Unofficial Mideast Peace Plans Get Global Backing
by
Jim Lobe
by Jim Lobe
If
the success of the unofficial Israeli-Palestinian peace plan launched
amid great fanfare in Geneva on Monday were dependent on international
goodwill, it could be implemented tomorrow.
With
three Nobel Peace Prize laureates including former US president
Jimmy Carter in attendance, as well as messages of support
sent from leaders from around the world, including a video hookup
with former South African president Nelson Mandela, the so-called
"Geneva Initiative" was signed by former ministers Yossi
Beilin and Yasser Abed Rabbo before more than 300 Israelis and Palestinians.
But
the question that remains to be answered was whether the Initiative,
as well as a parallel citizen's petition, known as the "People's
Voice" project, initiated by former Israeli intelligence chief
Ami Ayalon and a prominent Palestinian leader, Sari Nusseibeh, can
generate sufficient international and domestic pressure to achieve
a breakthrough for both sides.
"We
are saying to the world: 'Don't believe those who tell you that
our conflict is unsolvable'," urged Beilin, who served as justice
minister under the Labor-led Israeli governments of the 1990s. "Don't
try to help us manage the conflict. Help us to end it."
"We
cannot wait while the future of our two nations slides deeper into
catastrophe," warned Rabbo, former information minister of
the Palestinian Authority (PA) and a longtime collaborator of its
president, Yasser Arafat.
The
detailed, 50-page initiative, based largely on official peace talks
held in Taba, Egypt just before the Labor Party was voted out of
office in January 2001, was completed in October and has been circulating
since, drawing support from prominent global figures, including
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, and US Secretary of State Colin Powell.
The
People's Voice, which has been signed by some 200,000 Israelis and
Palestinians, has also drawn favorable comment from US Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, the principal proponent of the US war
in Iraq and widely considered the highest-ranking "neo-conservative"
hawk in the administration of President George W. Bush.
Nonetheless,
Washington maintained a discreet silence on the two plans Monday,
apparently fearful that anything it said could upset the current
diplomatic mission to Israel the first in several months
aimed at getting Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and
his new Palestinian counterpart, Ahmed Qurei, to resume peace talks.
The
Initiative calls for the creation of a Palestinian state roughly
defined by the Green Line that marked Israel's borders before the
Jewish state conquered East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip in the 1967 war.
Jewish
settlements close to the border would be incorporated into Israel
in exchange for comparable territory in Israel being turned over
to the Palestinians. Others would be abandoned or absorbed by Palestine.
Palestinian
refugees would have the right to return to the new Palestine or
opt to be resettled with compensation and rehabilitation assistance
in third countries. A few would be permitted to return to their
homes in Israel, subject to Israel's agreement. The Palestinian
state would also be demilitarized.
As
to the contentious issue of Jerusalem, Arab neighborhoods of East
Jerusalem would become the capital of Palestine; each side would
govern its holy sites with guarantees of access by members of all
religious faiths; while a US-led multinational force would help
provide security and ensure the accord's implementation.
A
public-opinion survey sponsored and released last week by the Texas-based
James Baker III Institute and Brussels-based International Crisis
Group (ICG) found that such a plan has majority support among both
Palestinians and Israelis.
In
face-to-face interviews, 53.3 percent of Israelis said they would
support such a proposal, while 43.9 percent said they opposed it.
Among Palestinians, the proportion was 55.6 percent for and 38.5
percent against.
While
Arafat and his ruling Fatah Party in the PA have not taken a formal
position on the plan, he reportedly encouraged Rabbo in his work
and several other top Fatah officials, including Arafat's top security
official, to attend the Geneva signing.
Sharon,
on the other hand, strongly denounced the plan when it became public,
going so far as to suggest that it constituted treason. But after
Powell and Wolfowitz indicated they support such initiatives, the
prime minister muted his remarks, leaving it to his right-wing ministers
to lead the charge against it.
In
this, they have been supported by US neo-conservatives apart
from Wolfowitz who has long voiced more sympathy for the plight
of Palestinians than his ideological comrades and leaders
of the Christian Right, who have attacked the Initiative.
New
York Times columnist William Safire wrote last week that Sharon
had nothing to worry about since he "is backed up by a US president
who has shown he understands the value of patience and courage in
the face of terror."
Washington
Post columnist Charles Krauthammer, who often acts as a mouthpiece
for hard-line pro-Likud officials in the administration, said the
Initiative amounts to a "suicide note (for Israel) by
a private citizen on behalf of a country that has utterly rejected
him politically."
He
added that Powell's letter of encouragement to Beilin and Rabbo
was a "disgrace."
Still,
both plans have support from some surprising US sources, including
Wolfowitz and Powell.
Republican
Senator John McCain, normally close to the neo-conservatives on
foreign-policy issues, has spoken favorably of them, as has California
Democrat, Sen. Diane Feinstein, one of the most prominent Jewish
members of Congress, and Republican Sen. Lincoln Chafee, a Republican
moderate who recently complained that the administration's "disengagement"
in peace talks was hurting its credibility in Iraq and the rest
of the Arab world.
Outside
the United States, current and former leaders who have taken an
interest in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict appear virtually unanimous
behind the plans.
Among
those who sent messages of support to Geneva were Blair, French
President Jacques Chirac, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Morocco's
King Mohamad VI and former president Bill Clinton.
Former
president Carter told the Geneva audience: "The only alternative
to this initiative is sustained and growing violence."
Fifty-eight
former world leaders also signed a statement endorsing both plans
and noting the critical importance of laying out the basic principles
of a "fair and lasting solution" at the beginning of the
peace process rather than negotiating incremental steps that gives
leverage to "extremists on both sides."
They
also called for the United States, the European Union, Russia, and
the United Nations, which have been trying unsuccessfully to get
both parties to implement a "road map" unveiled 10 months
ago, to line up behind the two initiatives.
Signers
included former Finnish presidents Martti Ahtisaari and Kalevi Sorsa;
former Costa Rican presidents Oscar Arias Sanchez and Jose Maria
Figueres; former Swedish prime ministers Carl Bildt and Ingvar Carlsson;
former Brazilian president Fernando Henrique Cardoso; and former
Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev.
Former
Indian prime minister I. K. Gujral; former Australian prime ministers
Malcolm Fraser and Bob Hawke; former South African president F.
W. de Klerk; former Philippine president Fidel Ramos; former Ghanaian
president Jerry Rawlings; former Polish prime minister Hanna Suchoka;
and former Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo also endorsed the plans.
Among
international officials, former UN secretary-general Boutros Boutros
Ghali; former European Commission president Jacques Delors; former
UN high commissioner for Refugees Sadako Ogata; former UN Population
Fund director Nafis Sadik; former Organization of African Unity
secretary-general Salim Ahmed Salim, and former UN commissioner
for human rights Mary Robinson also signed the statement.
December
2, 2003
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2003 Inter Press Service
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