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This Road Map Leads Nowhere Those of us who had believed that there would be a political payoff
for Palestinians at the conclusion of the Iraq war, with the US
administration turning the implementation of the quartet’s “road
map” into its first priority, are beginning to disabuse themselves of
the notion. In Congress, key Republican and Democratic allies of Ariel Sharon’s
government have not minced words: They are already pressing the White
House to adopt a more staunchly pro-Israel position by calling on the
president and the secretary of state to “temper” their support for the
long awaited road map, drafted by the quartet and embraced last June by
President Bush, who had pledged “my personal commitment” to its
implementation in a speech at the American Enterprise Institute on March
14. The plan envisions, in three phases, the creation of Palestinian
institutions, the establishment of “an independent Palestinian state
with provisional borders and attributes of sovereignty” by the end of
the year, and a final agreement reaching defined borders of the state,
with “the maximum territorial contiguity” by the year 2005. Not so fast, these congressional leaders, spearheaded by the
fanatically pro-Israel House Majority leader, Tom DeLay are now saying. In
a rare public split with President Bush, these legislators are
aggressively making their views known: The administration is
“undercutting” Israel by embracing the plan, which is to be presented
as a non-negotiable document calling on Palestinians and Israelis to take
parallel steps to move toward peace. Very simply, these GOP and Democratic
leaders in Congress — forever competing for Jewish-American voters and
donors — have made it clear, in speeches and a letter scheduled for
delivery to the White House later this month that they will oppose any
deal that “imposes significant requirements” on Israel, as they claim
the road map does. The Washington Post reported last week that several Republicans on the
Hill are saying that “Bush has privately assured them that he agrees
with them, but they expressed concern that Powell and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair might manage to soften his resolve.” So Bush’s on-again, off-again campaign to bring peace to the region
is up against concerted opposition in Congress by legislators who believe
that “we are absolutely right to stand with Israel,” as DeLay, a
born-again fundamentalist who views Israel as the fulfillment of biblical
prophecy, thundered at a conference in Washington last Wednesday that had
brought together right-wing Jews and evangelical Christians, who had come
to town to demonstrate their support for Israel. For his part, Ariel Sharon is already digging in for a hard fight over
the phraseology in the three phases of the road map. With regard to the
“independent Palestinian state with provisional borders and attributes
of sovereignty,” for example, he wants “independent” taken out and
the word “certain” inserted before “attributes of sovereignty.”
And “the maximum territorial contiguity” is too much for Palestinians
to enjoy in their homeland, he believes, and thus wants the absurd
addenda, “where this is possible.” This is one of 100 changes Israel
reportedly wants. Lest we forget, Bush is an unwavering supporter of Sharon, whom he had
at one time improbably called a man of peace. Yet he has been lobbied
equally heavily by officials of the quartet and the State Department, who
consider the road map a non-negotiable document, as he has been by
friendly Arab leaders who believe that the president should make the
pursuit of peace in Palestine a crucial follow-up to the Iraq war. This may turn out to be in vain. These pro-Israel congressional leaders
plan to tell Bush in their letter that before involving the US in attempts
to implement the road map, the administration should demand of the
Palestinians the creation of a new leadership with “real authority,” a
“cessation of terrorist acts,” and the establishment of an
“effective security apparatus.” Only these principles, they will be
asserting, will form “the basis for peace.” Thus, a more likely follow-up to the Iraq war will not be the
settlement of the Palestine conflict but the settlement of scores that the
US feels it has with Syria and Iran. America, in other words, is hell-bent
on deepening the breach between itself and European leaders — including
Britain’s Blair— on the one hand, and, on the other, deepening the
backlash against it that has been building in the Arab world since the war
started.
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.
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