This week Alpher discusses the interim ramifications for Israel of the Obama appeal for congressional support to attack Syria, the most relevant lessons of Oslo right now, as Israel and the PLO once again seek a negotiated solution, and a summary of the outgoing Jewish year, 5773, from the standpoint of Israel's overall security.
Q. As the drama continues to play out over the Obama appeal for congressional support to attack Syria, what
are the interim ramifications for Israel?
A. First and most obviously, threats of Syrian, Iranian and/or Hezbollah retaliation against Israel continue to be
voiced from Damascus and elsewhere. This has fed into an ongoing alert situation in Israel. The Assad regime and
its supporters presumably assess that the threats contribute to their effort to persuade international public
opinion, and particularly members of Congress, to oppose Obama's request.
Second, President Barack Obama has recruited active Israeli and American Jewish support for his initiative. He has
spoken several times with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and the latter, in turn, has spoken directly to members
of Congress and has reportedly urged AIPAC to act.
There are sectors in Congress where Netanyahu and AIPAC probably have more influence than Obama. Since Netanyahu
and most Israelis support the idea of a punitive US military strike against Syria, there is a certain logic to
Israel's involvement in lobbying Congress. On the other hand, depending on the outcome of both the congressional
vote and, if it happens, the American attack, the high-profile Israeli role poses the risk that Israel will be
blamed in the US for whatever goes wrong, somewhat similarly to allegations that it was Israel that dragged the
George W. Bush administration into Iraq in 2003.
Israel's support for Obama in the Syrian context focuses on two issues. One is the need for the international
community to deter Syrian use of chemical warfare, lest at some point in the future the Assad regime or its
successor feel free to deploy chemical weapons against Israel. The second issue is the credibility of Obama's "red
lines": Israelis want Obama to be free and motivated to act on his Syria red line because they believe that failure
to act will reduce the credibility of his Iran red line, which at the regional strategic level is more
important.
Q. This Friday marks the twentieth anniversary of the Oslo signings. What are the most relevant lessons of
Oslo right now, as Israel and the PLO once again seek a negotiated solution?
A. The Oslo paradigm for negotiations has survived these 20 years and continues to provide the model for the
current talks initiated by US Secretary of State John Kerry. This is quite remarkable; despite all the criticism of
Oslo, there is no operative "post-Oslo" paradigm. The negotiators are discussing the same menu of final status
issues set forth in the Oslo Declaration of Principles that was signed in Washington on September 13, 1993. While
the Oslo final status timetable expired long ago, and while the Palestinian state that is currently being
negotiated was never actually mentioned in the DOP, "Oslo rules" prevail.
Yet the odds of the current talks succeeding are generally thought to be low--even lower than the odds at Camp
David in July 2000 or in the Olmert-Abbas talks of 2008. Among the reasons cited are some that have nothing to do
with the DOP: lack of dedication and enthusiasm on the part of the current Israeli and Palestinian leaderships, the
regional revolutionary situation, the Obama administration's overall preoccupation with other crises and issues,
and the like. But precisely because the current negotiations represent yet another attempt to do what previous
Oslo-anchored negotiations failed to do in the course of 20 years, it behooves us to look at the lessons derived
from those failures. (Of course, Oslo had successes, too, such as Palestinian autonomy.) I would cite two lessons
that, I believe, negotiators present and future ignore at their peril.
One lesson was seemingly inevitable: the Oslo DOP created a negotiating situation that places a sovereign state,
Israel, across the table from a third-world-style national liberation movement, the Palestine Liberation
Organization, as if it were possible for them to negotiate as equals. Yet there is an obvious political asymmetry
here that goes beyond Israel's negotiating advantages as a state with territory and an army. Under Oslo, the PLO is
delegated to discuss the disposition of finite territories: the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. Yet it
does so as the representative of the entire Palestinian people, two-thirds of whom are part of a diaspora that
extends far beyond these territories and that insists the PLO discuss issues related to the five million
Palestinian refugees, most of whom live in that diaspora.
This disconnect relates to the second issue. The Oslo "menu" of final status issues contains a mix of "post-1967"
topics created by the outcome of the Six-Day War, like borders, security, sovereignty and a capital in Jerusalem,
with "pre-1967" topics like refugees and holy places that existed well before the 1967 conflict in which Israel
occupied the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. While the DOP does not stipulate regarding this menu that
"nothing is agreed until everything is agreed", it is precisely this mantra that has over the years become a
constant feature of final status negotiations.
This means that the only final status negotiations that can conceivably succeed are talks that seek to achieve an
end-of-claims, end-of-conflict resolution of all the issues. If a single issue--say, the disposition of the Temple
Mount, a "pre-1967" holy place--cannot be resolved, then agreement on all other issues is held hostage to it. All
three sides in the current negotiations have subscribed, or "re-subscribed", to this mantra or to words to that
effect.
