Is
Middle East Peace a Mirage?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Who
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With the truce
in the week-long Gaza war, Barack Obama is being prompted by right
and left to re-engage and renew U.S. efforts to solve the core question
of Middle East peace.
Before he gets
reinvolved in peacemaking, our once-burned president should ask
himself some hard questions.
Is real peace
between Palestinians and Israelis even possible?
Is there any
treaty that could be agreed to, or imposed, that would be acceptable
to Israel and the Palestinian Authority on the West Bank, let alone
to Hamas, which has emerged from its defiance of one of the most
intensive bombardments of modern time with new prestige?
What are the
obvious impediments to such a treaty?
First, Bibi
Netanyahu, who has presided over the expansion of Israel settlements
and joined Avigdor Lieberman, a supporter of ethnic cleansing of
Israeli Arabs, in a coalition of the Israeli hard right.
Would Bibi
agree to a treaty that required removal of scores of thousands of
Israeli settlers from Judea and Samaria, when he opposed Ariel Sharon's
withdrawal of a few thousand settlers from Gaza?
Would Bibi
agree to Jerusalem becoming the capital of Palestine as well as
Israel, a non-negotiable demand of Arab nations?
Could a Palestinian
Authority that gives up all rights to Jerusalem survive?
A second roadblock
is the correlation of forces in Washington.
Should Obama
begin to pressure Israel to remove settlers from the West Bank and
accept a Palestinian capital in Jerusalem, he would ignite a firestorm
among evangelical Christians, the Israeli Lobby, the neocons and
a Congress that, not long ago, gave Bibi 29 standing ovations after
he dressed-down Barack Obama right in the Oval Office.
Obama has acquired
much political capital with his election victory, but not that much.
In a Bibi-Barack
face-off over settlements and Jerusalem, with whom would ex-Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton and other Democrats looking to 2016 stand?
As for the Republicans, we already know. Their policy on Israel:
"No daylight between us," and, "We've got your back."
A third impediment
is the altered environment between Israel and a newly radicalized
Middle East.
Israel now
looks north to a Lebanon where Hezbollah possesses more and better
rockets than the metal-shop jobs Hamas fired off. Beyond lies a
powerful Turkey whose prime minister just declared Israel a "terrorist"
state.
To the northeast
lies Syria, where the 40-year truce on the Golan is unlikely to
last after Bashar al-Assad falls and is replaced by a Sunni regime
rooted in the Muslim Brotherhood, or becomes a failed state saturated
with jihadists and loose chemical weapons.
To the east
lies Jordan, wracked by riots, a monarchy that looks to be a candidate
for an Arab Spring uprising.
To the south
and west are Hamas, a Sinai that is a no man's land, and an Egypt
dominated by the Brotherhood, millions of whose people would like
to see the Israeli peace treaty trashed.
Israel is as
isolated as she has been in a region that is more hostile to her
presence than perhaps at any time since the war of '48.
The time of
Yitzhak Rabin, when Israel had treaties with Egypt and Jordan and
had entered into the Oslo Accords with Yasser Arafat's PLO, seems
ancient history. Looking back, with the Rabin assassination and
Netanyahu accession, the window that appeared to be open may have
closed for good.
Israelis appear
now to have entrusted their future to a U.S.-guaranteed military
superiority – F-16s, smart bombs and an Iron Dome missile defense
– rather than peace talks and parchment.
Which is their
call. But what of us? What do we have to show for decades of involvement
in the Middle East?
Despite our
"liberation" of Kuwait, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya at a cost of
thousands of lives and trillions of dollars, despite plunging hundreds
of billions into foreign aid, America's influence has never been
lower.
Hillary Clinton,
who cut off her Asian tour to fly to Israel and Egypt, was a bystander
in brokering the truce. She is not even allowed to talk to Hamas.
For we have designated Hamas a terrorist organization.
Astonishing.
What was Joe Stalin when Harry Truman talked with him at Potsdam?
What was Nikita Khrushchev when Ike invited the "Butcher of Budapest"
to Camp David? What was Chairman Mao when Richard Nixon toasted
him in Beijing in 1972?
We tie our
own hands and wonder why we cannot succeed.
Today,
as Obama is being pushed toward another futile round of peacemaking
in the Mideast, prodded to intervene in the ethnic-civil-sectarian
war in Syria and goaded to draw a "red line" for war on Iran, he
should ask himself:
How would America's
vital interests be imperiled by staying out of this particular quarrel,
conflict or war? Why are all of these crises somehow ours to resolve?
What are the odds that we can resolve them?
We are out
of Iraq, and leaving Afghanistan by 2014. Should we go back in,
or as Obama pledged, do our "nation-building" here at home?
November
23, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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