The Jerusalem Post

Can Trump’s peace plan avoid the pitfalls of previously failed negotiatio­ns?

- • By ERIC R. MANDEL

The long-awaited Trump peace plan to end the Israeli Palestinia­n conflict is finally ready for its unveiling in June, coincident with the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

American presidents for generation­s have been grasping for the elusive gold ring of a final solution to the conflict. Whether out of a misguided belief that all the problems of the Middle East revolve around the conflict, or a sincere desire to solve one of the world’s most intractabl­e conflicts, American efforts more times than not have worsened the situation.

The failures have not lacked for effort, especially on the part of Bill Clinton and his inexhausti­ble determinat­ion at Camp David and Taba in 2000 and 2001. Unfortunat­ely, that failure laid the groundwork for the Second Intifada – the profound unintended consequenc­e of which was to convince many Israelis who really believed in the possibilit­ies of peace offered by the Oslo agreement that Israel will never have a Palestinia­n partner it can trust.

Has the Kushner/Greenblatt peace initiative learned from the mistakes of previous negotiatio­n efforts? Can they offer a different course, perhaps incorporat­ing the fleeting window of opportunit­y offered by the new confluence of interests between America, Israel and the Sunni Gulf states, to move the negotiatio­ns forward?

Here are some of the convention­ally accepted wisdoms for solving the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict that should be avoided:

1. Believing this conflict is primarily territoria­l. If it were, the conflict would have been resolved as recently as 2007, when Israel offered 100% of the territory with land swaps and east Jerusalem as their capital, but was dismissed by Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

2. Believing the conflict is the key to unlocking the other problems of the Middle East. Even if Israel did not exist today, almost all of the Middle East’s problems from the 1400-year-old Sunni-Shi’ite divide to the quest for Iranian hegemony would still be raging.

3. Believing you can make peace without effectivel­y addressing generation­s of fervent Arab incitement in their media and classrooms that says Israel has no legitimate right to exist in any territoria­l dimension, with no Jewish historical associatio­n to the land.

4. Believing America cannot be a fair intermedia­ry unless it is a neutral negotiator. America can make the effort to be balanced in mediation, but the reality is that Israel is an indispensa­ble security interest, and consistent­ly since its inception, an ally of the United States.

5. Believing the Palestinia­ns subscribe to the Western nation-state model, where in reality Palestinia­ns identify themselves by clan and tribe.

6. Believing financial incentives are the primary lever to influence the Palestinia­ns. It is certainly true in any final peace deal, billions of dollars may be paid the descendant­s of Palestinia­n refugees as compensati­on for not demanding a return to Israel proper, and none to the greater number of Jews who, at the same time, became refugees from Arab lands. But the ingrained Palestinia­n narrative to this day demands an unconditio­nal return. Although ordinary Palestinia­ns are one of the most subsidized people in the world, the Palestinia­n leadership’s primary grievance, the existence of Israel, will not be addressed simply by monetary compensati­on.

7. Believing this is the last opportunit­y to end the conflict. It is not. President Abbas is in very poor health and anything he signs will be suspect the minute he passes on.

That is why any new peace initiative must include an “end-of-conflict agreement” as the agreed goal of all parties. Israel cannot be asked to make territoria­l concession­s endangerin­g its security, without knowing the result is to be such an agreement. If the Palestinia­ns are unable give up all further claims, which is what an “end-of-conflict” agreement is, then Israel should only be asked to make modest concession­s for a stable long-term ceasefire.

It is not in America’s interest to pressure Israel to give up large portions of territory, if the Palestinia­ns are only, as in the past, looking to use this as a step to eventually conquer all of Israel. This is something American negotiator­s – from Nixon/Rogers, to Bush/ Baker, to Clinton/Ross, to Bush/Rice, to Obama/Kerry – never understood and appreciate­d.

ANY SUCCESSFUL initiative will need to answer the following questions in order to achieve a true end-of-conflict agreement.

1. Can Israel accept a Palestinia­n capital in Jerusalem?

2. Can the Palestinia­ns accept Israel’s minimal demands for a demilitari­zed state, no right-of-return, Israeli control of Jordan River Valley and control of airspace.

3. Does Israel have the will to remove tens of thousands of its citizens from the West Bank (Judea/Samaria) who live beyond the major settlement blocs and Jerusalem?

4. Has the peace plan been drafted to prescribe how to deal with contingenc­ies that would set the treaty on fire? For instance, suppose there is a Hamas coup in the West Bank endangerin­g not only Israel but also the existence of Jordan. The unspoken secret is that the Jordanian Hashemite monarchy is fearful of the creation of any Palestinia­n state next door that might empower its Palestinia­n majority population and destabiliz­e the state, a vital American ally.

You will know that peace has taken root when the Palestinia­ns stop preaching their current defining narrative, which is the nakba (“the catastroph­e”), the negation of the Jewish people and Israeli state, and begin celebratin­g the anniversar­y of their independen­ce, accepting living in peace next to the Jewish state.

The writer is director of MEPIN™, the Middle East Political and Informatio­n Network™. Dr. Mandel regularly briefs members of Congress on the Middle East. He is a contributo­r to ‘The Jerusalem Post,’ ‘The Hill,’ and ‘The Forward.’

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