It’s Legacy Time Again
George W. Bush and Condoleezza Rice seek their own Palestinian peace plan, and bring Carter and Clinton along for the ride
By Jeff Emanuel Posted in appeasement | Foreign Affairs | Israel | Palestine — Comments (18) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
If the dinner conversation at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is focused on a Palestinian state and a ‘Middle Eastern peace plan’ built on Israel’s giving away both land and sovereignty, then it’s a pretty safe guess that it is currently year seven or eight of a two-term American presidency. Like clockwork, as the time for him to leave office draws near, President Bush, like Bill Clinton before him, has turned a hopeful eye to the Levant as a solution to his “legacy” problem. This problem is namely the fact that, like his predecessor, Bush's presidency (short of a miracle solution to the myriad challenges currently facing America) stands to be remembered largely for its poor choices, bad policy, and abysmal public relations, rather than for any large successes in the domestic or foreign policy realms.
Read on . . .
According to Reuters, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice “has made clear she will devote all her energy in the Bush administration's final 14 months to get what others have failed to attain in the past – a viable, independent Palestinian state living side by side with a secure Israel.” The fact that the U.S. is currently fighting a war on two fronts in the region – in Iraq and Afghanistan – and is dealing with the growing Iranian and Syrian nuclear threats would suggest that America has higher priorities in the Middle East than treading once more over well-worn ground in Israel and the Palestinian territories.
However, the Bush administration, represented by the Department of State and its less-than-competent head, appears more than willing to re-tread this ground, both in an attempt to divert attention (both by those currently watching and by those who will, in the future, write the history of these years) from its as-yet-unsuccessful attempt at nation building in Iraq, and in an attempt to enshrine in its legacy one inarguable foreign-policy success, in an area that has seen only failure on the part of the President’s predecessors. To this end, a “Palestinian statehood conference” will be held at the end of November in Maryland.
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In its attempt to change the focus of American foreign policy from the War on Terror and Middle Eastern nation building to the obligatory attempt at legacy-building through pressuring Israel to make land and defense concessions, though, the Bush administration is making several mistakes.
The first is allowing the Palestinian and Arab representatives a seat at the negotiating table (and thereby conferring legitimacy upon their positions in the exchange) without setting the recognition of the Zionist state’s right to exist as a precondition. Stipulating that Israel has a right to survival must be a requirement for beginning any 'peace process,' rather than being used as a point of negotiation by the Palestinian representatives.
The second mistake is following the lead set by previous administrations and negotiators, who have set the precedent of unilateral concessions by Israel as a starting point for these negotiations. Among the massive concessions the administration is asking Israel to make this time in the name of “peace” is the transference of sovereignty over Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem to the Palestinians and the surrendering of Israeli sovereignty over the sacred Temple Mount in that city. Also, huge chunks of neighboring Judea and Samaria would be surrendered should the Bush-Rice plan be agreed to, something which would immediately make the over 100,000 Israelis living in those areas into refugees themselves, and which would eliminate the crucial buffer that protects the narrow Jewish state from Palestinian rocket and other indirect fire attack. Further, according to the administration and their willing accomplice, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert (who holds a staggering 9% approval rating for just this reason), an agreement regarding the so-called Palestinian “right of return” (the right of Palestinians to re-populate the areas they left or were driven from during the 1948 war for Israeli independence) would be discussed, as well. Every one of these concessions is unacceptable for reasons of security and sovereignty at the very least.
The third mistake lies in Rice and Bush’s assumption that the Palestinians and their leaders, as well as the surrounding nations, actually desire peace with Israel in the first place, despite the fact that history seems to clearly show otherwise. Since the last Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire was agreed to last November, inhabitants of the Gaza Strip south of Israel have launched nearly 400 homemade Qassam rockets (fashioned from water pipes – no wonder Gaza has no infrastructure – and rebar, and filled with nails and ball bearings) at the Israeli town of Sderot, as well as at the Israeli plant which provides Gaza with its power. Though Rice has publicly stated her belief that the Palestinian people hold the same values that Americans do, and desire peaceful, prosperous lives just as much, a brief look at Palestinian state television clearly demonstrates just how different the Palestinians’ view of “quality of life” is from Americans’ and Israelis’. The glorification of suicide bombing (or “martyrs”), the question of “how many Jews did your father kill?” to the children of suicide bombers, and the veneration murdering Israelis as the ultimate goal to strive for in life – all on children’s programming – is standard fare on both Hamas and Fatah-funded state television.
