|
Israel,
Palestinians seek elusive peace
JERUSALEM—In the afterglow of a high-profile peace conference, Israeli
and Palestinian leaders will try in the coming year to resolve issues
that have defied solutions for decades.
For peace to work, Israel will have to give up most of the West Bank,
Palestinians must agree to resettle refugees inside their own state and
the two sides must share the holy city of Jerusalem. None of that will
come easily — and prospects for peace are hurt by the growing power of
extremists and the weakness of leaders on both sides.
Weighing heavily on the Middle East is fear about the influence of Iran
and the ascendancy of Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip. After Hamas
violently routed the more moderate Fatah movement in Gaza in June, the
big question now is whether the West Bank will go the same way.
Israel fretted through a year of angst about Iran’s nuclear program only
to be told in a new U.S. intelligence report that Iran stopped it four
years ago. Israel isn’t buying the claim, and is scrambling to convince
its allies that Iran remains a major threat to the West.
Hamas’ takeover of Gaza paradoxically opened the door to peace talks
between Israel and the moderate Palestinian leadership now in charge of
the West Bank. Israeli and Palestinian leaders both say they hope to
sign a peace deal by the end of 2008.
On Nov. 27, the two sides got together in Annapolis, Md., in the
presence of some 45 nations — including leading Arab states — to
relaunch peace talks that had been stalled during the past seven years
of Israeli-Palestinian violence.
All the main players have good reason to go for a deal: Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert wants to undo the damage done by his inconclusive
2006 war in Lebanon, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas needs a boost
in his showdown with Hamas, President Bush would like to offset his
difficulties in Iraq, and moderate Arab states need to counter
Iranian-supported extremism.
Working against this new hope is weakness at the top: a Palestinian
president who only controls half his territory and struggles to impose
order in the part he does control, and an Israeli leader who has done
little to confront domestic hawks intent on expanding West Bank
settlements and torpedoing any progress toward peace.
While the contours of a peace deal have largely been worked out in past
talks — a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza, shared control of
Jerusalem and a recognition the need to settle the Palestinian refugees
— every issue calls for excruciating compromises.
Negotiators will have to figure out how to share Jerusalem, a task that
must address key Israeli security concerns and religious sensitivities
on both sides; and find a just solution for the Palestinian refugees
displaced in Israel’s 1948 war of independence without destroying the
Jewish character of Israel. Both Israelis and Palestinians have a
growing sense that time is running out.
There will soon be more Muslims than Jews in the lands comprising
historic Palestine, and Israel will have to make a deal if it hopes to
remain both Jewish and democratic. And without peace, moderate
Palestinians will likely lose their life-or-death struggle against the
extremists.
“If things don’t work out it means that the voices that are not in favor
of ... a peaceful resolution of the conflict will feel vindicated and
they will be strengthened and empowered,” said independent West Bank
lawmaker Hanan Ashrawi. Israeli Cabinet Minister Ami Ayalon went
further, saying that if peace talks fail “we shall see Hamas controlling
the West Bank and the right wing will control Israel.”
Israel might sign some sort of a peace treaty in the coming year. But
it’s highly unlikely the deal would be implemented unless Israel is
assured that the lands it evacuates won’t be used as launching grounds
for attacks — as happened after Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip in
2005.
In hopes of bolstering Abbas’ forces in the West Bank, the international
community is expected to pledge almost $2 billion a year in aid for the
next three years to help rebuild the Palestinian economy and security
forces. There are no clear plans for Hamas-ruled Gaza, which is
internationally boycotted and can expect to remain almost completely
isolated and slide deeper into poverty as long as the Islamic militants
remain in power.
If the U.S. change of assessment on Iran was one year-end surprise,
Syria is another. The country has long been under U.S. pressure over its
role in Lebanon and Iraq, and in September Israeli warplanes struck a
site in Syria that some believe was a nascent secret nuclear site, an
accusation denied by Damascus.
But Syria improved ties with the U.S. by attending the Annapolis
conference, a thaw that U.S. officials hope will dilute Iran’s influence
in the region. Damascus, in turn, is hoping the next year will see a
resumption of stalled negotiations with Israel over the disputed Golan
Heights.—Agencies
|