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Written by Hussein Agha and Robert Malley Hussein Agha and Robert Malley
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Category: News News
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Published: 03 September 2010 03 September 2010
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Last Updated: 03 September 2010 03 September 2010
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Created: 03 September 2010 03 September 2010
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Netanyahu operates within a domestic consensus. On issue after issue
– acceptance of a two-state solution, insistence on Palestinian
recognition of Israel as a Jewish state, rejection of a full
settlement freeze including Jerusalem, refusal of preconditions for
negotiations – his stances resonate with the Israeli people. Neither
the right, from which he comes, nor the left, whose peace
aspirations he is pursuing, denies him the mandate to negotiate.
Netanyahu is heading on his own terms to negotiations he has
demanded for 20 months; Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas is being
dragged there without any of his preconditions having been met.
The Palestinian leadership has never been more vulnerable.
Participation in talks was opposed by virtually every Palestinian
political organisation apart from Fatah, whose support was
lethargic. Abbas's decision to come to Washington is viewed
sceptically even by those who back him. Netanyahu's is supported
even by those who oppose him.
Palestinian views are well known. There is little to no distinction
between their public, opening and final positions. Yet no one truly
knows the Israeli stance. Netanyahu can start with maximalist
positions and then climb down, exuding flexibility next to what
inevitably will be couched as Palestinian obstinacy. Palestinians
are likely to be frustrated, the atmosphere poisoned, and American
bridging proposals – likely falling somewhere between Palestinian
bottom lines and Israel's negotiating posture – risk being skewed.
Palestinian negotiators have logged countless hours on final status
questions since the 1990s. The reverse is true on the Israeli side.
From Netanyahu down, only one leading figure has seriously tackled
permanent status issues, and it is unclear what role defence
minister Ehud Barak may play. This disparity should favour the
Palestinians – the experienced trumps the novice. But they will also
be prisoners of their well-worn outlook, whereas the Israelis will
be free to introduce new ideas. Yet again, Palestinians will
confront the maddening task of beginning from scratch a process they
have undergone on multiple occasions.
Neither Israel's mounting isolation nor its reliance on US
assistance has jeopardised its ability to make autonomous choices,
whereas the Palestinian leadership's decision-making capacity has
shrivelled. Most recent Palestinian decisions have been made in
accordance with international demands, against the leadership's
instinctive desires and in clear opposition to popular aspirations.
Despite such deference, Palestinian leaders cannot count on
international support. They feel betrayed by Arab allies and let
down by Washington. In contrast, Israel has defied the Obama
administration without endangering close ties to Washington.
Palestinians will have to take into account the views of Arab and
Muslim states; Israel can negotiate by and for itself, without
reference to an outside party.
What happens should negotiations fail? The status quo, though
sub-optimal, presents no imminent danger to Israel. What Israelis
want from an agreement is something they have learned either to live
without (Palestinian recognition) or to provide for themselves
(security). The demographic threat many invoke as a reason to act –
the possibility that Arabs soon might outnumber Jews, forcing Israel
to choose between remaining Jewish or democratic – is exaggerated.
Israel already has separated itself from Gaza. In the future, it
could unilaterally relinquish areas of the West Bank, further
diminishing prospects of an eventual Arab majority. Because Israelis
have a suitable alternative, they lack a sense of urgency. The
Palestinians, by contrast, have limited options and desperately need
an agreement.
In any event, Abbas will return to a fractured, fractious society.
If he reaches a deal, many will ask in whose name he was bartering
away Palestinian rights. If negotiations fail, most will accuse him
of once more having been duped. If Netanyahu comes back with an
accord, he will be hailed as a historic leader. His constituency
will largely fall in line; the left will have no choice but to
salute. If the talks collapse, his followers will thank him for
standing firm while his critics are likely in due course to blame
the Palestinians. Abbas will be damned if he does and damned if he
doesn't. Netanyahu will thrive if he does and survive if he doesn't.
One loses even if he wins, the other wins even if he loses. There is
no greater asymmetry than that.
This article also appears in the Washington Post