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  • What if Bush invited Sharon & Abu Mazen to Camp David

    JCPA.org,(Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs)
    Jan 5 2005


    WHAT IF BUSH INVITED SHARON AND ABU MAZEN TO CAMP DAVID?
    THE PROSPECTS FOR NEGOTIATIONS IN THE POST-ARAFAT ERA
    Dore Gold and David Keyes

    At President Clinton's failed Camp David peace summit in mid-2000,
    Barak offered more than any Israeli prime minister in history. Yet
    the talks exposed vast remaining disparities between Israel and many
    of today's post-Arafat Palestinian leaders on key issues that must be
    considered before the Bush administration dispatches a "presidential
    envoy" or risks convening yet another peace summit in the period
    ahead:

    Refugees: Several months after Camp David, Abu Mazen wrote: "The
    right of return means a return to Israel, not to the Palestinian
    state." As recently as January 1, 2005, Abu Mazen reiterated: "We
    won't forget the right of return of refugees who have been exiled
    from their land for more than half a century." Palestinian officials
    were, in fact, dismayed by President George W. Bush's statements
    about preserving Israel as a Jewish state, since they hoped that by
    flooding Israel with hundreds of thousands of Palestinians they would
    be able to demographically overwhelm its Jewish majority.

    Borders: The Palestinians insisted that the June 1967 line be the
    recognized international boundary and even demanded the Latrun
    salient, which includes a section of the main Tel Aviv-Jerusalem
    highway. Additionally, the Palestinians rejected any Israeli
    sovereignty over national consensus suburban areas just beyond the
    municipal borders of Jerusalem, such as Maale Adumim and Givat Ze'ev.
    According to the notes of EU Special Representative to the Peace
    Process Miguel Moratinos from the Taba talks, the Palestinians "did
    not accept proposals to annex (settlement) blocs" to Israel.

    Jerusalem: Former Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben Ami noted that Abu
    Mazen, who had a reputation for moderation, suddenly became energized
    at Camp David and rejected U.S. proposals for compromise on
    Jerusalem. At the end of the Taba talks, even the status of the
    Western Wall remained contested. According to Moratinos, the
    Palestinians acknowledged Israel's request for an "affiliation" with
    the Western Wall, but did not explicitly accept Israeli sovereignty
    over it.

    Security Arrangements: Israel requested early warning stations in the
    West Bank for security purposes and the right to deploy forces in the
    event of an Arab coalition attack from the east. The Palestinians
    insisted that no Israeli soldier be on any of their territory and
    also rejected Israeli control of air space. Muhammad Dahlan explained
    in Taba that the Arab world would not accept Israeli force
    deployments inside a Palestinian state that were aimed at other Arab
    states. Furthermore, the Palestinians made clear at Taba that they
    would not accept a demilitarized Palestinian state, either.

    In 2001, Abu Mazen admitted, "Had the Camp David summit been convened
    again, we would have taken the same position" on the permanent status
    issues. Abu Ala, too, expressed no regret at any missed opportunity,
    asserting that he would not agree to what was offered at Camp David
    "even if it were to be proposed in another 100 years from today."

    During the Oslo years, the explicit declarations of Palestinian
    leaders were often ignored and treated as statements for internal
    consumption alone. Wishful thinking was frequently substituted for
    hard analysis. This does not mean that in 2005 no "window of
    opportunity" exists; rather, its actual size must be accurately
    measured. Indeed, in the present context, a partial cease-fire is
    more realistic than significant progress on any of the substantive
    issues raised at Camp David in 2000. What emerges from the following
    analysis is that a full-blown, final status peace accord between
    Israel and the Palestinians is probably more remote today than five
    years ago.

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Revisiting Past Israeli-Palestinian Negotiations
    Arafat's death has been heralded as marking the dawn of a new age and
    a golden opportunity to revive negotiations between Israel and the
    Palestinians. Since Arafat was the main obstacle to peace, the
    thinking goes, the Arab-Israeli peace process can finally be put
    "back on track." Former Secretary of State Warren Christopher wrote
    in the New York Times on December 30, 2004: "Arafat's death makes a
    comprehensive settlement feasible once again."1 Thus, a renewed call
    for negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians has been placed
    at the forefront of today's political debate.

