08/08/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- The Middle East is a tinderbox, with some key
players on all sides waiting for every opportunity
to destroy their enemies with bullets, bombs and
missiles. One of the special vulnerabilities of
Israel, and a repetitive cause of violence, is the
holding of prisoners. Militant Palestinians and
Lebanese know that a captured Israeli soldier or
civilian is either a cause of conflict or a valuable
bargaining chip for prisoner exchange. This
assumption is based on a
number of such trades, including 1,150 Arabs,
mostly Palestinians, for three Israelis in 1985; 123
Lebanese for the remains of two Israeli soldiers in
1996; and 433 Palestinians and others for an Israeli
businessman and the bodies of three soldiers in
2004.
This stratagem precipitated the renewed violence
that erupted in June when Palestinians dug a tunnel
under the barrier that surrounds Gaza and assaulted
some Israeli soldiers, killing two and capturing
one. They
offered to exchange the soldier for the release
of 95 women and 313 children who are among almost
10,000 Arabs in Israeli prisons, but this time
Israel rejected a swap and attacked Gaza in an
attempt to free the soldier and stop rocket fire
into Israel. The resulting destruction brought
reconciliation between warring Palestinian factions
and support for them throughout the Arab world.
Hizbullah militants in south Lebanon then killed
three Israeli soldiers and captured two others, and
insisted on Israel's withdrawal from disputed
territory and an exchange for some of the several
thousand incarcerated Lebanese. With American
backing, Israeli bombs and missiles rained down on
Lebanon. Soon, Hizbullah rockets supplied by Syria
and Iran were striking northern Israel.
It is inarguable that Israel has a right to
defend itself against attacks on its citizens, but
it is inhumane and counterproductive to punish
civilian populations in the illogical hope that
somehow they will blame Hamas and Hizbullah for
provoking the devastating response. The result
instead has been that broad Arab and worldwide
support has been rallied for these groups, while
condemnation of both Israel and the United States
has intensified.
Israel belatedly announced, but did not carry
out, a two-day cessation in bombing Lebanon,
responding to the global condemnation of an air
attack on the Lebanese village of Qana, where 57
civilians were killed and where 106 died from the
same cause 10 years ago. As before there were
expressions of "deep regret," a promise of
"immediate investigation" and the explanation that
dropped leaflets had warned families in the region
to leave their homes.
The urgent need in Lebanon is that Israeli
attacks stop, that Lebanon's regular military forces
control the southern region of the country, that
Hizbullah cease as a separate fighting force, and
future attacks against Israel be prevented. Israel
should withdraw from all Lebanese territory,
including Shebaa Farms, and release the Lebanese
prisoners. Yet Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has
rejected such a cease-fire.
These are ambitious hopes, but even if the UN
Security Council adopts and implements a resolution
that would lead to such an eventual solution, it
will provide just another band-aid and temporary
relief. Tragically, the current conflict is part of
the inevitably repetitive cycle of violence that
results from the absence of a comprehensive
settlement in the Middle East, exacerbated by the
almost unprecedented six-year absence of any real
effort to achieve such a goal.
Leaders on both sides ignore strong majorities
that crave peace, allowing extremist-led violence to
preempt all opportunities for building a political
consensus. Traumatized Israelis cling to the false
hope that their lives will be made safer by
incremental unilateral withdrawals from occupied
areas, while Palestinians see their remnant
territories reduced to little more than human
dumping grounds surrounded by a provocative
"security barrier" that embarrasses Israel's friends
and fails to bring safety or stability.
The general parameters of a long-term, two-state
agreement are well known.
There will be no substantive and permanent peace
for any peoples in this troubled region as long as
Israel is violating key UN resolutions, official
American policy and the international "road map" for
peace by occupying Arab lands and oppressing the
Palestinians. Except for mutually agreeable
negotiated modifications, Israel's official pre-1967
borders must be honored. As were all previous
administrations since the founding of Israel, US
government leaders must be in the forefront of
achieving this long-delayed goal.
A major impediment to progress is the US
administration's strange policy that dialogue on
controversial issues will be extended only as a
reward for subservient behavior and will be withheld
from those who reject US assertions. Direct
engagement with the Palestine Liberation
Organization or the Palestinian Authority and the
government in Damascus will be necessary if secure
negotiated settlements are to be achieved. Failure
to address the issues and leaders involved risks the
creation of an arc of even greater instability
running from Jerusalem through Beirut, Damascus,
Baghdad and Tehran.
The people of the Middle East deserve peace and
justice, and we in the international community owe
them our strong leadership and support.
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