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      Kerry's Coup from Mediator to Antagonist
	  
  By Nicola Nasser 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 23, 2013 
	     U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was scheduled to start his 
	  ninth trip of shuttle diplomacy between Palestinian and Israeli leaders on 
	  this December 11. However, the bridging “security arrangements,” which he 
	  proposed less than a week earlier on his last trip, have backfired and are 
	  now snowballing into a major crisis with Palestinian negotiators who view 
	  Kerry’s “ideas” as a coup turning the US top diplomat from a mediator into 
	  an antagonist.   Kerry’s “ideas” had provoked a “real crisis” and 
	  “will drive Kerry's efforts to an impasse and to total failure,” the 
	  secretary general of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation 
	  Organization (PLO), Yasser Abed Rabbo, said on this December 9.   
	  Resumption of the peace talks and U.S. involvement in the negotiations 
	  with Israel were both on record Palestinian demands. Disappointed by the 
	  deadlocked negotiations and more by the way Kerry decided finally to get 
	  his country involved, the Palestinian presidency expectedly stands now to 
	  regret both demands.   Kerry’s shuttle diplomacy during his current 
	  trip seems more aimed at controlling the damage his “ideas - proposal” 
	  caused than at facilitating the deadlocked Palestinian – Israeli bilateral 
	  talks.   On this December 6, Kerry said that (160) American security 
	  specialists and diplomats, headed by General John Allen, the former 
	  commander of the U.S. forces in Afghanistan, had drafted the “proposal,” 
	  believing “that we can contribute ideas that could help both Israelis and 
	  Palestinians get to an agreement.”   According to leaks published by 
	  mainstream Israeli media, including Israeli Channel 10 news, Haaretz, 
	  Maariv, Yedioth Ahronoth and DEBKAfile, as well as by the official 
	  Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam, the U.S. “security arrangements” propose:   
	  * Demilitarization of the future State of Palestine.   * U.S. 
	  monitoring of its demilitarization.   * To put the border crossings 
	  into Jordan under joint Israeli-Palestinian control.   * Maintaining 
	  an Israeli military presence deployed along the western side of Jordan 
	  River after the establishment of a Palestinian state.   * Installing 
	  Israeli early warning stations on the eastward slopes of the West Bank 
	  highlands.   * Postponement of arrangements for the final status of 
	  Gaza Strip, i.e. severing the strip from the status planned by Kerry’s 
	  proposal for the West Bank.   * All of the foregoing are on the 
	  background of the U.S. recognition of an understanding that the large 
	  Israeli illegal colonial settlements on the West Bank would be annexed to 
	  Israel, according to the letter sent by former U.S. President George W. 
	  Bush to the comatose former Israeli premier Ariel Sharon in April 2004, to 
	  which the incumbent administration of President Barak Obama is still 
	  committed.   Kerry and his administration have obviously coordinated 
	  a political coup by the adoption of the Israeli preconditions for 
	  recognizing a Palestinian state almost to the letter, turning the 
	  Palestinian priorities upside down and changing the terms of reference for 
	  the Palestinian – Israeli negotiations, which Kerry succeeded to resume 
	  and sponsor late last July.   When he announced the resumption of 
	  talks on last July 29, Kerry declared that his goal would be to help the 
	  Israelis and Palestinians to reach a “final status agreement’” within nine 
	  months.   Now, President Barak Obama, speaking at Brookings 
	  Institution’s Saban Forum in Washington last Saturday, says there would 
	  have to be a “transition process” and that the Palestinians wouldn’t get 
	  “everything they want on day one” under an accord, which initially may 
	  exclude Gaza, and let the “contiguous Palestinian state,” which he had 
	  previously promised, wait. The aim of the negotiations now is to reach a 
	  “framework that would not address every single detail,” he added.   
	  And now Kerry, on the same occasion, was speaking about a “basic 
	  framework” and establishing “guidelines” for “subsequent negotiations” for 
	  a “full-on peace treaty,” i.e., in his game of words, another “road map.” 
