Clock ticking on Mideast deal
U.S. secretary of state’s shuttle mission makes little headway
JERUSALEM — Halfway through an ambitious nine-month process aimed at forging Mideast peace, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, after another round of shuttle diplomacy, has little to show for his efforts.
The participants have reported no progress, a top Palestinian negotiator has resigned in frustration, and few believe Kerry can broker the comprehensive settlement set as his official goal.
Instead, there are rumblings about what will happen when the clock runs out — either an extension of talks, an interim deal, unilateral moves or the outbreak of violence.
Kerry tried to put a positive spin on things during a three-day stay marked by smiles, friendly rhetoric toward Israel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but also acknowledgments of the tough task ahead.
“I believe we are closer than we have been for years to bringing about the peace and prosperity and the security that all people in this region deserve and yearn for,” he said Friday as he wrapped up his eighth visit to the region as secretary of state.
Kerry did not elaborate, and it was the same type of optimistic language he has used since persuading Israel and the Palestinians to resume talks, their first substantive negotiations in five years, last July. Under heavy American pressure, the sides set an April target date for resolving their decadeslong conflict.
While negotiators have quietly been meeting, neither side has shown optimism. Instead, the talks have been repeatedly marred by mistrust and finger-pointing.
The Palestinians have accused Israel of negotiating in bad faith, pointing to continued Jewish settlement construction in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, lands captured by Israel in 1967 and sought by the Palestinians for their state. With roughly 550,000 Jews now living in these territories, the Palestinians say the chances of being able to divide the territory between the two peoples are running out.
Plans to build more settlement homes have sparked a series of crises in the talks. Kerry has said the construction raised questions about Israel’s commitment to peace, and the Palestinians have threatened to withdraw from the talks in protest.
Mohammed Ishtayeh, a former negotiator, said he resigned last month after concluding that the gaps would never be bridged.
“I found no partner in Israel in the talks and the Israelis are not serious,” he said. “They came to talk just to avoid the international pressure and isolation.”
Voices at home also have begun to question Netanyahu’s commitment to peace. On Wednesday, Yuval Diskin, a former director of Israel’s Shin Bet internal security service, said time was running out for a peace deal. The alternative, he warned, was plunging into a single binational state in which Arabs ultimately outnumber Jews. As the man responsible for battling Palestinian militants for many years, Diskin’s comments carry added weight in security-obsessed Israel.
“We need an agreement now, before we reach a point of no return from which the two-state solution is not an option any longer,” Diskin told the Geneva Initiative, an Israeli-Palestinian peace organization.
In perhaps his toughest criticism of Netanyahu, he said the unresolved conflict with the Palestinians posed a bigger threat to Israel than Iran’s nuclear program. Netanyahu believes Iran is trying to build a nuclear weapon and has sparred with Kerry over the international community’s recent nuclear deal with Tehran, which insists its atomic program is for peaceful purposes.
Netanyahu, for his part, has dismissed the criticism.
The Palestinians seek all of the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem as parts of their future state, with small adjustments through negotiated land swaps.
Netanyahu rejects any return to Israel’s pre-1967 lines and has indicated he wants to keep control of large parts of the West Bank and all of East Jerusalem. He says the core of the dispute is not land claims, but a Palestinian refusal to recognize the Jewish people’s ancient connection to the land.
Yossi Beilin, the mastermind of landmark interim peace agreements in the 1990s, said with the gaps so wide, the Americans will have to soon start thinking about a Plan B. “Otherwise, there will be no plan whatsoever. This is the worst case scenario.”
It is possible that the Americans will seek an extension in the talks. Beilin believes that with a final deal impossible, the best hope is for an interim agreement.