Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘No’ today, less tomorrow

- Bret Stephens Bret Stephens is a New York Times columnist.

Regarding President Donald Trump’s peace plan for the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, the instant convention­al wisdom is that it’s a geopolitic­al non-starter, a gift to Benjamin Netanyahu, and an electoral ploy by the president to win Jewish votes in Florida rather than Palestinia­n hearts in Ramallah.

It may be all of those things. But nobody will benefit less from a curt dismissal of the plan than the Palestinia­ns, whose leaders are again letting history pass them by.

The record of Arab-Israeli peace efforts can be summed up succinctly: Nearly every time the Arab side said no, it wound up with less.

That was true after it rejected the 1947 UN Partition Plan, which would have created a Palestinia­n state on a much larger footprint than the one that was left after Israel’s war of independen­ce. It was true in 1967, after Jordan refused Israel’s entreaties not to attack, which resulted in the end of Jordanian rule in the West Bank.

It was true in 2000, when Syria rejected an Israeli offer to return the Golan Heights, which ultimately led to U.S. recognitio­n of Israeli sovereignt­y of that territory. It was true later the same year after Yasser Arafat refused Israel’s offer of a Palestinia­n state with a capital in East Jerusalem, which led to two decades of terrorism, Palestinia­n civil war, the collapse of the Israeli peace camp, and the situation we have now.

It’s in that pattern that the blunt rejection by Palestinia­n leaders of the Trump plan—Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas denounced it as a “conspiracy deal”—should be seen. Refusal today will almost inevitably lead to getting less tomorrow.

That isn’t to say that the plan, as it now stands, can come as anything but a disappoint­ment to most Palestinia­ns. It allows Israel to annex its West Bank settlement­s and the long Jordan Valley. It concedes full Israeli sovereignt­y over an undivided Jerusalem. It conditions eventual Palestinia­n statehood on full demilitari­zation of a Palestinia­n state and the disarming of Hamas. It compensate­s Palestinia­ns for lost territorie­s in the West Bank with remote territorie­s near the Egyptian border. The map of a future Palestine looks less like an ordinary state than it does the MRI of a lung or kidney.

Then again, much of what the plan gives to Israel, Israel already has and will never relinquish.

More important, however, is what the plan offers ordinary Palestinia­ns—and what it demands of their leaders. What it offers is a sovereign state, mostly contiguous territory, the return of prisoners, a link to connect Gaza and the West Bank, and $50 billion in economic assistance.

What it demands is an end to anti-Jewish bigotry in school curriculum­s, the restoratio­n of legitimate political authority in Gaza, and the dismantlin­g of terrorist militias.

Taken together, this would be a historic achievemen­t, not the scam that liberal critics of the deal claim. The purpose of a Palestinia­n state ought to be to deliver dramatical­ly better prospects for the Palestinia­n people, not tokens of self-importance for their kleptocrat­ic and repressive leaders.

That begins with improving the quality of Palestinia­n governance, first of all by replacing leaders whose principal interests lie in perpetuati­ng their misrule. If Abbas—now in the 16th year of his elected four-year term of office—really had Palestinia­n interests at heart, he would step down. So would Hamas’ cruel and cynical leaders in Gaza. That the peace plan insists on the latter isn’t an obstacle to Palestinia­n statehood. It’s a prerequisi­te for it.

At the same time, it’s also essential to temper Palestinia­n expectatio­ns. The Jewish state has thrived in part because dayenu: it has always been prepared to make do with less.

The Palestinia­n tragedy has been the direct result of taking the opposite approach: of insisting on the maximum rather than working toward the plausible. History rarely goes well for those who try to live it backward.

For all the talk about Trump’s plan being dead on arrival, it says something that it has been met with an open mind by some Arab states, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. They know only too well that the Arab world has more important challenges to deal with than Palestinia­n statehood. They know too that decades of relentless hostility toward the Jewish state have been a stupendous mistake. The best thing the Arab world could do for itself is learn from Israel, not demonize it.

That ought to go for the Palestinia­ns as well. The cliché about Palestinia­ns never missing an opportunit­y to miss an opportunit­y has, sadly, more than a bit of truth in it. Nobody ought to condemn them to make the same mistake again.

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