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	Peace Held 
	Hostage to Rotating US, Israeli Elections  
	By Nicola Nasser 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 15, 2010 
	  The statement by former U.S. President George W. Bush in his 497 – 
	page memoir of “Decision Points” that a secret peace deal was worked out 
	between the then-prime minister of Israel, Ehud Olmert, and Palestinian 
	President, Mahmoud Abbas, which “we devised a process to turn .. into a 
	public agreement” had not Olmert been ousted by a scandal to be replaced in 
	the following elections by Binyamin Netanyahu, who reneged on his 
	predecessor’s commitments, is a piece of history which highlights the fact 
	that peace making in the Arab – Israeli conflict and the peace process have 
	been hostages to the rotating U.S. and Israeli elections since the Madrid 
	peace conference of 1991.   Of course Bush had a different point of 
	view. In his Rose Garden speech on Israel – Palestine two-state solution on 
	June 24, 2002, he said that “for too long .. the citizens of the Middle 
	East” and “the hopes of many” have been held “hostage” to “the hatred of a 
	few (and) the forces of extremism and terror,” a misjudgement that led his 
	administration to strike a deal with the former Israeli premier, now 
	comatose, Ariel Sharon to engineer a “regime change” in the self-ruled 
	Palestinian Authority that resulted – according to Sharon’s terminology – in 
	the “removal” of Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader who made peace 
	possible in the first place for the first time in the past one hundred years 
	and for that deserved to be a Nobel Peace Laureate, to be replaced by the 
	incumbent Palestinian leadership of Abbas who, despite being almost 
	identical of both men’s image of a peace maker, is again victimized by the 
	same rotating U.S. and Israeli elections, much more than by what Bush termed 
	as “forces of extremism and terror.”   Ironically, Bush’s own 
	Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, some three years ago, had to admit 
	that there is no consensus among U.S. officials on a clear-cut definition of 
	“extremism and terror” when she said, referring to acts of Palestinian 
	anti-Israeli military occupation, that, “The prolonged experience of 
	deprivation and humiliation can radicalize even normal people.” Even 
	Olmert’s care-taker successor and the opposition leader now, Tzipporah 
	Malkah “Tzipi” Livni, became the first ever Israeli cabinet minister to 
	strike a line between an “enemy” and a “terrorist” when she told U.S. TV 
	show “Nightline” on March 28, 2006: “Somebody who is fighting against 
	Israeli soldiers is an enemy .. I believe that this is not under the 
	definition of terrorism.”   However, judging from the incumbent Barak 
	Obama administration’s adoption of Bush’s perspectives on the issue, as 
	vindicated by Obama’s similar stance vis-à-vis the Palestinian anti-Israeli 
	military resistance, in particular from the Gaza Strip, and the Israeli 
	captive corporal Gilad Shalit, the U.S. successive administrations - whether 
	Democrats or Republicans is irrelevant – are still insistent on shooting 
	their Middle East peace efforts in the feet by giving the priority in peace 
	making to fighting “extremism and terror” rather than to make peace as the 
	prerequisite to ruling out the root causes of both evils.   Once and 
	again, then again and again, U.S. and Israeli elections bring about new 
	players and governments that renege on the commitments, pledges and promises 
	of their predecessors vis – a –vis the Arab – Israeli conflict in general 
	and the Palestinian – Israeli peace process in particular, with an overall 
	effect of being much more harmful to peace making than any forces of 
	‘extremism.”   This overall effect is devastating. First and foremost 
	it creates the vicious circle of unfulfilled promises and hopes, which in 
	turn, secondly, undermines what little confidence might still be there to 
	believe in the same pledges of the newcomers, which their predecessors 
	reneged on. Third, the repeatedly aborted endeavors for a breakthrough 
	renders the “peace process” less an honest attempt on conflict resolution 
	and more a crisis management effort, which is the last thing the Palestinian 
	and Arab “peace partners” would like to put on their agenda. The ensuing 
	environment of these and other factors is, fourth, the ideal setting for 
	opening a new “window of opportunity” as soon as an old one is closed for 
	“the forces of extremism” to exploit the political vacuum thus created. By 
	default or by decision extremists in the Arab – Israeli conflict are U.S. 