Perhaps the biggest mistake being made by Secretary Rice and the rest of the Bush administration in their quest for a legacy, though, lies in their choices of whom to consult about how best to move forward on this matter. In the last week, Rice has sought advice from two notorious critics of the administration, former Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, on the recipe for a successful peace in the Middle East. While the decision to speak with the former Presidents might not have been the worst one, especially if seeking knowledge of what not to do, the timing is singularly poor. Carter has in recent years become a more and more vocal opponent of Israel’s sovereignty, most notably with his terrorist-supporting call to “give Hamas a chance” in control of the Palestinian government (after he certified their electoral victory in January 2006) and with his book “Palestine: Peace not Apartheid,” in which he hyperbolically accused the Jewish state of waging a war on the human rights of those who attack Israel on a daily basis. Regardless of what position he might have held in the past with regard to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, it is clear that Carter is neither an unprejudiced observer nor a sound source of advice on a plan for peace which does not give our best ally in the region short shrift.
Seeking advice from Clinton was a poor choice for different reasons. First, Clinton’s attempt at brokering a Middle East peace deal, was, like Bush’s, a last-ditch, late-term attempt at salvaging his tarnished presidential legacy by scoring a seemingly impossible foreign policy success (so there is common ground on that front). However, Clinton was ultimately unsuccessful in his peace efforts; in fact, it was during Clinton’s last few months in office that the second intifada broke out, sparking several more years of violence. The biggest reason why it was a mistake for the Bush administration to seek the advice of President Clinton, though, has to do with timing. At a time when Clinton’s wife, Hillary, is the frontrunner for the Democrat presidential nomination, the appearance of approaching the former president for counsel confers upon him – and, by extension, his wife the candidate – an aura of wisdom and of foreign policy expertise. Rice's move here simply reinforces the impression that this administration, already thought by many to be inept in matters of foreign policy and diplomacy, requires the assistance of the wise and effective Clintons to do anything right outside the borders of the U.S.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict cannot be ‘solved’ in the mere fourteen months that President Bush has remaining in office – especially not through unilateral Israeli concession, many of the details of which almost exactly mirror the concessions that former Prime Minister Ehud Barak agreed to, and PLO leader Yasser Arafat walked away from, under Clinton. The fact that the Bush administration is going down this well-traveled path in the last months of its tenure clearly demonstrates that clichéd attempts at legacy-saving are more important to the President and his Secretaries than are meaningful policies. Further, the fact that Bush and Rice are going about doing this in exactly the same failed manner that their predecessors Clinton and Albright did only seven years ago shows that the decision-makers in the administration have maintained for the duration of their time in office the same lack of historical and practical understanding that led them into the foreign and domestic policy blunders that they have made thus far.
This article originally appeared in Human Events.
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We mocked Clinton for this. I'm deeply disappointed, since it was this man's foreign policy that earned him my vote last time around.
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Let's nominate the Nash Equilibrium for President.
Jeff gets it right. The Israeli-Palestinian situation cannot be ‘solved’ in a mere fourteen months. The Palestinians must earn nationhood. Something they have yet to do. The President Bush I voted for would tell them so.
...historians writing history from the perspective of Western Civilization tend to treat those leaders who strove to advance freedom, liberty, and democracy much more favorably than those who chose to maintain the status quo: ie Washington, Lincoln, Churchill and FDR contrasted with the historical treatment of Chamberlain, Petain, and Quisling.
If there is failure to be recognized and attributed, it is the failure of the American People, their elected representatives, and the media, who, in a time of national peril, chose to ignore the ignore the enemy at the gates and instead, wish the threat away.
Time will erase the vile passion and hatred that permeates this Nation's discourse and the only record left will be of the passage of events. The President wisely chose to remove the Islamofascist threat to Western Civilization by promoting freedom and democracy in the Middle East in much the same manner as freedom and democracy in Western Europe stood out in stark contrast against the economic slavery and oppression of Communism which eventually lead to the collapse of the Communist system.
Unfortunately, this generation had no George C Marshalls, Harry S Trumans, Dwight D Eisenhowers, or JFKs ("Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country"), but instead it contains such notables as Howard Dean ("The Republican agenda [defending freedom and democracy] is just too hard"), John Kerry, and "Pinch" Sulzberger.
The 'compare and contrast' between the generations need go no further than the two brothers, one a US President, the other a Senator; one repeatedly swam out to rescue his floundering, shipwrecked shipmates during wartime at great personal risk, the other deliberately chose to abandon the passenger in the vehicle he was driving, leaving her to drown in order to save himself.
but even if that was true, and it isn't, it would still be disappointing and dangerous.
