From
the Desk of Warren Clark, Churches for Middle East Peace
Pressures
and Positioning on Israel-Palestinian Negotiations
July
8, 2010
As
the days get hotter in Washington in July, so does the positioning of the
parties intensify as they prepare for the next moves in Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations aimed at reaching an agreement for a comprehensive peace. Here is
a scorecard on recent developments:
Many
observers said little took place during the meeting this week between President
Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu. It seemed more like an exercise to reassure
their respective political constituencies that all was well in U.S.-Israeli
relations.
Some
had expected the President to seek an agreement from the Prime Minister to
extend the freeze on new Israeli construction in the West Bank that is set to
expire September 26. This did not
happen. Instead Obama talked about
moving from indirect to direct talks well before the September deadline,
suggesting that in some unspecified way this would make moot the issue of
extending the construction freeze.
Everyone
knows that any public lifting of the freeze on new construction in September
would have an enormous political impact.
Resumption of unrestricted new Israeli construction in the Palestinian
territories is probably a political deal breaker that would lead Palestinians
to suspend talks altogether. It would continue the loss and division of
Palestinian territory and restrictions on Palestinian access to Jerusalem that
Palestinians and Arab states could not accept.
So
what is going on? Feeling
vulnerable, Palestinians seem to want clear proposals on borders and security
or guarantees that the construction freeze will continue in both the West Bank
and east Jerusalem before they move from indirect to direct negotiations. Prime Minister Netanyahu, however, must
deal with conservative members in his party and his coalition who remain
attached to the idea of Judah and Samaria -- the Palestinian West Bank --
eventually becoming part of Israel or at least remaining under direct Israeli
control for security reasons.
In
his attempt to square this circle, the Prime Minister since March has said on
the one hand there is no construction freeze in east Jerusalem, yet he seems to
have made sure that municipal groups and zoning boards do not approve or
actually start to carry out new construction or eviction projects. There have
been hints of some bold proposal in the next few weeks, perhaps on borders,
that would lead to direct talks and take the focus off settlement construction.
The
United States remains very much in this picture, pressuring and cajoling, using
a variety of political carrots and sticks to keep the parties on course in the
negotiations. When officials spoke
of carrying out an order evicting Palestinians from housing in east Jerusalem,
and Palestinians named a square in a West Bank town for a terrorist, the White
House issued a stern warning saying that both sides should avoid actions or
provocations that would damage the climate for negotiations. The U.S. seems to be seeking ways to
encourage Palestinians to agree to direct negotiations. Israel agreed at U.S. behest to ease
the blockade of Gaza, and the U.S. recently discussed more security
enhancements and agreed not to press Israel publicly over its nuclear program.
As
the summer proceeds, opportunities for political missteps or provocation will
remain. Considerable effort will
be needed to overcome the inertia of the status quo. But the pressures from expectations of progress are already
too high for the process to stop now.
Looking forward, the need to find a way to get around the settlement
construction issue and move to direct talks by September will be a major
hurdle. Once that is past, and once the U.S. mid-term elections have taken
place in early November, there will be time for a new
evaluation.