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Hillary’s Bombshell: Obama Administration Subtly Launches Dramatic Policy Change on Peace Process (Guest Voice)

Hillary’s Bombshell: Obama Administration Subtly Launches Dramatic Policy Change on Peace Process

by Barry Rubin

In a one-paragraph statement welcoming Israel’s ten-month-long freeze on building apartments in existing West Bank settlements, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made a major statement. The dramatic new U.S. stance on Israel-Palestinian Authority peace agreement is camouflaged by brevity and subtle wording. But make no mistake: this is one of the most important foreign policy steps the Obama Administration has taken.

Here is the statement in full:

“Today’s announcement by the Government of Israel helps move forward toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We believe that through good-faith negotiations the parties can mutually agree on an outcome which ends the conflict and reconciles the Palestinian goal of an independent and viable state based on the 1967 lines, with agreed swaps, and the Israeli goal of a Jewish state with secure and recognized borders that reflect subsequent developments and meet Israeli security requirements.”

Clearly, this approach builds on the 2000 Camp David meeting and the December 2000 plan of President Bill Clinton. Ironically, the latter is called the Clinton plan, so the name need not change since now it is renewed and extended by another Clinton.

These 77 words are worth analyzing in great detail. First, there is what the United States is offering the Palestinian side:

“The Palestinian goal of an independent and viable state based on the 1967 lines, with agreed swaps…”

One should first ask, which Palestinians? Hamas and Islamic Jihad don’t favor this approach and Hamas still runs the Gaza Strip. To pretend that Israel can or should make a peace treaty with the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority (PA) which has no authority over the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip is ludicrous. Whatever deal Israel makes with the PA, it could—indeed, probably would–be attacked by Palestinians from Gaza the next day. The conflict cannot be ended by anything the PA does by itself. Without a real commitment to overthrow Hamas the United States can never make peace.

The second issue is that what Clinton lists is not the entire Palestinian goal since the PA also demands a right for all Palestinians to go and live in Israel, thus subverting that country and destroying the state. This is no mere throw-away line but a very strongly held demand. Anyone who thinks that the PA is just going to drop it—no matter how much land or money it is given—knows nothing about Palestinian politics.

The word “based” in the phrase, “based on the 1967 lines” is carefully chosen to imply flexibility as to where the exact border would be drawn. In fact, the PA has always said that it must get the 1967 boundaries completely, never mentioning the word “swaps.” Therefore, when Clinton says that this is a Palestinian “goal” she is wrong.

It tells a great deal that the idea of “swapping land” so that the PA gets the equivalent of the same number of square miles as Jordan ruled before 1967 is an Israeli idea, another example of Israel’s willingness to compromise. Remember that the original Israeli position was that it annex about four percent of the West Bank.

Hence, by whittling down the demands she is making the typical negotiators’ error of putting forward a false stance and then finding out the negotiation fail. But at the same time, however, Clinton is trying to define how the United States sees a reasonable Palestinian demand that it will accept. In other words, she is implying: this is all you’re going to get.

There is also Clinton’s formulation of what Israel gets:

“The Israeli goal of a Jewish state with secure and recognized borders that reflect subsequent developments and meet Israeli security requirements.”

This incorporates several Israeli demands:

“An outcome which ends the conflict”: Israel insists that any peace treaty will explicitly end the conflict. Makes sense, right? But the PA refuses to agree to this principle. The reason is, of course, that it does not view getting an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and east Jerusalem as an end to the conflict but only as stage one of a longer-term effort to wipe Israel off the map.

“Jewish state”: Israel wants Palestinian recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. Why: To show a real acceptance on the Palestinian side. In addition, though, it has a very practical side, avoiding a Palestinian claim to recognize “Israel” and then doing everything possible—like flooding it with Palestinian Arabs—to transform it into an Arab and/or Islamic state. (“Binationalism” is just a cover word to hide a step in that direction.)

“With secure and recognized borders”: Israel wants borders recognized as a sign that full peace exists. The word “secure” here implies security arrangements to prevent future attacks.

“That reflect subsequent developments”: This is a fascinating and new phrase. What can it mean other than this: Since so many Jews have moved into settlements, this new factor must be taken into account in shifting the borders. This is the Obama Administration’s version of its predecessor’s idea that Israel could keep “settlement blocs,” large towns built up along its border like the Etzion bloc and Maale Adumim. It could also be applied to Jerusalem, though that sensitive word is not mentioned in the statement.

