Send the Baker commission to Gaza.Democrats made huge gains this election, largely because voters rejected the administration's policy in Iraq. But even before the electorate took its frustration over the war out on the president's party, Congress recognized the need for a new direction. In March, House Republicans--led by Rep. Frank Wolf Frank Rudolph Wolf, born January 30 1939, American politician, has been a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives since 1981. He represents Northern Virginia's 10th congressional district. He is the most senior of Virginia's eleven Congressmen. (R-Va.) and supported by such senior GOP figures as Sen. John Warner (R-Va.)--asked James Baker and Lee Hamilton to form the Iraq Study Group The Iraq Study group (ISG), also known as the Baker-Hamilton Commission,[1] was a ten-person bipartisan panel appointed on March 15, 2006, by the United States Congress, that was charged with assessing the situation in Iraq and the US-led Iraq War and making . The group, which is expected to offer policy recommendations within the next few weeks, was widely understood to offer the White House an opportunity to chart a new course in Iraq without having to admit its previous policies were wrong. So far, so good. But the much-neglected Israeli-Arab conflict--in particular the Israel- Palestine conflict--is as central to Middle East stability as the Iraq war Iraq War: see under Persian Gulf Wars. Iraq War or Second Persian Gulf War Brief conflict in 2003 between Iraq and a combined force of troops largely from the U.S. and Great Britain; and a subsequent U.S. is. The United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. can't truly address the latter without taking on the former too. A regional policy make-over that fails to make these connections is unlikely to create the tipping point The point in time in which a technology, procedure, service or philosophy has reached critical mass and becomes mainstream. See network effect. See also tip and ring. that will move the Middle East from extremism towards moderation. Given the President's lackluster performance on this front over the last six years, some external impetus is clearly needed. The new Democratic congressional leadership has a responsibility to provide that impetus. They also have a handy tool with which to do so--if only they will use it. Congress doesn't have the power to legislate a change of opinion or behavior on the part of the President and his foreign policy team. Simply urging the President to change his strategy won't work; in fact, it may just encourage him to dig in to cover by digging; as, to dig in manure s>. To entrench oneself so as to give stronger resistance; - used of warfare or negotiating situations. See also: Dig Dig deeper. So legislators should try another tactic, one that stands a far better chance of forcing the White House to get it fight: Give the job to Baker and Hamilton. The new Congress should mandate the Study Group to expand its scope of inquiry and provide recommendations for reviving the Middle East peace process--the logical next step in the painful rehabilitation of our policy for the region. Of course, both policy and politics have to be considered here. And politically, this proposal sounds counter-intuitive: if anything, the new Democratic Congress will be tempted to run to the President's right on the Israeli-Arab conflict, as Rep. Tom Lantos Thomas Peter "Tom" Lantos, Ph.D (born February 1 1928, Budapest, Hungary as Lantos Tamás Péter) has been a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives since 1981, representing California's 12th congressional district, located in the southwest part of San (D-Calif.), the ranking member In United States politics, the ranking member or ranking minority member is a member of a congressional committee from the minority party, frequently the member with the highest seniority. on the House International Relations international relations, study of the relations among states and other political and economic units in the international system. Particular areas of study within the field of international relations include diplomacy and diplomatic history, international law, Committee, did this summer when he pledged to block the aid the president had promised Lebanon until Beirut agreed to allow international troops to patrol the Syrian border. Even when Democrats belatedly discovered their voice on Iraq this election, most conspicuously failed to connect the war to a broader problem: our misguided regional policy that is urgently in need of reform. Democrats will need to be convinced that expanding the Baker-Hamilton Commission mandate to include Israel-Palestine would not only serve America's national-security interests and benefit our ally, Israel, but also that such a move wouldn't be a political exercise in self-flagellation. But let's start by considering the American interest. It seems blindingly obvious to observe that the unresolved, permanently visible Israeli-Palestinian conflict
