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John Kerry Uses Arabs to Bully Palestinians
By By Nicola Nasser
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 29, 2013
A new tactic by US Secretary of State John Kerry is causing a
split within the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) ranks regarding
further talks with Israel. Kerry is apparently using the Arab League’s
Follow-Up Committee on the Arab Peace Initiative (FCAPI) to bully the
Palestinians into accepting new ground rules for the talks to which they had
objected in the past. In his sixth tour of the region as secretary
of state, Kerry did something unusual. Instead of visiting Israel, as he
always does, he left it out of his itinerary, deciding instead to hold most
of the talks in the Jordanian capital Amman. While there, he conferred with
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas as well as members of the FCAPI. As the
talks progressed, it became clear that Kerry was no longer focusing on
Israel, the country that has torpedoed all previous attempts at peace, but
on the PLO. His aim was to get the latter to offer more concessions than any
they have accepted in the past. In order to do this, Kerry wanted to
get the FCAPI to accept these concessions on behalf of the Palestinians, a
new tactic that may or may not be working but that so far has succeeded in
causing divisions and widespread consternation in Palestinian circles. The
tactic is not totally new, for it resonates with the manner in which US
diplomats have used the Arab League to justify foreign intervention for the
sake of regime change in countries such as Iraq and Libya in the past.
Speaking after a meeting with Kerry in Amman, FCAPI diplomats voiced their
“great support” for Kerry’s efforts to revive the talks. Their remarks were
seen as a “victory” for Kerry, said the Associated Press. It was a “success”
for his diplomacy, added The New York Times. Kerry, for his part, announced
that the gap was “narrowing” between the Palestinians and the Israelis, and
that all that was needed now was to “iron out” a few kinks. For the
Palestinians, ironing out these kinks is going to be a quite a job, however.
PLO chief negotiator, Saeb Ereikat, is said to have had a “stormy” meeting
with the PLO leadership concerning Kerry’s proposals. The PLO, its back to
the wall, is now forming a working committee to decide what to do about the
talks. All of this is unprecedented. In the past, the FCAPI used to
take its cue from the Palestinians. When the Palestinians were faced with
demands for concessions they were reluctant to give, they politely said they
needed to consult with the FCAPI, which was a courteous way of turning down
unacceptable proposals. Now the FCAPI is getting them into trouble by
agreeing to concessions before the Palestinians even have time to discuss
them at length. In the absence of FCAPI support for the PLO
negotiators, the latter had no option but to play along with Kerry’s
proposals. On Friday, the US secretary of state declared his satisfaction
with the current plans to get the Palestinians and the Israelis talking
again about a “final status” deal. He has invited the PLO and Israel to send
negotiators to Washington soon to work out details of the agreement. PLO
senior officials told the French news agency AFP that Kerry was determined
to declare the resumption of the talks before leaving the region. US
Department of State spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters that unless
progress was made on Kerry’s sixth visit to the region, he would not be
returning for more visits. If anything, this sounds like an unveiled threat
aiming to put pressure on Abbas and his chief negotiator and force their
cooperation. During this round of talks, Kerry also left Abbas no
chance to play for time. Instead of waiting for Abbas to go to talk with the
FCAPI, Kerry brought the Arab League diplomats to Amman and had them agree
to his proposals without prior consultation with the PLO. In Amman,
members of the FCAPI issued a statement saying that Kerry’s ideas for the
resumption of talks were a “suitable foundation” for further negotiations.
The FCAPI stamp of approval placed the PLO in a difficult position. Abbas,
unable to wiggle free from this diplomatic ordeal, remained silent. But his
silence, as the saying goes in Arabic, was seen as a “sign of approval”.
Yet, the situation is likely to spark resentment back home, where most
of the PLO leaders are opposed to Kerry’s proposals. However, they know that
a blunt rejection of these proposals may invoke an unpleasant US reaction,
if not sanctions. Abbas is waiting to give his answer following
consultations with the PLO leadership. In all likelihood, the latter will
have to agree, despite its deep reservations about Kerry’s proposals.
As a result of all this, the FCAPI has let down the Palestinians, and it is
not the first time that this has happened. On 29 April, a Qatari-led FCAPI
delegation offered Kerry what amounted to its consent to a land swap at a
meeting in Washington. Critics of the FCAPI correctly noted that the step
was extraordinary, for the FCAPI is not empowered to make such concessions.
Only the Arab summit, which issued the Arab Peace Initiative, is entitled to
make any amendment to this initiative. As a mere follow-up committee, the
FCAPI had exceeded its mandate. Israel, of course, is pleased to see
the FCAPI offer concessions that the Palestinians do not seem willing to
make. Tzipi Livni, Israel’s foreign minister at the time, described the
FCAPI statement as “good news.” Lebanese analyst Ziad Al-Sayegh
recently wrote that “after the failure of the internationalization of the
talks [through the Quartet], we are now going through a regionalization of
the talks [through the Arab League].” One symptom of this regionalization is
that the land swap, overwhelmingly rejected by the Palestinians, is now
getting the Arab League’s stamp of approval. Last Thursday, the
Jordanian news agency, Petra, cited the Arab League chief, Nabil Al-Arabi,
as saying that the “US plan concerning the peace process is based on three
axes; political, economic, and security-related”. The Israeli newspaper
Yediot Ahronot then offered an interesting interpretation of this statement.
The political axis, it said, was the resumption of talks. The security axis
was going to be left to the US top brass to decide. And the economic axis
would mean a lot more aid to the Palestinian Authority. During his
last tour of the region, Kerry made no reference to the Israeli settlements.
Nor did he object when Israel declared plans to build 732 new settlement
units in the settlement of Modi’in Illit in west Jerusalem. For him, this
was not even a kink worthy of ironing out. Even worse, the FCAPI has not
seemed interested in Israel’s active settlement-building program, and it did
not even mention that future talks should focus on a two-state deal based on
the 1967 borders. Last Friday, Kerry said that the best way to give
the talks a chance was to keep them “private”. He declined to reveal the
details of his plan as a result, and the FCAPI had nothing to say. For now,
the PLO leadership is also keeping its cards close to its chest.
This article was submitted for publication at Al-Jazeerah after it was first
published and translated from Arabic by the Al-Ahram Weekly.
Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir
Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
nassernicola@ymail.com
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