“And meets Israeli security requirements”: Another and stronger reference to security guarantees.

How will this statement be received in Israel? This raises a fascinating question: Was it coordinated with the Netanyahu government as part of the freeze deal? If so, the Netanyahu government has certainly proved itself to be flexible and peace-oriented. Certainly, there isn’t everything Israel wants in this statement yet it does encompass some important points taken out of the cabinet’s position on peace arrangements.

The more I think about this point, the more it makes sense to me that the position is a gesture toward Israel. This is a statement that favors Israel’s position while still offering the Palestinians, in the mind of the administration, enough to make them happy (wrong) and enough to show the world that the United States is even-handed (right for Europe; wrong for the Arab world). It isn’t a blatantly pro-Israel stance but does incorporate key elements of what Israel wants to an extent greater than where the United States has gone before.

It also offers the Palestinians, or at least the PA, what it says it wants. Well, not exactly but in a way that Americans think is reasonably close. Unfortunately, that’s not the way the PA thinks. For more than thirty years the United States has been trying to formulate plans on the basis of what it thinks will satisfy Palestinian goals—the first Camp David meeting, the Reagan plan, the second Camp David meeting, and a thousand plans, conferences, statements, and initiatives in between.

Each time they fail because they aren’t addressing what the Palestinian leadership really wants. And today that is further complicated by there being two Palestinian leaderships.

The United States has endorsed the Israeli position that the PA must recognize Israel as a Jewish state, this is a big step forward and a victory for Israel.

P.S.: (in response to a reader’s question asking if this means the United States demands that Israel return to the 1967 borders):

It does NOT say the 1967 borders. Israel’s formula for the last 15 year has been: “with minor modifications” to the borders. I definitely don’t think this will lead to any breakthrough–the Palestinians will reject it and there is no treaty in sight for decades. In that sense, what it offers the Palestinians is not important because they will say no to everything short of all they want without their making any concesions.

Compare this statement to the Israeli government’s own program as well as to Israel’s position in the 2000 Camp David meeting and the subsequent [Bill] Clinton plan in December 2000. It is quite comparable. It includes recognition of the Jewish state, security arrangements satisfactory to Israel, changing the border, and end of conflict are four of the main six points. The fifth, resettling Palestinian refugees in a Palestinian state–no return, is unquestionably going to be endorsed by the United States. The sixth, a demilitarized Palestinian state, is also not mentioned either way.

Of course, Jerusalem is an important issue not explicitly mentioned here. But Clinton statement of ["that reflect subsequent developments"] also must apply to Jerusalem, thus legitimizing post-1967 Israeli neighborhoods there. This is very significant.

As I said, this is not a statement endorsing everything Israel would like to have. But it is the best conceivable position that the United States, and especially the Obama Administration, could conceivably take.

Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest books are The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), with Walter Laqueur (Viking-Penguin); the paperback edition of The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan); A Chronological History of Terrorism, with Judy Colp Rubin, (Sharpe); and The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley). To read and subscribe to MERIA, GLORIA articles, or to order books, go to http://www.gloria-center.org This is cross-posted from that site.

  • kathykattenburg
    Wow, Barry Rubin. This is quite an interesting piece, I must say. You have certainly gone the extra mile -- and then some -- to convey your utter contempt for Palestinians and their concerns. It oozes from almost every word.

    Having said this, can you perhaps provide any independent support for your astonishing, sweeping generalizations about what Palestinians want and what they would be willing to accept? Because right now you provide none at all -- apart from "I know Palestinians and you don't." Which I can't really take seriously as a grown-up argument.

    Also, I'd like to challenge you with a question: Why should anyone take your opinions seriously when you portray one side in a conflict as entirely serious, reasonable, peace-loving, and willing to compromise; and the other side as cartoon caricature villains who should not be taken with the slightest seriousness?

    I certainly can't.
  • spirasol
    ....Yes, let us together with Rubin and his ilk, crush the insect known as a Palestinian under our foot. Look their screaming......go back for more............kill the children, the women, the old men, kill history, bulldoze the truth, kill everyone except our kind, our religion, --- Watch out Syria, Lebanon-- the Zionist never sleeps and when you do they will take your clothes, your family, and finally your land.
  • Vajor
    Dear Ms. Kattenburg: You are right, it is an interesting piece. And you seem to miss the Palestinian situation: they (Hamas and PLO) hate each other, can't agree to get along with each other, kill each other and have no intention of working out a deal with Israel. Their actions speak louder than their words.
  • Vajor
    Wake up and smell the roses. The P. never fail to miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
  • spirasol
    As best as I can tell the roses on offer smell somewhat morbid. As for tripping over their own feet and falling deeper and deeper into the endless well, the talent of the IDF are self evident.