What we have learned from previous attempts at final status negotiations is that the post-1967 issues are easier to
resolve. Border negotiations have narrowed the gap to a few percentage points; many bilateral security issues have
been agreed; and reasonable outlines for a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem were delineated by both Ehud Barak
in 2000 and Ehud Olmert in 2008.
On the other hand, little if any progress has been made on the thornier pre-1967 issues. The two sides have not
come up with a formula for the "right of return" that satisfies the PLO's need for historical-psychological
satisfaction on this issue because it would imply that in 1948 Israel was "born in sin"; nor have they come
anywhere close to resolving the question who "owns" the Temple Mount. Based on 20 years experience, these are
narrative topics that could defy resolution for many years to come. Meanwhile, in response to the impression that
Palestinian demands on these issues bespeak the de-legitimization of Israel, Israeli negotiators now insist that
Israel be recognized as a Jewish state--a demand equally unacceptable to Palestinians and Arabs in general. On
these issues, the parties have never really gotten beyond "square one".
A tentative American recognition of this dichotomy of final status issues is embedded in the US request, first
enunciated by President Obama in May 2011, that the parties begin by discussing borders and security--seemingly the
two most solvable post-1967 challenges. But neither Israelis nor Palestinians have agreed to detach these topics
from the pre-1967 issues, nor has the US suggested as much. In a different context, Mahmoud Abbas' initiative to
request United Nations recognition of a Palestinian state can be understood as an attempt--whether intended or not
by Abbas--to apply both lessons of Oslo by placing negotiations on a state-to-state basis. Abbas would show up at
the table as president of the state of Palestine rather than chairman of the PLO. Presumably this would focus
negotiations on state-to-state issues, which are essentially (with the exception of holy places) post-1967. But
Abbas has never explained his UN initiative in these terms, and in any case his UN project has been totally
rejected by both Washington and Jerusalem.
If and when the current negotiations fail, one key explanation will lie in the failure to draw and apply the
necessary lessons from Oslo, 20 years later.
Q. Finally, on the occasion of the Jewish New Year, how would you summarize the outgoing year, 5773, from
the standpoint of Israel's overall security?
A. The year was characterized by a confusing mix of mostly positive but some negative developments for Israel's
security.
On the positive side of the ledger, we witnessed the renewal of peace talks with the Palestinians and the weakening
of the main Palestinian opponent of a two-state solution, Hamas. The main setback suffered by the Gaza-based
Islamist movement was the most recent coup in Egypt, which placed the secular armed forces in charge of the country
and suppressed Hamas' Egyptian ally, the Muslim Brotherhood.
The advent of military rule in Egypt also benefited Israel insofar as the Egyptian armed forces under General Sissi
have launched a major offensive against Salafist elements implanted in the Sinai Peninsula near the border with
Israel, thereby enhancing Israel's border security.
Another defeat for extremist Islamists that threaten Israel was registered in Iran, where the election of the
moderate Hassan Rowhani to the office of president generated new hope, however guarded, that sanctions and
negotiations could mitigate the prospect of an Iranian nuclear threat against Israel. Then too, the beginnings of
an improvement of relations with Turkey were registered in March, with President Obama's help.
The list of good news closes with the relative success of the Israeli economy when measured against global economic
woes. The inauguration of large-scale natural gas supply from Israeli wells in the Mediterranean offered an
additional boost.
And on the negative side of the ledger? Events in and around Syria seemingly embody the dark side of 5773. Both the
Assad camp, with its Iranian and Hezbollah allies, and the Salafist-Islamist opposition camp gained strength at the
expense of moderates. The fighting overflowed into Lebanon and Iraq. External forces, from Saudi Arabia to Russia,
were drawn further in. Israel was reportedly obliged to intervene militarily to prevent the transfer of strategic
arms to its enemies in January, May and July. And--closing the circle of this Q & A--American and international
hesitation regarding the obligation to counter Syria's use of non-conventional weapons sent an ominous message that
virtually all Israelis took worried note of.
Perhaps the most significant regional strategic development of the past year for Israel is what did not happen: the
Arab revolutionary wave did not end. Indeed, there is no end in sight. This means we enter 5774 in a state of
regional flux and uncertainty. No one can predict accurately what will happen in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Egypt,
Libya, Tunisia, and Yemen. No one can guarantee that revolution will not spill over into Jordan or the West Bank.
This leaves Israel in a state of watching and waiting, in the hope that its overall security interests will benefit
from the eventual outcome.