Trump's Deal of the Century:
A Watered-Down Version of Ehud Barak's
Rejected Plan
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
January 20, 2019
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Al-Aqsa Mosque Dome of the Rock in the Palestinian East
Jerusalem, 2018 |
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A Weakly Inflated Trial Balloon
This week a well-known Israeli journalist revealed what he said were
"new details about the Trump administration's Israeli-Palestinian peace
plan." His report, he said, came from notes he had obtained from an
American Jewish leader who had been part of a small group of community
leaders briefed by a "senior Administration official" just two weeks
earlier.
Since I had heard about the briefing and anticipated
the "expected leak," I began reading, preparing to be outraged. Instead
I found my reaction to be somewhere between bored and amused by the
content. At the same time, I was also alarmed, not so much by what was
or wasn't in the "plan," but by what I suspected was the intent of the
leak.
After waiting almost two years for the "Deal of
the Century," what the notes of the briefing contained was a
watered-down version of what Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak had
offered to Palestinian President Yasser Arafat almost two decades ago
and less than what Secretary of State John Kerry offered two years ago.
The elements of the purported deal included: a Palestinian state on 85%
of the West Bank with some land-swaps to compensate Palestinians for the
West Bank settlement blocks that will go to Israel; Israeli settlements
outside of the blocks will not be evacuated, but "illegal outposts" will
be; and Jerusalem will be a shared capital - Israel will have West
Jerusalem and Palestinians will have some of the "Arab neighborhoods" in
East Jerusalem - but the Old City and holy sites will remain under
Israeli control. There was no mention of Gaza or Palestinian refugees.
Nor was there any provision for Palestinian sovereign control over
borders or resources.
As I read the notes, I had difficulty
understanding how, after two years on the job, Trump's team had come up
with something so embarrassingly unsurprising and inadequate. They must
know, I thought, that there is no Israeli government on the horizon that
would be willing to cede control of 85% of the West Bank, and no
Palestinian leader who could accept a deal that retains Israeli control
over critical areas of occupied Jerusalem, and fails to address Gaza,
refugees, or sovereignty. For the Israelis, this plan gives too much;
for the Palestinians, too little. That much is obvious. What, however,
piqued my curiosity was a final comment in the Jewish leader's notes in
which he observed that the White House official, who was the source of
this plan, urged the Israelis not to reject it and let the Palestinians
be the rejectionist party.
Since it was so patently obvious that
the plan wasn't a serious solution to the conflict, there had to be, I
thought, another reason for floating such a poorly inflated trial
balloon. The only reason I could imagine that would account both for the
leak and for the caution to Israel not to reject it had more to do with
why it was might have been leaked in the first place - and that is to
make the Trump administration and the Israelis appear to be reasonable
and eager to accommodate Palestinians so as to facilitate US and Israeli
entreaties to Arab states to work more openly with Israel. This would
have the effect of subverting the Arab Peace Initiative (API).
The API provided an Arab commitment to normalize relations with Israel -
but only after: Israel withdrew from territories occupied in the 1967
war; there was an agreed upon solution to the Palestinian refugee issue;
and there was the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank
and Gaza with its capital in East Jerusalem. The " leaked deal," on the
other hand, would ask Arabs to begin normalization based on an
inadequate plan that Israel wouldn't reject but would never implement.
In the end, relations would be normalized, with the "rejectionist"
Palestinians remaining under occupation, in limbo.
In this
context, it is important to recall that for President Trump the matter
of Palestinian rights, per se, has never been a priority or even a
concern. If anything, it was a merely a pesky matter to overcome in
order to achieve the "deal of the century" that brought the Arabs
together with Israel, ostensibly to confront Iran and extremism. It
appears that the administration's thinking might be that if a real peace
deal can't be reached, then maybe, just maybe, it can be finessed by
sleight of hand.
Far-fetched? Possibly. But what other
explanation can there be for something so trite being leaked at this
time?
The bottom line, however, is that this lame effort will
fail since it underestimates Arab leaders and ignores what they know
about their region and their people. As
our most recent polling demonstrates, despite all of the issues
roiling the Middle East, Palestine remains a priority concern across the
region and there is no tolerance among Arabs, in any of the region's
countries, for normalized relations with Israel until the terms of the
API are met, in full. And even then, it will be a hard sell. There may
be regional concern with Iran's meddlesome behavior and the continuing
threat posed by extremist ideologies. But what the Trump administration
still hasn't figured out is that normalized relations with Israel
without real justice for Palestinians would only be a boon for Iranian
propagandists and extremist recruiters.
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