    Hell we couldn't even do Katrina, what would we look like if we were under constant chronic occupation?
  • Father_Time
    Still more than Bush ever did. Which was nothing.
  • dduck12
    Can't have a thread without Bush, can we?
  • TheMagicalSkyFather
    In FT's defense it was ignored for 8 years but I do think picking on Bush is unfair considering many of the steps now being taken as well as the difference in tone toward both sides is a very new thing so the same could be said for all presidents since Nixon. Clinton did little more than the standard US response which is and always has been "whatever Israel said", I can't say that has changed but it seems to have and the rhetoric is also now night and day different but no reason to single out Bush I agree. It will be a long while before we know if it is at all successful considering both sides have a bad habit of acting like they do not actually want to resolve this but we are at least trying new things, not from Bush but from prior admins period though mostly in tone which is actually very important to perceptions.
  • dduck12
    I'm really joshing about the overuse of the B name, from a debating standpoint. It seems like a knee-jerk reaction. When in doubt whip it out. I was trying to think of a topic that would be impossible to invoke the B name. Could not think of one.
  • TheMagicalSkyFather
    My comment was actually my first and therefore overly nice journey into the "stop bringing up Bush" struggle. I generally start by trying to find the middle by explaining both sides points but in reality I am trying to get rid of it as well. Its utter silliness when we have so many other Admins to use as examples. This is also why when comparing Bush to Obama I am trying to call Bush doofus so that no one thinks that I think he was a normal president. I think he was even unfairly maligned like Hoover and Carter before him(the most extreme examples I can find and Bush fits in with them) but it gets us nowhere but bickering to continue to bring up Bush much like conservatives bringing up Clinton for 9 years has not really resolved anything. Sorry for the explanation but I did not want you to think that I did not feel your pain on that one I do I just escalate slowly.
  • shannonlee
    Great reply.
  • shannonlee
    Or maybe this is a new right wing tactic. ;)

    Make people forget about Bush ASAP.
  • kathykattenburg
    Thank you, shannon!
  • dduck12
    "Make people forget about Bush ASAP" And, C also.
  • kathykattenburg
    In that case, shouldn't Israel offer them exactly what true justice would require: a Palestinian state, drawn on the 1967 border, with contiguous land, the apartheid wall torn down, the settlements dismantled, Jerusalem an international city not controlled by Israel or the Palestinians, and the right to return to the homes they were forcibly evicted from?

    If it's so certain Palestinian leaders will turn this down, why not make a serious offer? No need to worry; they're going to turn it down anyway, right?
  • TheMagicalSkyFather
    Honestly who is gonna forget doofus? Do not get me wrong I as well will pull his scary legacy out of the closet for the 2012 election if I feel I need to but until then what is really the point? We all remember and those that act like they do not are partisan hacks who disagree with your take on him anyway so it is wasted key strokes. When he is the best comparison by all means use him, I will, but the habit of constantly bringing him up is reminding me of 8 yrs of debating Clinton when Bush did or said anything and that is the best case scenario for bringing up Bush all of the time. We spent 8 yrs being attacked by sore winners bringing up Clinton every time Bush made a mis-step, I just think it would be nice to play the grown up while no true threat exists of a GOP resurgence.
  • dduck12
    I finally thought of a topic where they (you know who you are) can't insert B into the debate:
    Tomatoes nowadays are not as sweet as they used to be.
  • PJBFan
    Considering that Israel under Rabin offered 98% of what the Palestinians demanded, and the Palestinian government rejected it because it still wasn't enough, I find little compassion for the Palestinians, who are mostly of Jordanian and Syrian descent anyways. If anything, my suggestion is to let Israel keep the WB, Gaza, and the Golan heights, give only those Palestinians who can actually trace their descent to British Palestine Israeli Citizenship, and send the rest back to Jordan, Syria and their other true motherlands. Keep Jerusalem totally under Israeli control. That's my view anyways.
  • Vajor
    You shouldn't negotiate with someone who wants to kill you (and their own). It is very simple. Let the Palestinians get their house in order, clean up their act, FIRST!
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