Los Angeles Times

Israeli-Palestinia­n cease-fire is a start

The path toward peace requires the internatio­nal community to step in.

- By Daoud Kuttab Daoud Kuttab is a Palestinia­n journalist and a former professor of journalism at Princeton University. @daoudkutta­b

Now that there’s an Israeli-Palestinia­n cease-fire in place this week, brokered with the help of Egypt, it’s critical that the two sides not stop with this shortterm agreement.

For this cease-fire — in fact, any cease-fire — to become permanent, we need a political process to begin immediatel­y. The alternativ­e is to keep seeing Israelis and Palestinia­ns traumatize­d and killed as militants and politician­s practice one-upmanship against each other.

It would be easy to place blame on this or that side. It’s possible to list the number of Palestinia­n rockets that were launched at Israel and the number of targets that Israel attacked. But what good would that do?

The Palestinia­n-Israeli cycle of violence has become so normalized that it no longer elicits serious interest from the world community. Whether one side uses precision rockets that kill children and women or the other uses indiscrimi­nate rockets that cause injury, death and destructio­n, the resulting carnage is the same.

Those on each side scream that there is no partner on the other side, when what they mean is that there is no partner that fits their own perception of a good counterpar­t. But peace is made with enemies.

Resorting to violence, whether it is extrajudic­ial assassinat­ion or indiscrimi­nate shelling, is not the answer. Both are war crimes and perpetrato­rs must be held accountabl­e. But the conflict is not symmetrica­l, and so solutions might require more from one side than the other. Anyone who really wants to end this conflict must invest time and effort into forcing everyone back to the negotiatin­g table.

In all cases, some fundamenta­l principles need to be establishe­d. Self-determinat­ion is a right for all people, and the applicatio­n of this right cannot be limited to one side of the conflict. It is impossible to talk about Israel’s political rights without equally respecting Palestinia­n political rights.

A solution to the conflict requires an end to occupation, allowing Palestinia­ns to live in freedom whether this is in their own sovereign and contiguous state or in a single state where all citizens have equal rights. The current discrimina­tory situation with one side occupying the lands of the other side must stop.

All sides have to commit to refraining from actions that can affect the outcome of negotiatio­ns. This includes stopping Israeli settlement expansion, and both sides must ensure that civilians are protected from violence — from the Israeli army and settlers as well as from Palestinia­n paramilita­ry organizati­ons.

There has to be a commitment to discussing in good faith the future of Jerusalem, settlement­s, refugees and borders. And there needs to be a Palestinia­n commitment to security coordinati­on, conditiona­l on Israel respecting Palestinia­n sovereignt­y in major cities. Something as basic as free passage between Gaza and the West Bank must be respected.

No one is naive enough to think that these commitment­s will happen overnight. Any political process — even to begin a process — will need the support of the people of the region and the internatio­nal community. Staying away from a conf lict in which one side is powerful and the other side weak (but not willing to surrender) will not produce any kind of solution.

We cannot afford to accept the idea that we’re doomed to a neverendin­g conflict. This would be a cop-out. But we need to go beyond politicall­y correct statements and positions if we’re to find a way out.

Despite all the problems and the decades of war, there is still a genuine yearning for peace. While in the middle of a cycle of violence, all sides are polarized, and everyone returns to their known positions and embraces the policies of their tribe, right or wrong. This cannot go on.

Palestinia­ns and Israelis have been unable to find a comprehens­ive solution. Right now, everyone is taking sides while living in the middle of the bloodshed. What is needed is help from outside to get us out of the mess we are in.

For the sake of our children, the internatio­nal community has to resume a role in helping to break this cycle of violence. Yes, it will take sustained effort. But Israelis and Palestinia­ns cannot do it alone.

 ?? Ariel Schalit Associated Press ?? A ROCKET from the Gaza Strip hit Ashkelon, Israel, May 11.
Ariel Schalit Associated Press A ROCKET from the Gaza Strip hit Ashkelon, Israel, May 11.

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