For those of us who watch http://www.memri.org/ with any regularity, there can be no doubt---the "Palestinians" are not interested in peace. The media they subject their young children to similar to what the Germans where showing their kids in the 1930s. Those kids are going to grow up and OBL look ineffective.
We need a propaganda counter offensive, and we need it now. Instead, we get this legacy building tripe . . .
Yeah, they're asking the second US president to ever be impeached, along with the most bumbling and ineffective POTUS of the 20th Century! Bill Clinton, through his inaction (other than the "Wag the Dog" antics during the impeachment hearings), gave plenty of terrorist organizations the impression that the USA would retreat from terrorist attacks, Somalis, Khobar Towers, the Embassy bombings, and the USS Cole bombing to name a few. So now President Bush wants to further stain his legacy by adopting the failed policies of two of his predecessors? Wow, is there something in the water there in Washington D.C. that causes stupidity? Those who stand for nothing will fall for anything.- unknown
"And it shall come to pass in that day, that I will make Jerusalem a burdensome stone to all people: all that shall lift it up shall be rent and torn........."
Poor poor timing especially with an upcoming election year. This only gives credibility to shrillary to get bill back into some mediation role.
I thought President Bush would take advantage of his last couple years with a nothing to lose attitude to get some things done. I was wrong.
Using Clinton and Carter as negotiators is just window dressing. Who ever lives up to their side of the bargain anyway? We have to live through Lucy pulling the football away from Charlie Brown once again.
Maybe it'll be better w/ Arafat out of the way but I doubt it.
Ask not what I can do for my country, ask what my country can do for me. Washington Elected Elite
...they were just asked for advice ;-)
I'm disappointed that the Bush administration is trying to revive the "road map." It's destined to fail, IMHO, because it validates terrorism as a strategy.
The path to "peace" in the Middle East begins in Baghdad and runs straight through Beirut.
***
“Well, the trouble with our liberal friends is not that they are ignorant, but that they know so much that isn't so.” – Ronald Reagan
...over mis-appropriation of the Bumblebee brand the way Disney did over Mickey Mouse? Might be one way to put a stick in Hamas' spokes before Israel resumes missile strikes against their leadership.
And is there a bloody-handed dictator (Ortega, Chavez, Arafat) whose rear Jimmy Carter *hasn't* kissed?
--furious
"I find your lack of faith disturbing." -- Darth Vader
I did not expect to see Bush chasing after a legacy with all the "dignity" of Clinton.
Carter is a known sympathizer with terrorists. The Condi thing is stranger, but she has definitely been more conciliatory toward the Saudis and more obstreperous with the Israelis in recent years. There actually was a time when I would have contemplated voting for her for president but now, not even dogcatcher, as they say.
Something drives 2-term presidents batty in their 2nd terms. Too bad American presidents can't serve just 1 6 year term and be done.
You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you.
I remember reading Gallup or Zogby poll of Muslims worldwide for a paper I was writing for school. The question was whether or not they supported suicide bombing. The average for most countries was 20%-30%(hardly the tiny minority the PC police want us to believe), but what struck me was that in the Palestinian territories it was 70 something percent. I will try to find the poll. I guess my point is that I'm not holding my breath. I also point out that one of the greatest critics of this effort, Daniel Pipes, is an advisor of Rudy.
The naive forgive and forget.
The foolish forget but do not forgive.
The wise forgive but do not forget.
Umm yeah... Sorry.. The Israelis should be the ones making more concessions. The Palestinians already made their concessions. That's why Israelis live in homes that Palestinians built with their own hands. If somebody immigrated to my town and kicked me out of the house my family had lived in for several generations, and then said "by the way, we're founding a country here on your land and you have to leave and your house now belongs to us." Believe me when I say I'd be fighting to get it back and so would any of you.
just spouting someone else's talking points?
Socialism doesn't work. It looks nice on paper, but it's been tried and it's failed miserably every time (usually accompanied by widespread death and suffering).
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So is anti-Semitism, by the way, so please be careful not to express any.
The Fuzzy Puppy of the VRWC. I've been usurped!
[build] with their own hands"? Where? What concessions have they made? Is suicide bombing justified? What is the reason for the Israeli border expansion? Did Israel provoke a war of aggression in 1948? Was their being the first country in history to conquer surrounding countries and then give back a great deal of the territory they conquered not a concession?
You need to make sense, Not Caesar Chavez.






what in the he!! are they thinking? Jimmy (anti-american) jew hating Carter and Bill (anything besides my wife) Clinton helping with foreign policy......President Bush just continues to sink into the "What will my legacy be" pit of doom.
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