Israel Palestine
Middle East Conflict
Uri Avnery
26.9.09
The Drama and the Farce
NO POINT denying it: in the first
round of the match between Barack Obama and Binyamin Netanyahu, Obama was
beaten.
Obama had demanded a freeze of
all settlement activity, including East Jerusalem, as a condition for convening
a tripartite summit meeting, in the wake of which accelerated peace
negotiations were to start, leading to peace between two states – Israel and
Palestine.
In the words of the ancient
proverb, a journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step. Netanyahu has
tripped Obama on his first step. The President of the United States has stumbled.
THE THREEFOLD summit did indeed
take place. But instead of a shining achievement for the new American
administration, we witnessed a humbling demonstration of weakness.
After Obama was compelled to give up his demand for a settlement freeze, the
meeting no longer had any content.
True, Mahmoud
Abbas did come, after all. He was dragged there
against his will. The poor man was unable to refuse the invitation from Obama,
his only support. But he will pay a heavy price for this flight: the
Palestinians, and the entire Arab world, have seen his weakness. And Obama, who
had started his term with a ringing speech to the Muslim world from Cairo, now looks
like a broken reed.
The Israeli peace movement has
been dealt another painful blow. It had pinned its hopes on the steadfastness
of the American president. Obama’s victory and the settlement freeze were to
show the Israeli public that the refusal policy of Netanyahu was leading to
disaster.
But Netanyahu has won, and in a
big way. Not only did he survive, not only has he shown that he is no “sucker”
(a word he uses all the time), he has proven to his people – and to the public
at large – that there is nothing to fear: Obama is nothing but a paper tiger. The
settlements can go on expanding without hindrance. Any negotiations that start,
if they start at all, can go on until the coming of the Messiah. Nothing will
come out of them.
For Netanyahu, the threat of
peace has passed. At least for the time being.
IT IS difficult to understand how
Obama allowed himself to get into this embarrassing situation.
Machiavelli taught that one
should not challenge a lion unless one is able to kill him. And Netanyahu is
not even a lion, just a fox.
Why did Obama insist on the
settlement freeze – in itself a very reasonable demand – if he was unable to stand
his ground? Or, in other words, if he was unable to impose it
on Netanyahu?
Before entering into such a campaign,
a statesman must weigh up the array of forces: What power is at my disposal?
What forces are confronting me? How determined is the other side? What means am I ready to employ? How far am I prepared to go in
using my power?
Obama has a host of able advisors,
headed by Rahm Emanuel, whose Israeli origins (and
name) were supposed to give him special insights. George Mitchell, a hard-nosed
and experienced diplomat, was supposed to provide sober assessments. How did
they all fail?
Logic would say that Obama, before
entering the fray, should have decided which instruments of pressure to employ.
The arsenal is inexhaustible – from a threat by the US not to shield the
Israeli government with its veto in the Security Council, to delaying the next
shipment of arms. In 1992 James Baker, George Bush Sr’s
Secretary of State, threatened to withhold American guarantees for Israel’s
loans abroad. That was enough to drag even Yitzhak Shamir to the Madrid
conference.
It seems that Obama was either
unable or unwilling to exert such pressures, even secretly, even behind the scenes.
This week he allowed the American navy to conduct major joint war-games with
the Israeli Air Force.
Some people hoped that Obama
would use the Goldstone report to exert pressure on Netanyahu. Just one hint that
the US might not use its veto in the Security Council would have sown panic in
Jerusalem. Instead, Washington published a statement on the report, dutifully
toeing the Israeli propaganda line.
True, it is hard for the US to
condemn war crimes that are so similar to those committed by its own soldiers.
If Israeli commanders are put on trial in The Hague, American generals may be
next in line. Until now, only the losers in wars were indicted. What will the
world come to if those who remain in office are also accused?
THE INESCAPABLE conclusion is
that Obama’s defeat is the outcome of a faulty assessment of the situation. His
advisors, who are considered seasoned politicians, were wrong about the forces
involved.
That has happened already in the
crucial health insurance debate. The opposition is far stronger than
anticipated by Obama’s people. In order to get out of this mess somehow, Obama
needs the support of every senator and congressman he can lay his hands on.
That automatically strengthens the position of the pro-Israel lobby, which already
has immense influence in Congress.
The last thing that Obama needs
at this moment is a declaration of war by AIPAC and Co. Netanyahu, an expert on
domestic American politics, scented Obama’s weakness and exploited it.
Obama could do nothing but gnash
his teeth and fold up.
That debacle is especially
painful at this precise point in time. The impression is rapidly gaining ground
that he is indeed an inspiring speaker with an uplifting message, but a weak politician,
unable to turn his vision into reality. If this view of him firms up, it may
cast a shadow over his whole term.
BUT IS Netanyahu’s policy wise
from the Israeli point of view?
This may well turn out to be a
Pyrrhic victory.
Obama will not disappear. He has
three and a half years in office before him, and thereafter perhaps four more.
That’s a lot of time to plan revenge for someone hurt and humiliated at a
delicate moment, at the beginning of his term of office.
One cannot know, of course, what
is happening in the depths of Obama’s heart and in the back of his mind. He is
an introvert who keeps his cards close to his chest. His many years as a young black
man in the United States have probably taught him to keep his feelings to himself.
He may draw the conclusion, in
the footsteps of all his predecessors since Dwight Eisenhower (except Father
Bush during Baker’s short stint as hatchet man): Don’t Mess With
Israel. With the help of its partners and servants in the US, it can cause grievous
harm to any President.
But he may also draw the opposite
conclusion: Wait for the right opportunity, when your standing in the domestic
arena is solid, and pay Netanyahu back with interest. If that happens,
Netanyahu’s air of victory may turn out to be premature.
IF I were asked for advice (not
to worry, it won’t happen), I would tell him:
The forging of
Israeli-Palestinian peace would mean a historic turnabout, a reversal of a 120
year old trend. That is not an easy operation, not to be undertaken lightly. It
is not a matter for diplomats and secretaries. It demands a determined leader
with a stout heart and a steady hand. If one is not ready for it, one should
not even start.
An American President who wants
to undertake such a role must formulate a clear and detailed peace plan, with a
strict timetable, and be prepared to invest all his resources and all his
political capital in its realization. Among other things, he must be ready to confront,
face to face, the powerful pro-Israel lobby.
This will not succeed unless
public opinion in Israel, Palestine, the Arab world, the United States and the
whole world is thoroughly prepared well in advance. It will not succeed without
an effective Israeli peace movement, without strong support from US public
opinion, especially Jewish-American opinion, without a strong Palestinian
leadership and without Arab unity.
At the appropriate moment, the
President of the United States must come to Jerusalem and address the Israeli
public from the Knesset rostrum, like Anwar Sadat and President Jimmy Carter
before him, as well as the Palestinian parliament, like President Bill Clinton.
I don’t know if
Obama is the man. Some in the
peace camp have already given up on him, which effectively means that they have
despaired of peace as such. I am not ready for this. One battle rarely decides
a war, and one mistake does not foretell the future. A lost battle can steel
the loser, a mistake can teach a valuable lesson.
IN ONE of his essays, Karl Marx
said that when history repeats itself: The first time it is as tragedy, the
second time it is as farce.
The 2000 threefold summit meeting
at Camp David was high drama. Many hopes were pinned on it, success seemed to
be within reach, but in the end it collapsed, with the participants blaming
each other.
The 2009 Waldorf-Astoria summit was the farce.