Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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After Arafat: Perils and Prospects in the Middle East The Strategic Realities of Asymmetrical Polarization |
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Beryl P. Wajsman | 15 November 2004 |
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“Only those can afford peace who can no longer afford war.” ~ Friedrich Duerenmatt Yassir Arafat’s death has already brought about much unrealistic speculation about the prospects for a permanent peace between The brutal terrorism of the Intifada cannot be viewed in the narrow context of two combatants fighting for narrow strips of land. Nor in the decades old rivalry of two leaders. The death of Arafat does not eliminate the fundamental factors feeding the aggression and destabilization. The aims of Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Al-Aqsa Brigades, Hezbollah and a half dozen others, many backed not by frontline participants to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but by Iran, are not merely to sow death and destruction, but also to extend the conflict and embroil other states. The lust by Islamists for worldwide hegemony is reflected regionally in the fanaticism of these groups drive for total domination from the waters of the Having suffered through the havoc of some 9,000 terror attacks over the past few years alone that resulted in several thousand dead and tens of thousands injured ,not to mention surviving four wars of aggression by its frontline “neighbours”, any final settlement leading toward a Palestinian state must allow Israel to exploit to the utmost its “responsibility to protect” its citizens and defend its national interests. A doctrine of responsibility advocated by the International Commission on State Sovereignty and Intervention that The antagonisms toward Over forty percent of the Palestinian population is below the age of fifteen. The inhibition and eradication of the propagation of the demonization of The imperative to survive will continue to be the primary concern on the agenda of It is no coincidence that the wording of Security Council Resolution 242 that brought the Six-Day War to an end, and upon which all peace talks are based, recognizes the need to provide Israel with “…secure and recognized borders…” Implicit in those words was the recognition that the pre-1967 borders failed in this respect. It is also no coincidence that the resolution does not speak about Notwithstanding, Israeli withdrawal and Palestinian statehood must be predicated on one overriding consideration. What Yigal Allon once termed the “…essential minimums of security…” The current status quo does not meet that criteria. Most of the territories are without any topographical security value and more importantly fail to protect Israeli blood is being spilled by conventional arms delivered by the most conventional of means…the human body. The sophisticated Scuds of the first Gulf War never even came close to approximating the current carnage. With all the damage that warheads and missile systems can inflict, they alone cannot be decisive. The German air “blitz” did not knock This basic truth remains. In conventional war, those without weapons of mass destruction, an attack by ground forces, conventional, guerrilla or terrorist, is necessary for a conflict to be decisive. Resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict does not require the former American-Soviet concept of M.A.D., mutually assured destruction. It does require a new M.A.D. however. Mutually agreed doctrines. The final status agreements can never be based on any guarantees from foreign powers assuring Both sides will have to agree to radically pragmatic compromise. This will be the real test of the new “moderate” Palestinian leadership as well as of The area required would cover approximately 350 square miles almost completely devoid of population. A corridor under Palestinian sovereignty would be delineated permitting uninterrupted access on the Ramallah-Jericho axis. To connect The overriding security issue will be the necessity to demilitarize the new Palestinian entity given the appalling record of the Palestinian Authority’s complicity at worst, and impotence at best, in dealing with Islamic terrorists. Apart from civilian police needed to maintain internal order, the new state would have to be devoid of offensive forces and heavy arms. Any final agreement must be based on a It is a wide chasm from conflict to conciliation. But a chasm that can be bridged. A bridge built on the foundational recognition that, in the words of President Kennedy, “…civility is not a sign of weakness and sincerity is always subject to proof…” A proof that the faith, by both sides, of preserving peace has been forged so strongly that it outweighs the fear, by both sides, of appeasing hate. -30- |