For Sunni Al-Qaedists and Shiite Ahmedinajists alike, the Palestinian cause is a central rallying cry Noun 1. rallying cry - a slogan used to rally support for a cause; "a cry to arms"; "our watchword will be `democracy'" war cry, watchword, battle cry, cry catchword, motto, shibboleth, slogan - a favorite saying of a sect or political group 2. . Although extremists exploit the issue, it resonates far beyond the madrassa or the militia training camp. Of course, solving this conflict is not a panacea; not all hatred would instantly evaporate. But progress on the Israel-Palestine issue could be decisive in stabilizing the Middle East. A re-energized political effort on the Israeli-Palestinian and broader Arab-Israeli front would also dramatically wrong-foot America's adversaries in the region. Such a move would answer the calls of America's moderate Arab allies, and represent a first step towards repairing our damaged regional credibility. Indeed, it's hard to see how the alliances necessary to attempt progress on Iraq and Iran can even be constructed without such re-engagement and investment of political capital. Unfortunately, however, the administration has wandered so far off course that nothing short of a policy re-boot will work. On one Mideast journey during the Lebanon crisis this summer, Secretary Rice was forced to return to Washington in embarrassing dejection--she was unwelcome in any regional capital outside Jerusalem. Her return visit last month was derided in the Israeli and Arab press alike as promising little, and achieving even less. Envoys have been dispatched sporadically (General Anthony Zinni Anthony Charles Zinni (born September 17, 1943) is a retired general in the United States Marine Corps and a former Commander in Chief of U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM). In 2002, he was selected to be a special envoy for the United States to Israel and the Palestinian Authority. , Ambassador John Wolf) but to little effect. Attempts to advance economic development have failed because they haven't been matched with a political framework. The core issues of the conflict--land, borders, Jerusalem, security co-operation--were abandoned as too difficult, and have now been exacerbated on the ground. The administration's repeated failure to take any initiative--when Palestinian Authority Palestinian Authority (PA) or Palestinian National Authority, interim self-government body responsible for areas of the West Bank and Gaza Strip under Palestinian control. President Mahmoud Abbas Mahmoud Abbas (Arabic: محمود عباس) (born March 26, 1935), also known by the kunya Abu Mazen replaced Yassir Ararat, when the Saudis introduced their peace plan, when Ehud Olmert was elected on a platform of territorial withdrawal, when the Syrians called for a return to peace talks--ill-served both American and Israeli interests. Hence, the need for a commission. The implications of such a commission for Israel will weigh heavily on Democrats, for legitimate reasons of substance and of domestic politics. It is these considerations that create the temptation to move rightwards of the administration on this issue. However, succumbing to that temptation could be both bad policy and bad politics. Recently, there has been a tendency to conflate con·flate tr.v. con·flat·ed, con·flat·ing, con·flates 1. To bring together; meld or fuse: "The problems [with the biopic] include . . the neoconservative ne·o·con·ser·va·tism also ne·o-con·ser·va·tism n. An intellectual and political movement in favor of political, economic, and social conservatism that arose in opposition to the perceived liberalism of the 1960s: agenda with the Israeli interest. This is both wrongheaded and disastrous for Israel's predicament. There is a narrative that links America and Israel's common interests that is not of neo-conservative design. The Democratic Congress needs to discover that narrative. During the election campaign, some Democrats with Jewish constituencies did make the connection, by noting that the Iraq war strengthens jihadists and emboldens Iran. Now, there's a second sentence that needs to be articulated: American disengagement disengagement /dis·en·gage·ment/ (dis?en-gaj´ment) emergence of the fetus from the vaginal canal. dis·en·gage·ment n. from the peace process and from its active mediating role has also been bad for Israel. To guarantee its future as a secure Jewish and democratic state, Israel needs agreed and recognized borders. The vast majority of Israelis understand this, and the precedent was set in evacuating Gaza. Israel is now groping grope v. groped, grop·ing, gropes v.intr. 1. To reach about uncertainly; feel one's way: groped for the telephone. 2. for a formula to part ways with the West Bank (minus the agreed mutual modifications to 1967 line), and Palestinian areas of East Jerusalem East Jerusalem refers to the part of Jerusalem captured by Jordan in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, and subsequently by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War. It includes Jerusalem's Old City and some of the holiest sites of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, such as the Temple Mount, Western . But rather than help smooth this difficult transition, the U.S. merely appears uninterested. For Democratic legislators to make this argument, and to encourage a policy re-think via a Baker-Hamilton study group, the politics will also have to add up. That calculation isn't so simple. In recent years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time GOP has made a bold play to peel off Jewish supporters and donors, by citing President Bush's strong support for Israel. Democrats may worry that establishing a commission to assess those policies might advance this GOP effort. No doubt it will, on the margins. But anecdotal and polling evidence suggest that the silent majority of the Jewish community is hungry for a progressive move to renew peace efforts and hope: Democrats would likely be surprised at just how favorably much of their Jewish base would respond to a new direction. This path also offers the chance to prevent a looming rift between the Democratic Jewish base, and the progressive foreign policy community. A pro-peace process Democratic voice that is at the same time firmly pro-Israel (remember President Clinton?) could help prevent a schism between these two key constituencies. So far, however, Democrats have allowed Republicans to "out-pro-Israel" them, by failing to challenge a neocon ne·o·con n. Informal A neoconservative: "The neocons and hard-liners have long felt that no Soviet leader could be trusted" New York Times. orthodoxy that ultimately damages Israel and the U.S. A large part of the pro-Israel