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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
10.11.2008
What About a SEME?

It was Thursday, barely 36 hours since Barack Obama was recognized to have won the American presidency, that some editorialist at the London Financial Times sat down to do his Friday leader. It was the paper's first instructions to Obama. The previous day's commentary was a cliche: a reminder, as if neither he nor his party grasped the truism, that Obama needed to be president of the "whole" country.

So on what subject did the editors of the FT choose to exhort the president-elect? It was not on the international economic calamity about which, we may presume, the newspaper possesses some special authority. It was not directed to other domestic issues--race, health care, the environment, infrastructure, education--about which Great Britain is, if anything, far more in trouble (though less in panic) than we are. Yes, it was about foreign policy, though not about Russia and NATO or the Korean bomb or, for that matter, Iran's much more ambitious nuclear designs. Not about the corroded moral authority of the United Nations either. Or even about the confrontation between democratic political interests and moral ideals and the new Islamic militancy sweeping across West Asia to the gates of China and planting itself west, north, and south of Vienna where a Muslim siege had been rebuffed in 1683. In all of these matters, London still retains some authority as a European power and also as the seedbed of democracy itself.

But on none of these urgent matters does the FT offer any counsel to Obama. Its first counseling is about the long and tortuous dispute between Israel and the political sects and clannish tribes which aspire to (isn't it really all of?) Palestine. And what does the Financial Times advise? It is really a gimmick: Appoint Bill Clinton as "special envoy for the Middle East with plenipotentiary powers." Yes, with plenipotentiary powers, no less. How could he function without them?

A special envoy for the Middle East is an old hat idea. In fact, it is not exactly an idea and certainly not a new idea. By my count, there have been perhaps a dozen special envoys to the region in the last dozen years, perhaps more, and many of them appointed by the president of the United States as his personal representative to the disputants. Here are a few of the designees of the White House: Philip Habib, William Burns, Anthony Zinni, James Jones, Curtis Wilson. Didn't George Tenet also play this role for President Bush? And wasn't James Wolfensohn a special rep of someone or other, as well? Then, of course, there is the present special envoy of the Quartet, come straight out of 10 Downing Street to the Middle East bazaar, Tony Blair. Very important person, accomplished nothing.  Someone once suggested that George Bush Sr. be appointed to this prestigious office. And someone else suggested that James Baker be the one to do the miracle of Middle East peace. The problem with the last two men is that they don't much like Jews. This might be called a disqualification.

There have also been U.N. special representatives to the conflict and the region: Count Folke Bernadotte and Ralph Bunche 60 years ago, up to Terje Roed-Larsen ten minutes ago. The E.U. has its own emissary: Marc Otte. Russia, China, Japan, and the two most sanctimonious meddlers in the region, Sweden and Norway, are always appointing special thises and thats to the neighborhood. Right now the Philippines has also sent a new person to collect frequent flyer points in Israel and the Arab capitals.

Actually, the idea that Bill Clinton become SEME (you like that? an acronym) was originally broached in the Huffington Post, which gives you some sense of how serious it is. (Irony!)

There are several reasons why the very notion should not appeal to Barack Obama. First of all, Bill Clinton is by now a very frivolous man. He is full of self-love and, thus, can no longer be trusted with an important public chore, as Obama must have noticed during the campaign. It is true that Clinton is invested in the historic struggle between Israel and the fissiparous Palestinians. It is hard to imagine that he is not still committed to the Camp David principles to which Ehud Barak committed but Yassir Arafat would not even discuss. Much blood has been shed since the fall of 2000 and Gaza was given over five years later, to also an unhappy consequence. The Israelis cannot be expected to start a negotiation with its old concessions carved in stone. Which is what the Palestinians expect for starters, and only for starters. Clinton would do anything to get the Palestinians to sign on. But that would happen--and the "would happen" is remote--if the Israelis were to sign away not only more territory but not insist on realistic conditions without which free Palestinian Gaza immediately became a base for rockets and missiles into Israel, as it has become in the last days again. Clinton once told a Jewish audience that, if Israel were endangered, he would pick up a gun in its defense. Israel would be in peril only if it yielded the concessions it gave to Clinton in 2000.

