“I honestly believe that if any Israeli parent sat down with those
[Palestinian] kids, they’d say, ‘I want these kids to succeed.’ ”
Very true. But how does the other side feel about Israeli kids?
Consider that the most revered parent in Palestinian society is Mariam Farhat
of Gaza. Her distinction? Three of her sons died in various stages of
trying to kill Israelis — one in a suicide attack, shooting up and
hurling grenades in a room full of Jewish students.
She gloried in
her “martyr” sons, wishing only that she had 100 boys like her
schoolroom suicide attacker to “sacrifice . . . for the sake of God.”
And for that she was venerated as “mother of the struggle,” elected to
parliament and widely mourned upon her recent passing.
So much for
reciprocity. In the Palestinian territories, streets, public squares,
summer camps, high schools, even a kindergarten are named after suicide
bombers and other mass murderers. So much for the notion that if only
Israelis would care about Arab kids, peace would be possible.
That
hasn’t exactly been the problem. Israelis have wanted nothing more than
peace and security for all the children. That’s why they accepted the 1947 U.N. partition
of British Palestine into a Jewish and Arab state. Unfortunately —
another asymmetry — the Arabs said no. To this day, the Palestinians
have rejected every peace offer that leaves a Jewish state standing.
This
is not ancient history. Yasser Arafat said no at Camp David in 2000 and
at Taba in 2001. And in 2008, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert offered a
Palestinian state on all of the West Bank (with territorial swaps) with
its capital in a shared Jerusalem. Mahmoud Abbas walked away.
In
that same speech, Obama blithely called these “missed historic
opportunities” that should not prevent peace-seeking now. But these
“missed historic opportunities” are not random events. They present an
unbroken, unrelenting pattern over seven decades of rejecting any final
peace with Israel.
So what was the point of Obama’s Jerusalem speech encouraging young Israelis
to make peace, a speech the media drooled over? It was mere rhetoric, a
sideshow meant to soften the impact on the Arab side of the really
important event of Obama’s trip: the major recalibration of his position
on the peace process.
Obama knows that peace talks are going
nowhere. First, because there is no way that Israel can sanely make
concessions while its neighborhood is roiling and unstable — the Muslim Brotherhood taking over Egypt, rockets being fired from Gaza, Hezbollah brandishing 50,000 missiles aimed at Israel, civil war raging in Syria with its chemical weapons and rising jihadists, and Iran threatening openly to raze Tel Aviv and Haifa.
Second, peace is going nowhere because Abbas has shown Obama over the past four years that he has no interest in negotiating. Obama’s message to Abbas was blunt: Come to the table without preconditions, i.e., without the excuse of demanding a settlement freeze first.
Obama
himself had contributed to this impasse when he imposed that
precondition — for the first time ever in the history of Arab-Israeli
negotiations — four years ago. And when Israel responded with an equally unprecedented 10-month settlement freeze, Abbas didn’t show up to talk until more than nine months in — then walked out, never to return.
In Ramallah
last week, Obama didn’t just address this perennial Palestinian dodge.
He demolished the very claim that settlements are the obstacle to peace.
Palestinian sovereignty and Israeli security are “the core issue,” he
told Abbas. “If we solve those two problems, the settlement problem will
be solved.”
Finally. Presidential validation of the screamingly
obvious truism: Any peace agreement will produce a Palestinian state
with not a single Israeli settlement remaining on its territory. Any
settlement on the Palestinian side of whatever border is agreed upon
will be demolished. Thus, any peace that reconciles Palestinian
statehood with Israeli security automatically resolves the settlement issue. It disappears.
Yes, Obama offered the ritual incantations
about settlements being unhelpful. Nothing new here. He could have
called them illegal or illegitimate. It wouldn’t have mattered — because
Obama officially declared them irrelevant.
Exposing settlements
as a mere excuse for the Palestinian refusal to negotiate — that was the
news, widely overlooked, coming out of Obama’s trip. It was a
breakthrough.
Will it endure? Who knows. But when an American
president so sympathetic to the Palestinian cause tells Abbas to stop
obstructing peace with that phony settlement excuse, something important
has happened. Abbas, unmasked and unhappy, knows this better than
anyone.
Read more from Charles Krauthammer’s archive
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