	and Israeli made as well as they are a legitimate byproduct of a failed 
	process where the mission of peace making has been moving on from an old 
	administration to a new one, each with a new plan that hardly takes off 
	before another is offered by new players.   The outcome of the latest 
	U.S. mid-term elections was not an exception. Both Palestinian and Israeli 
	protagonists were on edge “waiting” for a new equation that would change the 
	balance of power between the incumbent administration and the Congress to 
	serve their respective goals and expectations, and a change did occur that 
	will curtail the ability of President Obama to follow up on his pledges to 
	deliver on his promises of peace making. The Palestinian disappointment is 
	on the verge of despair to consider alternatives to the U.S. sponsorship of 
	peace making, let alone continuing a peace process that has been 
	counterproductive all along. The Israeli jubilation is on the verge of 
	declaring an Israeli victory in a non-Israeli U.S. Congress over a U.S 
	president who never even thought of compromising the U.S. – Israeli 
	strategic alliance or the decades old commitment of successive 
	administrations to the security of Israel, but only pondered a non-binding 
	plan to bring the protagonists together to decide for themselves through 
	strictly bilateral direct negotiations that rule beforehand any external 
	intervention.   Obama’s plan, to all practical reasons, is thus 
	aborted in the bud and its file is about to be archived on top of the pile 
	of the older files of the earlier plans of presidents Reagan, Bush senior, 
	Clinton and Bush junior, which were swept away to the dustbin of history by 
	the rotating U.S. or Israeli elections, while holding the Palestinian 
	negotiator hostage to a process that nothing indicates it will ever end, 
	waiting for the U.S. Godot.   Holding the Palestinian negotiator 
	hostage to this open-ended U.S.-sponsored process is now and has been always 
	the only game in town for the Israelis, the only beneficiaries of the ever 
	explosive status quo of the Arab – Israeli conflict, who have been 
	exploiting the peace process as a playground to win more time to create more 
	facts on the ground that will sooner or later render the temporary status 
	quo created by their military occupation of 1967 into a permanent regional 
	arrangement.   Netanyahu’s anti-Oslo campaign was interpreted to 
	create the political environment that contributed to the assassination of 
	Yitzhaq Rabin on November 4, 1995, two years after signing the Oslo 
	agreement (Declaration of Principles) with Arafat - who was suspiciously 
	poisoned to death on November 11, 2004 - and Netanyahu’s election to the 
	premiership immediately thereafter was interpreted as an anti-peace coup 
	d’etat. When the 1999 elections brought back to power the so-called “peace 
	camp” led by Labor, PM Ehud Barak did not bring the “peace process” back to 
	Rabin track, but reneged on the signed agreements, refused to implement the 
	imminent and final withdrawal from the West Bank and succeeded, with U.S. 
	help, in dragging the Palestinian side to jump to the intractable final 
	status issues. The following elections followed the collapse of the Camp 
	David trilateral summit and the ensuing violence, which led the new premier, 
	Ariel Sharon, to declare the death of Oslo accord. Sharon succeeded in 
	recruiting the support of George W. Bush to put the change of the 
	Palestinian Authority (PA) regime of Arafat as the only item on the agenda 
	of the “peace process” as a precondition to its resumption and convinced 
	Bush to delay the official launch of the “Road Map” until after the Israeli 
	elections. All that done already, and a new PA regime of their liking is 
	already in place, but the Map has yet to be implemented. Two years ago, 
	Obama had a plan to negotiate how to renegotiate the Road Map, but the 
	latest Israeli elections brought to power Netanyahu who seems determined to 
	negotiate only on how to implement his own unilateral plans.   No 
	surprise then Palestinian negotiators are almost concluding that enough is 
	enough, that they are left with no options but to get rid of this rotating 
	electoral vicious circle and let come whatever, it would not be worse than 
	the current status of being captives to a waiting game for a Godot that will 
	never come.   * Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in 
	Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.   
	  
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