Our Life and Times
August-September 2000
Camp David Peace Talks Collapse
Kevin A. Barry and Mary Holmes
When the Camp David peace talks collapsed after two weeks on July 25, the
situation was no clearer than before they had begun. On the one hand, the
collapse exposed the fact that even the sole remaining superpower, the
United States, cannot by fiat get its will everywhere. This is especially
true of the Middle East where the large Muslim majority resents decades of
U.S. support not only for Israel, but also for so many of its own
authoritarian rulers.
On the other hand, despite the failure of these talks between Palestinian
Authority President Yasir Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak,
mediated by U. S. President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright, some new ground may have been broken, especially on the explosive
issue of Jerusalem.
Among Israelis, there is an increasing recognition, in the words of Hebrew
University Professor Edith Zertal, that "If we want Jerusalem, we have to
share it" (interview on Chicago Public Radio, July 31). At Camp David,
Barak reportedly agreed to a U.S. proposal for a limited form of
Palestinian political control over parts of East Jerusalem. As minimal as
these concessions were, they broke with decades of demagoguery by Israeli
politicians, Labor as well as Likud (conservative), to the effect that
continuation of sole Israeli control of the whole of Jerusalem was
non-negotiable.
Not surprisingly Arafat rejected the American proposal, which reportedly
would have kept West Jerusalem in Israeli hands while offering the
Palestinians an official headquarters in the Old City of East Jerusalem,
some type of control short of sovereignty over some of the surrounding Arab
neighborhoods as well as the two major mosques, plus the bizarre idea of "a
new bridge allowing Palestinians unhindered access to the Muslim holy
places from areas of their control to the east of the city" (NEW YORK
TIMES, July 28).
After the talks broke down over this too-limited concession on Barak's
part, some Palestinians boasted that Arafat had become nothing less than a
new Saladin, the general who drove the Crusaders out of Jerusalem in 1187.
Publicly, Arafat promised to hold out for the whole of East Jerusalem,
presumably including even Judaism's most revered site, the Wailing Wall.
(It abuts the city's prime Muslim religious site, the hill on which stands
Al Aksa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock.) The normally pro-U.S. Arab
leaders of Egypt and Saudi Arabia also publicly applauded Arafat's
position.
Offstage, however, there was talk that the negotiations had not ended, but
in fact just begun. The Palestinian Authority's top representative in
Jerusalem, Faisal Husseini, acknowledged quietly that the Israelis had
broken new ground: "The taboo on opening the file on Jerusalem has
vanished. This file has been opened, and we hope it will generate more
discussion in the Israeli community and that we can reach a solution before
Sept. 13. I don't believe this is the end" (NEW YORK TIMES, July 26).
Some type of division or sharing of Jerusalem acceptable to both Arabs and
Jews would not only be the key factor in an overall settlement of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, it would also undermine the pretensions of
terrorist and fundamentalist groups to be fighting for "Holy Jerusalem." An
equally thorny issue is some type of settlement for the more than three
million Palestinian refugees and their descendants, who are for the most
part stateless.
On the Israeli side, the Likud and the religious fanatics are sharpening
their knives against Barak for having dared to open up the question of
Jerusalem at all. They are also girding to protect the Jewish settlements
within the Palestinian territories. The most extreme of these fanatics
revere the mass murderer Baruch Goldstein, who violated all notions of
human solidarity by murdering 29 Muslims as they peacefully worshipped at a
mosque in 1994. One of their number murdered Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin in 1995 because of his land for peace policies.
On the Arab side, demagogues point to Hezbollah's successful guerrilla war
in Lebanon that helped dislodge the small Israeli-occupied zone there as
the key to "liberating" Jerusalem as well, also threatening Arafat's life
if he compromises over it.
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