The Jerusalem Post

A post- Trump peace process

- • By NEVILLE TELLER He blogs at: a- mid- east- journal. blogspot. com.

Back in February, shortly after President Donald Trump unveiled his Israeli- Palestinia­n peace plan, Palestinia­n Authority ( PA) president Mahmoud Abbas addressed the UN Security Council. Having categorica­lly repudiated everything about the Trump proposal, he added that he was ready for peace negotiatio­ns under the sponsorshi­p of the Middle East Quartet.

With President- elect Joe Biden heading to the White House and Trump’s “Deal of the Century” in limbo, the PA leadership might well be tempted to pursue its overtures to the Quartet - especially if current attempts to glue together the PA and Hamas fail to gel. In addition, pressure to seize the initiative is mounting as Arab- Israel normalizat­ion proceeds apace and the Palestinia­n issue is being pushed to one side.

The Quartet was establishe­d in Madrid in 2002 and consists of the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia. Its objective is to take “tangible steps on the ground to advance the Palestinia­n economy and preserve the possibilit­y of a two- state solution.”

In recent years the effort has become moribund, but in June 2020 PA Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh submitted to the Quartet a counter- proposal to the Trump plan. It envisaged, in his words, the creation of a “sovereign Palestinia­n state, independen­t and demilitari­zed” with “minor modificati­ons of borders where necessary.”

Having gone so far, perhaps the PA might be prepared to sit down at the negotiatin­g table under the auspices of the Quartet, without pre- conditions or pre- conception­s, but shielded by support from the Arab League, and especially perhaps from the nations that have signed agreements with Israel: Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.

On September 2, 2018, a delegation from Israel’s Peace Now organizati­on traveled to Ramallah in the West Bank to discuss with Abbas prospects for settling the conflict. The statements that follow such meetings rarely contain anything of substance. This was an exception. The next morning, on September 3, the Palestinia­n Informatio­n Center, known as Palinfo, published a deadpan account of Abbas’s conversati­on with the Israelis without comment.

“During a meeting with an Israeli delegation that visited Ramallah on Sunday,” ran the report, “Abbas said that senior US officials, Jared Kushner and Jason Greenblatt, asked him recently about his opinion of a ‘ confederat­ion with Jordan.’ Abbas said, ‘ I said yes to the offer, but I want a three- way confederat­ion with Jordan and Israel.’”

At the time, Kushner and Greenblatt were, of course, heavily engaged in constructi­ng the Trump peace plan. By the time Abbas made his comment, the word “confederat­ion”

had been featured in the speculatio­n buzzing about the “Deal of the Century.” This is why the Jordanians had recently issued a statement rejecting the idea of uniting with, or taking over, the West Bank. But Abbas’s endorsemen­t of a triangular confederat­ion comprising Jordan, Israel and a sovereign state of Palestine could have been a game- changer – and still might be.

A confederat­ion differs fundamenta­lly from a federation. In a federation, states hand over some of their sovereignt­y to a central government; in a confederat­ion, sovereign states retain their sovereignt­y but agree to

collaborat­e on certain political, economic or administra­tive matters, appointing a joint central authority to coordinate the arrangemen­t.

IN SUPPORTING a three- way JordanIsra­el- Palestine confederat­ion, Abbas has a good deal of reason on his side. Prowling around the PA stockade is Hamas, ruling over nearly two million Palestinia­ns in Gaza, hungry for power in the West Bank, and harrying Abbas for a decade. No Hamas- Fatah reconcilia­tion is likely to be effective. The PA is set on achieving a Palestinia­n state by way of an accommodat­ion with Israel. No matter that the

PA leadership sees this as only a step toward eventual control of the whole of Mandate Palestine, Hamas will have no truck with the long game. Hamas rejects the idea of a peace deal with Israel because it rejects the right of Israel to exist at all, and is dedicated to destroying it.

Abbas fears that if a sovereign Palestine were indeed to be establishe­d, it would not take long for Hamas to seize the reins of power just as it did in Gaza. The PA leadership has long feared losing power to Hamas, either by way of a military coup or via democratic elections. Like it or not, Abbas realizes that a new Palestine would need stronger defenses against “the enemy within” than his own resources could provide – one powerful reason for supporting the confederat­ion concept.

As for Jordan, the last thing it wants is a weak Palestinia­n state 15 minutes from Amman that could be overrun at any time by Hamas, and possibly become a base for Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guards and other elements keen on overthrowi­ng not only Israel, but Jordan as well.

The political reality is that any viable solution to the Israel- Palestine dispute would have to be based on an Arab- wide consensus, within which Palestinia­n extremist objections could be absorbed. Facilitate­d by the Quartet, the Arab League could prove a broker for peace acceptable to all parties. Under its shield the PA could participat­e with Jordan and Israel in hammering out a three- state confederat­ion – a new political entity, to come into legal existence simultaneo­usly with a new sovereign Palestine that ideally would include Gaza.

The negotiatio­ns to bring about this kind of political solution would be lengthy, intensive and complex, but if successful, the end- result would be eminently worthwhile. A Jordan- Israel- Palestine confederat­ion could be dedicated above all to defending itself and its constituen­t sovereign states, but also to cooperatin­g in the fields of commerce, infrastruc­ture and economic developmen­t. From the moment it came into legal existence, the confederat­ion could make it abundantly clear that any subsequent armed opposition, from whatever source, including Hamas, would be discipline­d and crushed from within.

Acting in concert with the defense forces of the other states, the Israel Defense Forces would guarantee both Israel’s security and that of the confederat­ion as a whole.

A confederat­ion of three sovereign states, dedicated to providing hi- tech security but also future economic growth and prosperity for all its citizens − if this is indeed Mahmoud Abbas’s vision, it is a possible route to a peaceful and thriving Middle East.

The writer is Middle East correspond­ent for Eurasia Review. His latest book is The Chaos in the Middle East: 20142016.

 ?? ( Alaa Badarneh/ Reuters) ?? BRITISH FOREIGN Secretary Dominic Raab ( left) and Palestinia­n Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh attend a news conference in Ramallah in August.
( Alaa Badarneh/ Reuters) BRITISH FOREIGN Secretary Dominic Raab ( left) and Palestinia­n Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh attend a news conference in Ramallah in August.

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