts of leadership.
The cycle cannot be broken by over-focusing on Mr.
Arafat. You can win the war against Mr. Arafat, both in
the public-blame arena and in the military battlefield.
His institutions can crumble. It may even feel like a
moral victory to prove that Mr. Arafat was to blame for
the failure of the negotiations. But will you win security
for your people, let alone peace?
Israelis today have a feeling of insecurity, even
though Israel remains the most powerful state in the
region. This genuine feeling has resulted from the
Intifada and from the unilateral Israeli withdrawal from
Lebanon under duress.
But consider this: All strong states in the region
understand Israeli power and are responsive to its
deterrence. It is no secret that the Syrian-Israeli border
has remained quiet for nearly three decades, while the
border with the weak state of Lebanon has not. Deterrence
works against centralized states that fear retaliation,
but does not work against decentralized guerilla groups.
The weaker the Palestinian Authority, the more the chaos,
the less effective Israeli deterrence.
But the danger is even greater than increased
instability.
The region is witnessing the beginning of a
transformation of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict from a
nationalist one that lends itself to compromise into a
religious and ethnic one that does not. The deal at Oslo
constituted a formalization of the nationalist framing of
the conflict that made a two-state solution possible.
The collapse of the peace process, the focus on the
religious aspects of Jerusalem and the tension in Israel
among Arab and Jewish citizens may have broadened the
conflict into an Arab-Israeli and even into a
Jewish-Muslim one. A collapse of the Palestinian Authority
will undoubtedly accelerate the transformation and push
back peace for another generation.
Leaders must be held responsible for the actions of
their peoples, and although Mr. Arafat does not have a
full state, he shares the responsibility. There is much
that he can and must do, together with Israel, in curbing
the violence, if there is any serious chance of
negotiations.
But it is wrong to think that the issue is simply one
of personal preference -- for you or for Mr. Arafat.
Despite the unprecedented mandate you have as prime
minister, for example, it is unimaginable that you can
sign an agreement accepting all the Palestinian refugees
into Israel. This is not a matter of courage but a matter
of your people's sense of identity.
Similarly, Mr. Arafat can and must display leadership
on many issues. But there are some issues, like accepting
Israeli sovereignty over East Jerusalem, on which he
cannot overcome the will of his people.
You have an opportunity to test Mr. Arafat by avoiding
Mr. Barak's biggest strategic mistake of not negotiating
directly with the Palestinians and relying too heavily on
American mediation. The Palestinian-Israeli negotiations
involve existential issues that only the parties can
resolve and must be built on mutual respect.
You can begin with simple gestures: removing the
economic siege, withdrawing the army from areas of
friction and demanding of Mr. Arafat things he can
deliver, such as preventing his forces from using
violence. But don't expect him to forcefully put down
public demonstrations. You have the right to expect
reciprocity, if you take the lead.
The current state of affairs can only be overcome by
acts of bold leadership, without which both Palestinians
and Israelis are fated to bleed for years to come.
Shibley Telhami holds the Anwar Sadat Chair for
Peace and Development at the University of Maryland,
College Park and is a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution in Washington.
Copyright © 2001,
Baltimore Sun
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