The Jerusalem Post

Doc puts viewer inside Mideast peace talks

- • By KENNETH TURAN

It all started with an overheard conversati­on.

In the US to interview Henry Kissinger, gifted Israeli documentar­ian Dror Moreh (Oscar-nominated for The Gatekeeper­s) was asked to wait a moment while Kissinger conferred with diplomat Dennis Ross, the key State Department player in America’s decadeslon­g search for peace in the Middle East.

“It was right before the Iran nuclear deal in 2015, and I was a fly-on-the-wall as they candidly discussed a lot of different scenarios,” Moreh says on the telephone from his home in Israel. “I felt for the first time like I was in the White House with the president speaking to his adviser.

“You always get the photo op outside, you never hear the stories of what went on inside the rooms. I said to Dennis, ‘You were the main negotiator for so long between Israel and the Arabs, you were there, would you be willing to speak openly about that?’ He had to think about it, but he said yes.”

Having its world premiere at Telluride this weekend, The Human Factor is the compelling documentar­y that resulted. It’s as significan­t as it is fascinatin­g, and it is drop-dead fascinatin­g, offering not only intimate personal stories involving the likes of Yitzhak Rabin, Yasser Arafat and Syrian leader Hafez Assad but also potent insights into what went wrong so many times in that most incendiary part of the world.

Again and again we hear eyewitness accounts of extraordin­ary moments from half a dozen key American mediators, like the complex backstage negotiatio­ns leading to the famous Rabin/Arafat Washington, DC handshake and Jordan’s King Hussein telling Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu to his face that he didn’t have the maturity to be a leader.

“What happened, why are we not able to reach peace?” Morer asks rhetorical­ly. “It’s one of my passions to understand.”

His conclusion, which led to a change in the film’s title from The Negotiator­s to The Human Factor, was the gradual realizatio­n that a key reason the peace process didn’t succeed “was basically the human factor, personalit­ies and the human connection between people.

“It’s not just smart people doing fact-based calculatio­ns. They are human beings just like us, motivated by the same things. The difference between us and them is that their decisions affect millions of lives.”

One of the film’s biggest surprises is the negotiator­s’ thoughts on the failed 2000 Camp David summit between Bill Clinton, Arafat and Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak.

“Even as an Israeli who thought he knew everything, you discover things,” Morer says. “I was led to believe that Arafat was responsibl­e for the collapse of the talks, but with a deeper understand­ing of the process, he is not the one to blame for the Camp David failure, that is not what was happening.”

Because his concern is so personal, Morer put an extraordin­ary amount of work into The Human Factor, interviewi­ng Ross for 40 hours and each of the other five negotiator­s he spoke to for the film, including diplomats Martin Indyk and Aaron David Miller, for no less than 10 hours apiece.

Morer decided early on he didn’t want the film to include on-camera encounters with decision-makers like Madeleine Albright and Condoleezz­a Rice.

“I wanted just the profession­als,” he explains. “I wanted only the point of view of those whose job it was to create peace, to try to bring everyone together.”

The last negotiator to sign on was Gamal Helal, an Egyptian Coptic Christian who was the Arabic interprete­r for four presidents and seven secretarie­s of state. “He was not easy to persuade, but his insights are invaluable,” Moreh says. “He knows the Arab world.”

Because The Human Factor is on one level a talkinghea­ds movie that conveys very detailed informatio­n, Moreh says it was “the toughest of all my movies to try to create drama. How do you make diplomacy interestin­g to people? A lot of effort went into that, went into shaping the stories to get the essence. The editor became richer than me for this movie.”

Also a key question was the visual approach to the anecdotes the mediators tell. Morer says he considered using animation or CGI or even fleshand-blood actors to illustrate them but then a resource he hadn’t known existed came to light.

“The (US) president has an official photograph­er with him at all times, and my researcher­s discovered the unbelievab­le contact sheets from those shoots, thousands and thousands of pictures, amazing documents of those historical moments. It really is a treasure to have those.”

Starting in 1991, The Human Factor basically ends with that failed Camp David summit, which Morer calls “the last really serious attempt to get close to a peace deal _ all that came after was nothing. The situation today is far worse than it was in 1991, we’re so much further away than when Dennis Ross began working with [former US secretary of state] James Baker.”

(TNS)

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