    But is this assessment really correct? It assumes that Arafat stifled
    his more moderate advisors, who are now rising to positions of
    authority from which they will shake off his hard-line legacy. It is
    certainly true that Arafat's departure from the political scene was
    fortuitous, yet the likelihood of productive negotiations today
    remains in serious question. Many analyses of past
    Israeli-Palestinian negotiating failures have focused on Arafat's
    negative role. It may therefore be instructive to revisit the past
    negotiating history and examine the positions of other key
    Palestinian players who are now likely to play a leading political
    role in determining future Palestinian policies on peace.

    Prior to the outbreak of the Palestinian violence in 2000, there were
    several sets of negotiations that are worthy of review, including
    pre-negotiations in Stockholm and the 2000 Camp David summit. Even
    after the violence began there were the Taba talks in 2001. Some
    revisionist historians have placed the blame for the failure of each
    of these talks on tactical mistakes made by the parties involved: if
    only the Palestinians were given more time to prepare for Camp David;
    if only Barak had treated Arafat with more respect; if only the
    negotiators had convened twenty-two times in Stockholm instead of
    twenty. In fact, at that time, the gaps between the two parties on
    nearly every major issue, from borders to Jerusalem to refugees to
    security, were simply too wide to bridge.

    Since the Camp David talks, the political landscape has changed
    dramatically. Bush, Sharon, and Abu Mazen have replaced Clinton,
    Barak, and Arafat. The Palestinian violence has resulted in the
    deaths of thousands. The 9/11 attacks have occurred, and the Taliban
    and Saddam Hussein regimes have been destroyed.

    Negotiations are often risky ventures. Positions need to be soberly
    assessed, the timing must be right, and all the parties must be
    primed to reach a peaceful endgame. So what would happen if Bush
    invited Sharon and Abu Mazen to Camp David today? Are the gaps still
    unbridgeable?



    Clinton's Camp David Peace Summit
    At President Clinton's failed Camp David peace summit in mid-2000,
    Barak offered more than any Israeli prime minister in history. Yet
    the talks exposed vast remaining disparities between Israel and many
    of today's post-Arafat Palestinian leaders on key issues that must be
    considered before the Bush administration dispatches a "presidential
    envoy" or risks convening yet another peace summit in the period
    ahead:

    Refugees:
    Israel agreed to the complete resettlement of Palestinian refugees in
    a Palestinian state but not in Israel itself. Proposals for accepting
    a minimal number of dispossessed Palestinians into Israel on
    "humanitarian grounds" over a period of years were also discussed.
    The Palestinians rejected this and demanded the unlimited return of
    all refugees into Israel. Nabil Shaath told Clinton at Camp David
    that the Palestinians anticipated that 400,000-800,000 Palestinian
    refugees would be expected to go to Israel.2

    In an article in the London Arabic daily al-Hayat, written several
    months after Camp David, Abu Mazen clarified: "The right of return
    means a return to Israel, not to the Palestinian state."3 As recently
    as January 1, 2005, Abu Mazen reiterated in Rafiah: "We won't forget
    the right of return of refugees who have been exiled from their land
    for more than half a century."4 Two days later, he repeated this
    point, adding, "the day will come when the refugees return home."5
    Both Abu Mazen and Abu Ala explicitly reiterated their commitment to
    the "right of return" when they presented their respective
    governments to the Palestinian Legislative Council in 2003.6

    Borders:
    Israel offered to withdraw from over 94 percent of the West Bank and
    all of Gaza, conceding the long-standing principle of "defensible
    borders" and instead accepting international forces in the Jordan
    Valley. The Palestinians insisted that the June 1967 line be the
    recognized international boundary and even demanded the Latrun
    salient, which includes a section of the main Tel Aviv-Jerusalem
    highway. Additionally, the Palestinians rejected any Israeli
    sovereignty over national consensus suburban areas just beyond the
    municipal borders of Jerusalem, such as Maale Adumim and Givat
    Ze'ev.7 According to the notes of EU Special Representative to the
    Peace Process Miguel Moratinos from the Taba talks, the Palestinians
    "did not accept proposals to annex (settlement) blocs" to Israel.8

    Jerusalem:
    Israel proposed making eastern Jerusalem the capital of a Palestinian
    state. Yet the Palestinians rejected any territorial compromise over
    the city; Palestinian spokesmen, such as Abu Ala, even laid claim to
    the western half of Jerusalem as well. Former Foreign Minister Shlomo
    Ben Ami noted that Abu Mazen, who had a reputation for moderation,
    suddenly became energized at Camp David and rejected U.S. proposals
    for compromise on Jerusalem.9 At the end of the Taba talks, even the
    status of the Western Wall remained contested.10 According to
    Moratinos, the Palestinians acknowledged Israel's request for an
    "affiliation" with the Western Wall, but did not explicitly accept
    Israeli sovereignty over it.