	    Kerry moreover hinted that the negotiations might have to extend 
	  beyond the agreed upon nine months, thus, from a Palestinian perspective, 
	  planning to buy Israel more time to create more colonial facts on the 
	  occupied Palestinian ground.   Kerry’s “ideas” alienated the 
	  Palestinian “peace camp” and negotiators led by Fatah, which rules the 
	  Palestinian Authority (PA) and leads the PLO, who have put “all their eggs 
	  in the U.S. basket” for the past two decades, let alone all the other PLO 
	  member factions who are against the resumption of the negotiations with 
	  Israel for pragmatic reasons, but first of all because they did not trust 
	  the U.S. mediator; Kerry has just vindicated their worst fears. Non-member 
	  organizations like Hamas and al-Jihad oppose the negotiations as a matter 
	  of principle.   On December 8, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, 
	  according to The Times of Israel three days later, met with the American 
	  consul general in Jerusalem, Michael Ratney, and formally rejected the 
	  proposal, saying that the Palestinian position was “unequivocal”: no 
	  Israeli presence, though the Palestinians would tolerate a third-party 
	  military presence.   On the same day on the occasion of the first 
	  1987 Palestinian Intifada against the 1967 Israeli military occupation of 
	  the Palestinian territories, the PLO Executive Committee in a statement 
	  said the Palestinian people will not accept Kerry’s proposed plan, which 
	  the committee’s secretary general Abed Rabbo described as “extremely 
	  vague” and “open-ended.”   On the same day in Qatar, the PLO chief 
	  negotiator Saeb Erakat, commenting on Kerry’s proposals, said that the 
	  Palestinian leadership “perhaps” committed a “strategic mistake” by 
	  agreeing to the resumption of negotiations with Israel instead of seeking 
	  first the membership of international organizations to build on the UN 
	  General Assembly’s recognition last year of Palestine as a non-member 
	  state.   The former second in command in Erakat’s negotiating team, 
	  Mohammad Shtayyeh who resigned his mission recently because there was no 
	  “serious Israeli partner,” called for replacing the U.S. sponsorship of 
	  the negotiations by an international one, on the lines of the Geneva 
	  conferences for Iran and Syria, because the U.S. sponsorship is 
	  “unbalanced.”   Former negotiator Hassan Asfour wrote that kerry’s 
	  plan, which he described as a “conspiracy,” would “liquidate the Palestine 
	  Question and end any hope for a Palestinian state,” adding that its 
	  rejection is a “necessity and national duty” because it “violates the red 
	  national lines.”   Member of the PLO executive committee and former 
	  Palestinian chief negotiator, Ahmad Qurei’, said Kerry’s plan replaces the 
	  land for peace formula by a security for peace one as the basis for 
	  Palestinian – Israeli talks.   Abed Rabbo said last week in Ramallah 
	  that if the U.S. accepts that final borders are set according to what 
	  Israel determines are its security needs “all hell with break loose.”   
	  Kerry who on his last eighth trip warned Israelis of a Palestinian third 
	  Intifada seems himself laying the ground for one. His “ideas” clash head 
	  to head with the Palestinian repeated and plain rejection of long or short 
	  term interim or transitional arrangements based only on Israel’s security. 
	    He seems obsessed with Israel’s security as “the top priority” for 
	  Washington, both in nuclear talks with Iran and peace talks with the 
	  Palestinians. In his press availability at Ben Gurion International 
	  Airport on December 6 he used the word “security” and “secure” twenty 
	  times in relation with Israel, but no words at all about the Israeli 
	  “occupation” and “settlements.”   U.S. commitment to Israel’s 
	  security is “ironclad,” “spans decades,” “permanent,” “paramount” and a 
	  “central issue” in the work of the United States for both final agreements 
	  with Iran and Palestinians, he said. President Obama last Saturday said 
	  that this commitment is “sacrosanct.”   George Friedman of Stratfor 
	  on December 3 reported that “Israel's current strategic position is 
	  excellent” and “faces no existential threats.” About “the possibility that 
	  Iran will develop a nuclear weapon,” Friedman wrote: “One of the reasons 
	  Israel has not attempted an air strike, and one of the reasons the United 
	  States has refused to consider it, is that Iran's prospects for developing 
	  a nuclear weapon are still remote.”   Despite objections to Kerry’s 
	  “security arrangements” by the Israeli defense and foreign cabinet 
	  ministers, Moshe Ya’alon and Avigdor Lieberman, the chief Israeli 
	  negotiator and justice minister Tzipi Livni admitted that the proposed 
	  American security framework addresses a large part of Israel’s security 
	  needs.   Obsession with “Israel’s security” could not be interpreted 
	  as simply a naïve commitment out of good faith by an old hand veteran of 
	  foreign policy like Kerry.   More likely Kerry is dictating to and 
	  pressuring the Palestinian presidency with the only option “to take” his 
	  proposal or “leave it,” to be doomed either way, by its own people or by 
	  the U.S.-led donors to the PA. With friends like Kerry, Palestinian Abbas 
	  for sure needs no enemies.   Ironically, Kerry’s “ideas” create a 
	  solid political ground for a Palestinian consensus that would be an 
	  objective basis for ending the Palestinian divide and reviving the 
	  national unity between the PLO in the West Bank and Hamas in the Gaza 
	  Strip as a prerequisite to be able to stand up to Kerry’s “coup.”   
	  Such a development however remains hostage to a decision by President 
	  Abbas who is still swimming against the national tide because he has made 
	  peace making through negotiations only the goal of his life and political 
	  career.   * Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in 
	  Birzeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
	  nassernicola@ymail.com   
       
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