Friday, November 23, 2007

Is The New Best Friend Of The US In The Middle East Now The Palestinian Arabs?

Could be.

While Ehud Barak is saying there is a 'High chance' summit will succeed, Caroline Glick paints a much darker picture based on those involved in the negotiations and on a leaked copy of a draft of the joint statement.

Maybe someone should ask Barak--who 7 years ago described Israel's retreat as "a happy day"--just how he defines success.

Caroline Glick:
The mood is dark in the IDF's General Staff ahead of next week's "peace" conference in Annapolis. As one senior officer directly involved in the negotiations with the Palestinians and the Americans said, "As bad as it might look from the outside, the truth is 10 times worse. This is a nightmare. The Americans have never been so hostile."

On Thursday a draft of the joint statement that Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are discussing ahead of the conference was leaked to the media. A reading of the document bears out the IDF's concerns.

The draft document shows that the Palestinians and the Israelis differ not only on every issue, but differ on the purpose of the document. It also shows that the US firmly backs the Palestinians against Israel.

As the draft document makes clear, Israel is trying to avoid committing itself to anything at Annapolis. For their part, the Palestinians are trying to force Israel's hand by tying it to diplomatic formulas that presuppose an Israeli withdrawal to the 1949 armistice lines and an Israeli acceptance of the so-called "right of return" or free immigration of foreign Arabs to Israel.

The Palestinians are also trying to take away Israel's right to determine for itself whether to trust the Palestinians and continue making diplomatic and security concessions or not by making it the responsibility of outside parties to decide the pace of the concessions and whether or not the Palestinians should be trusted.

As the leaked draft document shows, the Americans have sided with the Palestinians against Israel. Specifically, the Americans have taken for themselves the sole right to judge whether or not the Palestinians and the Israelis are abiding by their commitments and whether and at what pace the negotiations will proceed.
Read the whole thing.

If Annapolis does fail--as we can only hope it will--to the degree that it would be an enduring legacy of failure of the President Bush Administration, it will be a failure well earned.

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1 comment:

Jack Steiner said...

Barak's judgement concerns me. The man has a funny idea of success.