| Where We Stand |
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Roadblocks on the Path to Peace Gareth Evans and Robert Malley The New York Times But all of that will fade into irrelevance unless the
international community demonstrates the will to promote a settlement plan that
goes beyond the generalities offered by President Bush and shows how a
Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders can be achieved without threatening
The current approach appears premised on the belief that Mr.
Bush's call in June for sweeping improvements in Palestinian security
procedures, across-the-board institutional reform and leadership change as
prerequisites for genuine political progress is having its intended effect. It
is not. There is no doubt that Palestinian politics have been shaken.
There is open discussion of reforming Palestinian institutions. There are
growing complaints about the Palestinian Authority's lack of transparency and
accountability. And there is increased awareness among Palestinians that
attacks against Israeli civilians must stop. But it is not the shake-up that is
in question; it is its meaning and direction. Yes, talk about reform is getting louder. But reform means
different things to different people. For some Palestinians, it means starting
to build more modern, state-like institutions, as the Under these pressures, reform of the Palestinian Authority
seems inevitable — but it can take one of many directions. If Palestinians are
not offered a clear and credible way to end the occupation and reach a
comprehensive settlement, moderate Palestinians will have little to offer.
Instead, the type of reform most likely to emerge is one that would establish a
leadership composed of all national and radical Islamic forces, including
Hamas, in order to resist Likewise on the issue of security, the predominant mood among
practically all Palestinians is to pull back from terrorist attacks against
Israeli civilians. But the cycle of revenge is unlikely to end without some
sense that there is reason to hope for a settlement. At the same time, so long
as Israelis are persuaded that the Palestinians have not relinquished the
option of violence, they will continue to feel the need to engage in both
pre-emptive and retaliatory action. The Bush administration believes that raising final-status
issues now will undermine genuine Palestinian reform. In fact, the absence of
that element is undermining genuine reformers. In a similar vein, until
Israelis can see a realistic political way forward, they are unlikely to
challenge Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's policies that are harming the chances
of reaching a peace agreement. What is puzzling is that so many in the international
community publicly endorse an American approach that they privately concede has
no chance of succeeding. British Prime Minister Tony Blair has suggested a better way
forward. His little-noticed call for an international peace conference by the
end of the year — at which the key parties could place a blueprint for a
comprehensive settlement on the table — is what is required. Offering a plan,
of course, will not mean its immediate implementation. But it would have the
effect of reviving political debate on both sides, bolstering the fortunes of
the Palestinians and Israeli peace camps and providing them with a common
political platform around which to rally. Palestinian terrorist attacks in Tel Aviv and elsewhere, the
siege of Yasir Arafat's headquarters, the killing of Palestinian civilians in
the occupied territories: these are not unexpected roadblocks but the natural
consequences of the path currently pursued. They provide powerful evidence that
attempts to resolve the conflict through sequential or incremental means —
starting with Palestinian reform or with security agreements in localized areas
— will not work. The conflict is of a whole and must be resolved as such. The Israeli-Palestinian confrontation is at yet another
critical turning point. The less the Gareth Evans, foreign minister of |
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