A bit more than a year ago a "special envoy" was again being widely touted. Aluf Benn and Shmuel Rosner wrote a piece in Ha'aretz calling "a special envoy for Middle East peace ... a diplomatic tool that has become a cliche, an envoy in the guise of a messiah." Which is apparently just what the FT wants. This begins with the "parameters" drawn up by Mr. Clinton in December 2000 after the collapse after the Camp David summit. Here in the FT's own words: "the creation of a 
viable Palestinian state on nearly all the occupied West Bank with Arab east Jerusalem as its capital, with agreed and equal land swaps, and fair treatment for 4.4 million Palestinian refugees, largely through compensation."

Of course, this is such a skewed view of the conflict. Four and a half million refugees, indeed. Wait another few years and it will be five million and then six and seven. And, really, what about the physical security of Israel and Israelis wedged in between the hills and the sea? This is not an abstract matter. Will Tobias Buck, the FT news correspondent in Israel and perhaps the most obsessively anti-Zionist newsman for any western journalistic enterprise, at least admit that the lives and limbs of Israelis and the very peace of its society are endangered? No, he and the lead writers of the FT have not and will not.

The first prerequisite for any solution to this conflict and for the acceptance of a real Palestinian entity is that the Palestinians demonstrate concretely that they do not still yearn to vitiate a Jewish sovereignty in the Land of Israel.

Posted: Monday, November 10, 2008 9:30 AM with 12 comment(s)

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noga1 said:

Obama is a new broom. New brooms, as per definition, think they invented  the idea of sweeping to keep the floors clean. But those who are not brooms, new or old, know that sweeping is an age old method for cleaning the floors.

However, there are new kinds of brooms invented practically every day. The latest is this:

www.swiffer.net/.../swiffer_system_bottom.jpg

It's a new brooming concept. You sweep the floor and then you throw away the dusting sheet and replace it with a new one.

Marty, you mayfind the concept of Clinton as a special envoy less emetic if you think about him as a dusting sheet, one in  packet of 50 or so, in a box.

On a less frivollous tone, I agree that no envoy is going to create magic until Palestinians discard their dreams of  destroying Israel. Or, put another way, until Palestinians decide that what they really was in statehood.

November 10, 2008 11:23 AM

noga1 said:

Spellcheck:

On a less frivollous note, I agree that no envoy is going to create magic until Palestinians discard their dreams of destroying Israel. Or, put another way, until Palestinians decide that what they really want is statehood.

November 10, 2008 11:41 AM

liberal reformer said:

Just after reading your post, Mr. Peretz, I had this awful daymare. At my death, I am taken up into cryogenic limbo and four centuries hence, the technology is perfected to bring me back. It is 2442, a nice anagram of a year and the new president, Arugula Makapolous, the outgoing governor of Cyprus (the 51st state), has just appointed a new SEME to mediate the by now eons-old conflict. The Assassins the most radical sect yet - are in controil of Gaza but Pres. Makapolous assures us that there can be peace in our time. I want to go back to the 21st century.

November 10, 2008 11:54 AM

CRS9TNR said:

Bill Clinton would just prolang the agony and break the expense account bank.

I'd send Dick Cheney.

Some folks enjoy wrestling with the pigs, some folks eat bacon for breakfast.  

November 10, 2008 6:15 PM

nbarry said:

ALL special envoys have done nothing but prolong the agony while chasing their fantasy of a Ralph Bunche moment and a possible pension from the oil sheikhs.

November 10, 2008 7:01 PM

jerrywander said:

Any envoy or Secretary of State should study the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Quran for months under Jewish, Christian, and Muslim religious scholars before they study the history of the region since the British Mandate.  And they should study these things before they ever set foot in this region or talk to political leaders.  

Then they should take a very good look at the reality on the ground. If any diplomat can divorce himself or herself from their own prejudices (something that neither Blair nor Rice has ever done), a look at the facts should diabuse them of any notion that there is any legitimacy to the Oslo accords, or the Annapolis accords, or anything that the Clinton administration or the Bush administration has been pushing in the name of "peace process" in the middle east.  

Hopefully, the next president of the U.S. will be effective in his agenda to strengthen the U.S. economy, strengthen the U.S.'s reputation, and fend off Iran's nuclear program while relegating military presence to areas where they are needed most.  Doing all of this would be a big step in stabilizing the middle east.  

But as for Palestinian/Israeli issues, the president should be consistent.  If he is willing to speak with the president of Iran, who is known to actively support terrorist groups, then he should be willing to talk with the leaders of Hamas, who were democratically elected (fairly, according to Jimmy Carter).  On the other hand if he refuses to talk with Hamas because they are a terrorist organization, then he should refuse to talk with Fatah which has never ceased its terrorist activities or Mahmoud Abbas, who supports terrorism and was  Arafat's right hand man.

