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Jewish World Review August 1, 2001 / 12 Menachem-Av, 5761
http://www.jewishworldreview.com --
AFTER the collapse of the Oslo process in January 2001, Israeli and
American officials most closely involved with this diplomacy went silent -
and with good reason. Promising an end of the Arab-Israeli conflict, they
delivered the most vicious and fatal Palestinian-Israeli fighting since
1948.
But the brief period of remorse by those diplomats and politicians has
now ended. In recent weeks they have launched an audacious campaign arguing
that no matter how bad things are today, the parties eventually must return
to exactly their brand of diplomacy.
And now The New York Times has devoted its immense resources to backing
up this self-interested claim. "Quest for Mideast Peace: How and Why It
Failed," published on July 26, amounts to a 6,000-word valentine by the
paper's Israel bureau chief, Deborah Sontag, to the men of Oslo.
Ms Sontag works to undermine what she dismissively terms the "potent,
simplistic narrative" that most Israelis and many Americans now accept:
Yasir Arafat was offered exceptionally generous terms last summer by Prime
Minister Ehud Barak, he turned them down, and instead resorted to a campaign
of violence. This shows Arafat unsuitable as a negotiating partner, so a
diplomatic resolution of Israeli-Palestinian differences is impossible so
long as he remains the Palestinian leader.
Ms Sontag's alternative "narrative" (dare one call it impotent and complex?)
is summarized by her subtitle: "Many Now Agree That All The Parties, Not
Just Arafat, Were to Blame." If she can show that Israelis and Americans
were as responsible as Arafat for the present crisis, she thereby revives
Arafat as a negotiating partner and with that, the whole Oslo process. The
Palestinian leader comes off predictably well in her account - like an
innocent bystander to a two-car smash-up.
Instead, she mostly blames that nuisance called democracy. The change
of Israeli and American leaders at the start of 2001 imposed an artificial
deadline on the talks; had Barak and Bill Clinton remained in office, a
United Nations official informs us, a final peace deal "could have been
hammered out."
Also, Barak saw former prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu as his
strongest electoral opponent. To obstruct Netanyahu's path, he colluded
with Netanyahu's rival Ariel Sharon to enhance Sharon's nationalist
credentials, for example by permitting him to take a walk on the Temple
Mount. Arafat warned this would have terrible consequences; Ms Sontag
reports that he "huddled on the balcony" with Barak at a dinner party and
implored him to block Sharon's visit to the holy site, but to no avail.
Sharon did go and he "set off angry Palestinian demonstrations" which the
Israeli forces then put down with "lethal force," launching "the cycle of
violence" that yet continues.
If the Oslo track was indeed derailed by these dumb mistakes, rather
than being Arafat's fault, diplomacy can be resumed where it left off. An
Israeli insider sums up Ms Sontag's conclusion by announcing that "the basis
of the agreement is lying there in arm's reach."
THIS IS PATENT NONSENSE. In part, Ms Sontag has the facts wrong. Sharon's
stroll provoked ten months of Palestinian violence? Inherently improbable
to begin with, this notion has been completely discredited by several
Palestinian leaders' publicly acknowledging that violence was planned.
Sharon's walk, actually, was but a pretext.
In part, Ms Sontag has the premises wrong. Oslo has not only caused
many hundreds of deaths (including 700 or so in the past 10 months) but it
has vastly increased the danger of all-out Arab-Israeli war. Why would
anyone want more of it?
The answer lies in Ms Sontag's acknowledgment that her article was
based on conversations only with "peace advocates, academics and diplomats."
By excluding all critics of Oslo, she has uncritically accepted the
pleadings of Oslo's core enthusiasts - those individuals who, for their
reputations to be restored, need Oslo to be revived. She serves as their
apologist.
Thus, Ms Sontag never mentions the real reason for Oslo's failure: the
Palestinian Authority's violation of nearly every commitment from the moment
Arafat signed the accords eight years ago. Her article is consistent with
the New York Times having over that entire period politicized its news pages
and not informing about those violations.
With this "special report," the Times caps its record of
undistinguished reporting on Arab-Israeli diplomacy by publishing what is in
reality just shallow propaganda for a failed
By Daniel Pipes
JWR contributor Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle East Forum and the author of several books, most recently Conspiracy: How the Paranoid Style Flourishes and Where It Comes from. Let him know what you think by clicking here.