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No Details, No Hope

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Gershom Gorenberg is the author of "The End of Days: Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount."

If you missed President Bush’s speech on the Middle East conflict, it’s not hard to find out what’s in it. You can read the full text on the White House Web site. But to assess the long-awaited policy statement, it’s actually more important to look at what isn’t in it. The short answer is hope. For those who live in the Mideast and for Americans who care about what is happening here, the speech contained almost nothing that could lead to a peace initiative with a chance of succeeding.

First a word about what Bush did say. He called for two states living in peace and asserted that reaching that objective required all sides to fight terrorism. Living in Jerusalem, I certainly second that sentiment. In this city, the calendar seems stuck on Sept. 11 all year round. I know couples who won’t meet at restaurants for lunch or take buses together, so as not to leave their kids orphaned in the event of a bombing. The most basic requirement of any diplomatic effort is that it change that reality.

The way to achieve that goal, the president said, is to replace the Palestinian leadership. That’s a short, simple answer. To understand why it’s not enough, we need to look at just some of the things that Bush didn’t include in his vision.

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First is the Saudi initiative. In the midst of the violence and diplomatic deadlock, Arab League approval of the Saudi peace initiative in March provided a glimmer of optimism. In return for an Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories and establishment of a Palestinian state, the Arab states proposed full peace and normal relations.

The initiative was a starting point for talks, not an end point. Nonetheless, it was a victory for Israel: For the first time, the Arab world was collectively offering to recognize the Jewish state--at least in its pre-1967 boundaries. By putting the initiative on the table, the Saudis also tacitly acknowledged that their alliance with the U.S. depended on taking an active role in ending the conflict with Israel.

Bush could have pointed to the initiative as a positive proposal worth building on, outlining concrete steps to move the process forward. He would thereby have given moderate Arab leaders an incentive to stay involved in diplomatic efforts and rewarded Israeli politicians who took the risk of welcoming the Arab League decision.

He also would have made a statement to the Israeli public: Ultimately a peace agreement will rest on the pre-1967 boundaries, with negotiated adjustments. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s conception of a Palestinian state in fragmented pieces of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, squeezed between Israeli settlements, isn’t a serious basis for an end to the conflict.

Another thing missing from the speech was any sense of the negotiations undertaken by Bill Clinton. Just before leaving the White House, President Clinton summed up his peace efforts with a speech to the Israel Policy Forum in New York. The president who’d arguably put more effort into Israeli-Palestinian peace than any American leader before him set down essential parameters for an agreement.

They asked a lot from both sides: Israel would have to give up most of the West Bank. Palestinians would have to drop their demand for the unlimited return of refugees to Israel. The solution in Jerusalem would give each side less than it wanted but keep the city open and undivided.

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Neither Israelis nor Palestinians would have signed off on the parameters as stated. But among those committed to peacemaking, Clinton’s outline is recognized as a fair formulation of the direction needed to solve the outstanding issues. The parameters show a commitment to Israel’s welfare--and recognize that its interest lies in ending its rule over the Palestinians.

Naturally, Bush has ignored the parameters. He’s one of those executives who shows he’s in charge by doing everything differently from the guy before him. If his predecessor had white curtains in the office, he wants brown ones; if his predecessor boosted sales, by golly, he’ll cut them. So anything with the name Clinton on it has to go.

Instead, Bush vaguely spoke of “secure and recognized borders” for Israel, without saying what he meant by that. He said, “We must

By skipping past the core issues of the conflict and making Arafat the sole obstacle to peace, Bush virtually signed on to the position of Sharon. Yet Sharon, Israel’s most intransigent prime minister ever, is proof that a democratically elected leader can be more extreme than his electorate, less willing than his constituents to take the steps necessary for peace.

Take the settlement problem: Sharon rejects evacuating a single Israeli settlement in the occupied territories; he has insisted that the isolated, tiny Gaza Strip settlement of Netzarim is as important to Israel as Tel Aviv. But in a recent poll of the Israeli public by the Tami Steinmetz Center for Peace Research at Tel Aviv University, 54% of Jewish respondents said settlements weakened Israel’s national interests; only 35% said they strengthened the country. Even voters for Sharon’s right-wing Likud Party were almost evenly split on the issue. (The Arab minority, of course, is utterly opposed to settlements.)

Sharon won office because negotiations appeared to have failed, and he stays in power because peace proponents can’t point to a viable diplomatic option. Bush could have given new life to the political debate here by telling the Israeli public: The United States will lend a hand to a new push for peace, but the Israeli government needs to renew its commitment to compromise. At that point, voters again would have had a real choice: Sharon’s failed bid at a military solution to terror or the peace platform of his opponents.

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And then there’s the issue of democracy. Yes, Bush did use the word in his speech, regularly. But there’s a difference between saying the word and talking about the thing itself.

The way Bush spoke of democracy, the Palestinians are supposed to go to the polls and vote--against Arafat. One wonders: Will there be a gunboat off the Gaza coast to ensure the outcome? Or if Arafat wins in the popular vote, does Bush expect the new, independent Palestinian judiciary to simply name Arafat’s opponent the winner?

The sad reality is that if Palestinian elections were held today, Arafat would either win again or lose to a challenger more intransigent than he is. If reelected, he’d face a legislature dominated by hard-liners. Arafat has been discredited not only by his corruption but by his failure to bring independence through the Oslo process.

Again, there is a legitimate way for the U.S. to influence Palestinian politics: Provide reason to believe that by choosing peace, Palestinians stand a greater chance of realizing their aspirations for independence.

On the surface, Bush tried to do that. But his promise of full independence that “could be reached” three years hence was too distant and tenuous to inspire trust in American diplomacy. His call for Israeli settlement activity to stop, and for Israeli troops to pull back to the positions they held before the current uprising, lacks a time frame. Even if Sharon were to comply, the existing settlements would remain in place, chopping Palestinian-controlled territory into a series of enclaves. Pending the vague final-status solution, Palestinians would find themselves at the status quo ante of September 2000--living under the conditions that eroded confidence in a peaceful solution.

Under those conditions, Palestinians aren’t likely to run for office on a platform of conciliation.

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It wasn’t, I suspect, that Bush aimed for a speech without hope. He didn’t grasp that hope is in the details. American intervention could change the political atmosphere among both Israelis and Palestinians. But it has to provide tangible reason for Israelis to believe they’ll finally have security and for Palestinians to believe they’ll achieve independence.

To inspire hope, the president needs to say much more. He needs to talk about how he envisions solving those problems of borders, Jerusalem and refugees. He needs to be honest about the need for Israel to evacuate settlements--honesty that most Israelis would appreciate. He needs to say more about the diplomatic steps toward reaching agreement.

And unless he does so, his supposed support for Israel will remain hollow--for Israel’s most vital interest remains peace.

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