Return to realism
Jennifer Rubin reports that former peace processor Aaron David Miller has returned to realism.Now, thankfully, Miller is back to his earlier brand of realism, stating that "it should be clear to all but the interminably obtuse" (and the intentionally obtuse, I would add) that a breakthrough in peace talks isn't possible in the forseeable future. He asserts that "the cooler heads in the Obama administration know this. Particularly the secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, and the new national security adviser, Tom Donilon." Now they just need to convince the president.Indeed.
Miller urges Obama to focus on attainable items, not a Middle East peace breakthrough. So Miller advises:First, stay out of the United Nations. Don't encourage the Palestinians to believe that the United States will vote for, or even abstain on, resolutions that criticize the Israelis on settlements. Or support efforts to recognize Palestinian statehood. It's a key to an empty room. That will come only through negotiations and U.S. mediation in the region -- not in New York.I'd stop at No. 2. On the list of farcical exercises, the search for an Israeli-Syrian breakthrough ranks high. But Miller's return to realism should be applauded. We can only hope that the "interminably obtuse" don't include the president.
Second, support Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad's institution building on the West Bank, especially in the economic and security areas;
Third, use the absence of direct talks -- which have rarely produced sustained breakthroughs in any case -- to press both sides separately, at a high level, on where they are on the core issues. Do this for three months -- and see where the gaps are and what the chances are for bridging them;
Fourth, probe for signs of life on the Israeli-Syrian talks.
Labels: Aaron David Miller, Barack Obama, Jennifer Rubin, Mahmoud Abbas
1 Comments:
The point is there is no progress in sight in the foreseeable future. The Palestinians can get the UN to condemn Israel but all they will achieve is an empty room and nothing on the ground will change.
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