Barack Obama, in his speeches, recognized Israel as its strongest ally in the region.  Here again, I hope that he will be consistent.  If he is to pressure Israel to do anything,  he should pressure Israel to restore and upgrade its democracy (Face it; much as George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and their crew have done to chip away at citizen representation in America, in Israel it became worse with Sharon and then Olmert seeing themselves as unilateral rulers.) , remove corruption,  and stop abusing the human rights and civil rights of its own citizens.  This way Israel can become stronger and an even better ally to the U.S.  

To the knee-jerk reaction of the Palestinian or Palestinian sympathizer who reads this and spouts off about the evils of "occupation" and the oppression of the Palestinian people, I agree.   Some land has been occupied, and the Palestinian people have been subjected to severe oppression by Fatah and Hamas, amongst others.   And the weak-minded Israeli leaders have allowed this to happen.  The best thing for the Palestinian people would be a very strong Israeli leadership which would return the region to the way it was before 1988, with modifications to end everyone's refugee status and afford people their rightful dignity.

November 11, 2008 3:10 AM

Harveychaim said:

And not Dennis Ross either!

Harveychaim

Jerusalem

November 11, 2008 4:20 AM

amidut said:

About the FT (Financial Times): they don't publish my rejoinders to their Advice to Israel columns. And they're staffed with house Jews who also spout the party line.

November 11, 2008 9:58 AM

The Ignorant Populist said:

"The first prerequisite for any solution to this conflict and for the acceptance of a real Palestinian entity is that the Palestinians demonstrate concretely that they do not still yearn to vitiate a Jewish sovereignty in the Land of Israel."

What are you talking about Marty?!

Vitiate? Normal recognition is not enough now?

John Whitbeck speaks, plain, obvious sense on this delusional propaganda that you indulge in:

"Recognizing Israel's existence" appears on first impression to involve a relatively straightforward acknowledgment of a fact of life. Yet there are serious practical problems with this language. What Israel, within what borders, is involved? Is it the 55 percent of historical Palestine recommended for a Jewish state by the UN General Assembly in 1947? The 78 percent of historical Palestine occupied by the Zionist movement in 1948 and now viewed by most of the world as "Israel" or "Israel proper"? The 100 percent of historical Palestine occupied by Israel since June 1967 and shown as "Israel" (without any "Green Line") on maps in Israeli schoolbooks?

"Recognizing Israel's right to exist," the actual demand being made of Hamas and Palestinians, is in an entirely different league. This formulation does not address diplomatic formalities or a simple acceptance of present realities. It calls for a moral judgment.

There is an enormous difference between "recognizing Israel's existence" and "recognizing Israel's right to exist." From a Palestinian perspective, the difference is in the same league as the difference between asking a Jew to acknowledge that the Holocaust happened and asking him to concede that the Holocaust was morally justified. For Palestinians to acknowledge the occurrence of the Nakba – the expulsion of the great majority of Palestinians from their homeland between 1947 and 1949 – is one thing. For them to publicly concede that it was "right" for the Nakba to have happened would be something else entirely. For the Jewish and Palestinian peoples, the Holocaust and the Nakba, respectively, represent catastrophes and injustices on an unimaginable scale that can neither be forgotten nor forgiven.

To demand that Palestinians recognize "Israel's right to exist" is to demand that a people who have been treated as subhumans unworthy of basic human rights publicly proclaim that they are subhumans. It would imply Palestinians' acceptance that they deserve what has been done and continues to be done to them. Even 19th-century US governments did not require the surviving native Americans to publicly proclaim the "rightness" of their ethnic cleansing by European colonists as a condition precedent to even discussing what sort of land reservation they might receive. Nor did native Americans have to live under economic blockade and threat of starvation until they shed whatever pride they had left and conceded the point.

________________________________________________________________________________

I just hope casual observers to this site don't read your articles on the I/P issue and give them anymore time they deserve.

November 11, 2008 1:52 PM

josie19 said:

Many American Jews live somewhere on Happy Dale Road next door to the Three Bears. They stroll through life as did German Jews during the 1930's, confident that their place in modern Germany was safe, that their lives were not threatened in that German culture that they virtually revered.

