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Mideast Needs Aggressive U.S. Plan
to End Conflict
By Shibley Telhami
USA Today
October 9, 2000
Ttragic events
in the Middle East have transformed the challenge the
United States faces from an obstacle in the peace
process to a serious national security crisis.
The immediate
task is no longer brokering a final-status agreement or
alleviating human suffering, but preventing regional war,
civil strife within Israel and a threat to the global
economy.
Ehud Barak's
ultimatum that Yasser Arafat call an immediate end to the
clashes notwithstanding, President Clinton was right to
set aside other issues to deal with this crisis. The time
has arrived for an assertion of an American plan to end
the conflict.
Two weeks ago,
the conflict was primarily Palestinian-Israeli. Today it
is quickly turning into an Arab-Israeli conflict and a
Muslim-Jewish conflict.
Yesterday,
governments were the key players in deciding what course
to take; today, public passions and religious institutions
are increasingly dictating the course.
Jerusalem has
turned even Kuwaitis, whose relations with the
Palestinians suffered when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990,
into supporters of the Palestinian cause and defenders of
Muslim rights. One-half million people demonstrated in
Morocco, a key supporter of the United States and of
making peace with Israel. And within Israel itself, Arab
and Jewish citizens have confronted each other in an
unprecedented manner that could escalate into a civil war.
The
Lebanese-Israeli front, largely quiet since the Israeli
withdrawal last spring, once again has been ignited.
Internal tensions mount
Perhaps more
importantly, the psychology of peacemaking is quickly
being replaced by the psychology of war.
In Israel, there
is now fear that Israel's "deterrence" posture has been
undermined in the past few months, and that Arabs and
Muslims are increasingly believing that Israel is weak and
that its withdrawal from Lebanon through violence was a
powerful example. Many in the Jewish state believe that
Israel must now act with an iron fist to dispel this Arab
notion.
On the Arab and
Muslim side, there is an increasing belief among segments
of the public that Israel is out to control Islamic holy
places through a peace agreement and that nothing short of
a holy war can defend Arab and Muslim rights. Frequent
funerals only reinforce these tendencies.
These events are
bad enough for their humanitarian consequences, but what's
at stake for the United States are serious issues of
national security.
While a full war
between Israel and its neighbors is not likely, the spread
of massive violence among Israelis and Palestinians and
across the Lebanese border, political and economic actions
by Arab states, and attacks against U.S. and Israeli
targets are now serious possibilities.
Gift for
Saddam
These events will
be a perfect gift for Iraq's Saddam Hussein, who is always
trying to link his conflict with the international
community to the Arab-Israeli issue, and thus gain
sympathy. He has a powerful weapon: oil. As events
escalate into a full confrontation, he could simply halt
his oil production and call upon his Arab colleagues to do
the same in the name of liberating Jerusalem -- turning
himself into a hero.
Even if the
Saudis, who have the capacity to make up for lost
production, may not respond to his calls, escalation over
Jerusalem and public passions would prevent them from
making up for the shortage. The consequence will be an
economic crisis that could quickly turn into a military
crisis.
A rational
analyst may hope that Arab and Israeli leaders should have
learned by now that their conflict will not be resolved by
war and that, after more tragedy, they will ultimately
have to return to the negotiating table.
They probably
have so learned. But the history of the conflict also
shows an extraordinary degree of miscalculation, wishful
thinking, mishandled brinkmanship and extremist minorities
dictating events in times of crisis such as the one we now
face.
This is a time
for the White House to set all else aside and aggressively
assert an American plan not only to help the parties avoid
another bloody war, but also to protect vital American
interests.
Shibley
Telhami holds the Anwar Sadat Chair for Peace and
Development at the University of Maryland and is a
non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Copyright © 2000,
USA Today
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