A New Chance for Peace?
By Jimmy Carter
01/18/07 "Washington
Post" - --- I am concerned that
public discussion of my book "Palestine Peace Not
Apartheid" has been diverted from the book's basic
proposals: that peace talks be resumed after six years
of delay and that the tragic persecution of Palestinians
be ended. Although most critics have not seriously
disputed or even mentioned the facts and suggestions
about these two issues, an apparently concerted campaign
has been focused on the book's title, combined with
allegations that I am anti-Israel. This is not good for
any of us who are committed to Israel's status as a
peaceful nation living in harmony with its neighbors.
It is encouraging that President Bush has announced that
peace in the Holy Land will be a high priority for his
administration during the next two years. On her current
trip to the region, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
has called for an early U.S.-Israeli-Palestinian
meeting. She has recommended the 2002 offer of the 23
Arab nations as a foundation for peace: full recognition
of Israel based on a return to its internationally
recognized borders. This offer is compatible with
official U.S. policy, previous agreements approved by
Israeli governments in 1978 and 1993, and the "road map"
for peace developed by the "quartet" (the United States,
Russia, the European Union and the United Nations).
The clear fact is that Israel will never find peace
until it is willing to withdraw from its neighboring
occupied territories and permit the Palestinians to
exercise their basic human and political rights. With
land swaps, this "green line" can be modified through
negotiations to let a substantial number of Israeli
settlers remain in their subsidized homes east of the
internationally recognized border. The premise of
exchanging Arab territory for peace has been acceptable
for several decades to a majority of Israelis but not to
a minority of the more conservative leaders, who are
unfortunately supported by most of the vocal American
Jewish community.
These same premises, of course, will have to be accepted
by any government that represents the Palestinians. A
March 2006 poll by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
and the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey
Research in Ramallah found 73 percent approval among
citizens in the occupied territories, and Palestinian
Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh has expressed support for
talks between President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert and pledged to end Hamas's
rejectionist position if a negotiated agreement is
approved by the Palestinian people.
Abbas is wise in repeating to Secretary Rice that he
rejects any "interim" boundaries for the Palestinian
state. The step-by-step road-map formula promulgated
almost three years ago for reaching a final agreement
has proved to be a non-starter -- and an excuse for not
making any progress. I know from experience that it is
often more difficult to negotiate an interim agreement,
with all its future uncertainties, than to address the
panoply of crucial issues that will have to be resolved
to reach the goal of peace.
Given these recent developments and with the Democratic
Party poised to play a more important role in governing,
this is a good time to clarify our party's overall
policy in the broader Middle East. Numerous options are
available as Congress attempts to correlate its
suggestions with White House policy, and there is little
doubt that the basic proposals of the Iraq Study Group
provide a good foundation on which Democrats might reach
something of a consensus (recognizing that individual
lawmakers could still make their own proposals on
details). This party policy would provide a reasonable
answer to the allegation that Democrats have no
alternatives of their own to address the Iraq quagmire.
A key factor in an Iraq policy would be strong demands
on Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government to
cooperate in ending sectarian violence, prodded by a
clear notice of plans for troop withdrawals. A
commitment to regional cooperation, including
opportunities for Iran and Syria to participate, would
be beneficial in assuring doubtful Iraqis that America
will no longer be the dominant outside power shaping
their military, political and economic future.
Although Israel's prime minister has criticized these
facets of the Iraq Study Group's report, the most
difficult recommendation for many Democrats could be the
call for substantive peace talks on the Palestinian
issue. The situation in the occupied territories will be
a crucial factor, and it would be helpful for both the
House and Senate to send a responsible delegation to the
West Bank and Gaza to observe the situation personally,
to meet with key leaders and to ascertain the prospects
if peace talks can be launched.
I am convinced that, with bipartisan support, this is a
good opportunity for progress.
The writer was the 39th president and is a Nobel Peace
Prize laureate. His most recent book is "Palestine Peace
Not Apartheid."
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