Nathan J. Brown
Source: Getty
After Abu Mazin? Letting the Scales Fall From Our Eyes
In the wake of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s announcement that he would not seek a second term, any further attempts at some form of peace process must not ignore a few basic realities about the settlements, Hamas, and Palestinian politics.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s announcement that he would not seek a second term set off a wide range of speculation: Is he bluffing? Will he simply cancel elections and stay in office? If he leaves, who would succeed him? And what would his successor (or successors) succeed him as—president of the Palestinian Authority, head of Fatah, head of the PLO, or president of the state of Palestine declared improbably in Algiers in 1988?
A cynical observer might suggest that the political deterioration in the Palestinian polity is so advanced, the answer to such questions about succession matters about as much as whether there is any claimant to the throne of the Holy Roman Empire. It is not time for that degree of cynicism—yet. Succession and leadership do still matter to a degree. (It is of course depressing to note that all the names trotted out are either exhausted figures, corrupt politicians, or both. The one possible exception, Marwan al-Barghuti, is not only imprisoned by Israel but also possesses a far narrower political base than outsiders sometimes realize.)
The Obama administration’s response to the growing crisis in Palestinian politics has certainly aggravated matters. In a strange way, that may be an achievement: it is now undeniable that the peace process has no clothes.
Is there a way out? No. Or at least not now. The best we can do is to make sure that things don’t get worse and begin creating the raw ingredients for fresh new approaches. This will not be easy.
2. Palestinians have domestic politics too. It is generally no trouble for American politicians to remember their domestic political context; the Israeli political system also imposes easily identifiable constraints. Politics does not stop at the 1967 lines, however. The Goldstone report fiasco shows what happens when we forget that the Palestinian public has opinions, and that there is an intense internal political game. Ironically, the report itself provided unsettling reading about Israel and about the Hamas-led half of the Palestinian Authority. The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority, by contrast, emerged largely unscathed but so far is the only actor to pay a heavy political price.
3. Don’t forget Gaza. The debate over the Goldstone report has focused on conduct during the Gaza war and whether Israel targeted Palestinian civilians. That may be an important argument. But there can be no disputing the larger picture of devastation in Gaza. Rarely discussed—at least in U.S. policy circles—is the degree to which civilians in Gaza have had their economy destroyed as a result of international sanctions (imposed chiefly by Israel but also by Egypt and with some broader international support). Of course, it is clear why Israel would not want military material brought into Gaza. It is not at all clear why pasta and paper are military material.
The barely concealed purpose of the strangulation policy—to make it impossible for Hamas to govern—is clearly backfiring.
5. Settlements do matter. The Obama administration’s diplomacy on the Israeli settlement issue was problematic, but it did not create the problem. Any approach that is based on the assumption that settlements are a side issue (as some have bizarrely claimed) or that the matter is resolved by simply drawing the borders in the right way and relocating a small number of settlers (as is routinely asserted) ignores how extensive the settlements are, how rapidly they grew during the peace process, how difficult any relocation would be for Israel, how powerful settlers have become in domestic Israeli politics, how corrosive they have been for Palestinian hopes for a two-state solution, and how difficult “border adjustments” would be for a Palestinian leadership to accept.
1 See my June 2007 Carnegie Web Commentary, “The Peace Process Has No Clothes: The Decay of the Palestinian Authority and the International Response.”
2 I discuss this and other alternatives in “Sunset for the Two State Solution?” Carnegie Policy Brief no. 58, May 2008.
3 “Palestine and Israel: Time for Plan B?” Carnegie Policy Brief no. 79, February 2009.
4 See, for instance, “The Road Out of Gaza,” Carnegie Policy Outlook, February 2008 and “Pointers for the Obama Administration in the Middle East: Avoiding Myths and Vain Hopes,” Carnegie Web Commentary, January 2009.
About the Author
Nonresident Senior Fellow, Middle East Program
Nathan J. Brown, a professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University, is a distinguished scholar and author of nine books on Arab politics and governance, as well as editor of five books.
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Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.
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