American Jews are that deranged. The United States is not Germany of the 1930's. However, American Jews, or a substantial body of them, whether bound together in organizations or free standing, believe that American non-Jews are prepared to lay down the lives of their sons and daughters in defense of the State of Israel. Such a belief, forming a blindspot in their minds, may cause an explosion of anti-Semitism should a military draft be initiated in whole or part for such a defense.

American non-Jews believe that the primary duty of their govenment, as of all governments, is the protection of the lives of its citizens, and, in the absence of a supervening cause,  the avoidance of any alliances  that will cause attacks upon the United States by third countries that hate the State of Israel. There is no supervening casuse that would justify this nation's military alliance with Israel.

During the recent Democrat primaries, Obama and Clinton were called upon by interlocutors to state before the world  whether they would defend the State of Israel, one of the leading atomic-weaponed countries on earth. Jews are unaware of the revulsion that these compelled, virtual oaths for  the defense of Israel caused in the non-Jewish community. They do not dare to test the question whether American non-Jews individually are willing to sacrifice their children in the defense of Zionism, a belief that they do not have nor do they despise. Zionism simply is not a shared non-Jewish American belief for which Americans are willing to die, a fact that Jewish readers of this comment will simply not accept.  

November 11, 2008 5:01 PM

noga1 said:

"They do not dare to test the question whether American non-Jews individually are willing to sacrifice their children in the defense of Zionism.."

Nobody asked Americans to die in defence of Israel. But  Israelis were asked  to die in defence of American interests (Gulf War).

And your statement is not by any measure original or revolutionary or even shocking. Merely vulgar and bullying. History testifies to the reluctance of an American administration to save Jewish life when they could:

www.pbs.org/.../index.html

"The ultimate lesson of this book is that America must free itself from the shackles of the pro-Israel lobby. It is this message, more than any other, that makes Mearsheimer and Walt the heirs of a certain American current. In 1940, Joseph P. Kennedy went to Hollywood to address its mostly Jewish studio chiefs. As recounted in Neal Gabler's An Empire of Their Own: How the Jews Invented Hollywood, Kennedy told his lunch audience to "stop making anti-Nazi pictures or using the film medium to promote or show sympathy to the cause of the 'democracies' versus the 'dictators.'" He told the executives that the Jews were already being blamed for the war. His bullying was effective: the studio chiefs, uneasy about their ethnic heritage and therefore susceptible to the call of assimilation, were frightened into compliance by his message, until America entered the war a year later. Mearsheimer and Walt have set themselves a similar goal: to convince non-Jews that their Jewish fellow citizens do not have their best interests at heart, and, further, to harass or to rattle or to embarrass American Jews into silence. "

www.tnr.com/.../story.html

November 11, 2008 7:36 PM

sighthnd said:

One thing that is needed in order to create a Palestinian constituency for peace.  Simply put, any deal that is produced through palace diplomacy, no matter what concessions Israel makes, will not endure if it does not induce a large enough portion of Palestinian society to demand that its leaders to abide by it.  Palace diplomacy would only work if concessions to the government would provide enough of what the ordinary people want that such concessions would create a constituency for peace on their own.  The problem is that if the demands of the government, such as sovereignty over more land, are unrelated to those of the people, such as being able to deliver goods to viable markets, then such concessions would not create a peace constituency.

The first step would be to deal directly with the Palestinian people instead of only through their leaders.  Under such an approach, instead of dealing with officials in the Palestinian palace, we would deal with Palestinian business leaders and farming groups to directly find out what would make a difference to such groups.  

Related to this, Israel has to stop approaching its 4th generation conflict with Palestinian extremists using 3rd generation methods.  In 4th generation warfare, support on the street is the leading asset for one of the sides.  Yet Israel's strategy for dealing with Hamas and other extremists ignores what motivates ordinary Palestinians to support such groups.  Accordingly, concessions to ordinary people, would remove the motivation to seek representatives to stand up to those who are responsible for their difficulties.  An example of such an action would be the Israeli Army's protection of Palestinian olive farmers against Jewish settlers.

Two people who could push such an approach forward are John Nagl and David Kilcullen.  They have the understanding of how to find out what people on the other side want, as demonstrated by their experience in Iraq.  Further, their military experience would convince the Israelis that the concessions they advocate, and the people they advocate making them to, could produce long-term results that justify the risks.

November 11, 2008 9:39 PM

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