community appears ready for this message. Some may object to James Baker co-chairing the effort--his tough stand towards Israel's settlement policy didn't earn him many fans. But he is the Republican inheritance of the bi-partisan study group, has credibility in the region, and did, after all, bring the then-Likud-Shamir Israeli government to the Madrid Peace Conference. So, a re-mandated Baker-Hamilton Study group on the Middle East peace process could offer the administration a face-saving way to change course. Just as the Iraq Study Group was given the mandate to talk to anyone and everyone it chose, so, too, should the Baker-Hamilton commission have the freedom to gather information from all experts and interested parties--including those that the White House currently deems to be beyond the conversational pale. Once the commission has gathered all the facts, it would provide new policy options to the administration, just as it will do on Iraq. While it's impossible to say what such a commission would recommend, we know enough to hazard a pretty good guess. As secretary of state, Baker believed in shuttle diplomacy, and recently said the administration should talk to Syria. Lee Hamilton signed a recent call by the International Crisis Group for urgent action towards a comprehensive settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict. We can expect, then, that the commission will engage in a fundamental reassessment of the administration's existing policy. Is the Middle East Roadmap still salvageable, or is a new framework necessary? Should the Quartet mechanism (the U.S., EU, the UN Secretary-General's representative, and Russia) be further empowered to monitor and cajole (language) CAJOLE - (Chris And John's Own LanguagE) A dataflow language developed by Chris Hankin <clh@doc.ic.ac.uk> and John Sharp at Westfield College. ["The Data Flow Programming Language CAJOLE: An Informal Introduction", C.L. the parties? Would Palestinians, led by Hamas or Fatah or a combination of the two, be better tested by setting security rather than declarative de·clar·a·tive adj. 1. Serving to declare or state. 2. Of, relating to, or being an element or construction used to make a statement: a declarative sentence. n. targets? Is there a need to publicly issue clear parameters for an endgame Endgame blind and chair-bound, Hamm learns that nearly everybody has died; his own parents are dying in separate trash cans. [Anglo-Fr. Drama: Beckett Endgame in Weiss, 143] See : Death peace arrangement, to which the various parties would be expected to respond? The commission would address all these questions. A full U.S. re-engagement would likely need to include, in parallel, the political issues of land, borders, demilitarization de·mil·i·ta·rize tr.v. de·mil·i·ta·rized, de·mil·i·ta·riz·ing, de·mil·i·ta·riz·es 1. To eliminate the military character of. 2. and settlements, along with immediate on-the-ground needs (especially regarding the Palestinians) of humanitarian assistance, economic rehabilitation and a mutually respected ceasefire. The allied Arab states could be asked to play an active supporting role--including early gestures of public diplomacy towards Israel, providing the Israeli government with both vital assurances and an important marketing tool. An envoy to lead the bold initiative would almost certainly be needed, and former World Bank chair James Wolfensohn (who briefly played this role during disengagement) might be recalled with a new mandate. Democrats are already looking ahead to 2009, when they may return to the White House. If they do, they're going to need a Middle East policy that is sounder than President Bush's, and can garner enough political support to succeed. That won't be easy. But handing the Middle East brief to a bipartisan commission is perhaps the least-risky way to begin that effort. Moreover, the region cannot wait until 2009. Israel's wounded Olmert government needs help to navigate its way back to a peace process, without which it has little reason to be in office. And, especially after Hizbollah's success this summer, the allied Arab states need to prove to their people that a moderate, U.S.-friendly approach can deliver results on the Palestinian issue. Syria needs a practical alternative to its alliance with Iran, and its unhelpful meddling med·dle intr.v. med·dled, med·dling, med·dles 1. To intrude into other people's affairs or business; interfere. See Synonyms at interfere. 2. To handle something idly or ignorantly; tamper. in Lebanon, Palestine, and Iraq. And the Palestinians themselves desperately need a clear signal that non-violent negotiations can secure something more than a endless armed struggle, a reverse is the lesson of recent years. We all need to understand that political Islamists are not cut from the same cloth. By lumping them together, we pursue policies that strengthen the Al-Qaedists and other anti-democratic forces. Of course, there is no guarantee that President Bush would follow such a study group's advice. But Congress would have done its duty and tried; and Americans, the region and the world would take note. And today, that too is something. Daniel Levy is a senior Fellow at the New America Foundation The New America Foundation is a non-profit public policy institute and think tank located in Washington, D.C. that promotes innovative political solutions transcending conventional party lines -- what they call radical centrist politics. and The Century Foundation and directs their respective Middle East and Peace initiatives. Levy formerly worked as an adviser in the Israeli Prime Minister's Office The Prime Minister's Office is a small department which provides advice to a Prime Minister in some countries:
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva. Initiative detailed peace plan. |
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