    Security Arrangements:
    Israel requested early warning stations in the West Bank for security
    purposes and the right to deploy forces in the event of an Arab
    coalition attack from the east. The Palestinians insisted that no
    Israeli soldier be on any of their territory and also rejected
    Israeli control of air space. As will be clarified later, Muhammad
    Dahlan explained in Taba that the Arab world would not accept Israeli
    force deployments inside a Palestinian state that were aimed at other
    Arab states. Furthermore, the Palestinians made clear at Taba that
    they would not accept a demilitarized Palestinian state, either.

    While Barak came to Camp David to negotiate, Arafat failed to present
    a single idea or serious comment.11 No amount of skillful diplomacy
    could have brought the parties together at that time; despite a
    historic opportunity and heavy U.S. pressure, the Palestinians could
    not be compelled to moderate their demands. Shlomo Ben Ami commented
    that no rational Israeli leader could have concluded a deal at Camp
    David.12 From the outset, the Palestinians knew that they would not
    budge regarding key issues. Feisal Husseini, who held the PA's
    Jerusalem portfolio, and Assad Rahman, who held the refugee portfolio
    on the PLO Executive Committee, did not even attend Camp David.13

    President Clinton wrote that he believed Abu Mazen and Abu Ala would
    have accepted his ideas for peace but didn't want to be at odds with
    Arafat.14 Unfortunately, Arafat's successors have pledged to maintain
    his main ideological goals. Muhammad Dahlan has warned, "I would
    caution against the illusion that when there is a sharp transition
    from Arafat to post-Arafat, the (Palestinian) mythological rules will
    be broken. For there to be legitimacy, there needs to be continuity.
    Those who come after Arafat will want to build their positions on the
    basis of their being his successors."15



    A Moderate Abu Mazen?
    Abu Mazen succeeded Arafat as chairman of the Palestine Liberation
    Organization and is the Fatah faction's candidate to become the next
    Palestinian Authority chairman. Abu Mazen has become known for his
    conclusion that the Palestinian reliance on violence as a political
    tool was a tactical mistake. However, on issues of policy he is
    extremely close to Arafat. He categorically demands the full right of
    return for all Palestinian refugees, despite the clear danger this
    would pose to the future of the Jewish state. He has rejected any
    limitation on the number of refugees allowed to return to Israel,
    "even if they [the Israelis] offered us the return of three million
    refugees."16

    As recently as November 2004, Abu Mazen said, "We promise you
    [Arafat] that our heart will not rest until we achieve the right of
    return for our people and end the tragic refugee issue."17 He also
    rejected proposals to moderate Palestinian goals in exchange for
    formal recognition of their state by the U.S. and a financial support
    package of billions of dollars, saying, "we rejected these [offers]
    and said that our rights are not for sale."18

    Regarding borders, Abu Mazen has said, "I will cut off my hand if it
    signs an agreement in which even one centimeter of Palestinian
    territory conquered in 1967 is missing."19 This language contradicts
    the very deliberate wording of UN Resolution 242, which calls for
    negotiations to determine future borders, and ignores Israel's right
    to "defensible borders." He even said in September 2000 that Israel
    should not have sovereignty over the Jewish Quarter in the Old City
    of Jerusalem or over the Western Wall.20

    On the pre-Camp David preparations, Abu Mazen stated, "We made clear
    to the American and Israeli sides several times that the Palestinian
    side is unable to make concessions on anything" (authors'
    emphasis).21 Thus, it should have come as no surprise when, after the
    most generous offer in Israeli history, Abu Mazen claimed that Camp
    David was "a trap, from beginning to end....We did not miss an
    opportunity at all, but rather survived a trap that was set for
    us."22 Abu Mazen's explanation for turning down the Israeli offer was
    that it "never reached the level of our aspirations."23 Furthermore,
    he concluded, "I don't feel any sense of regret. What we did was the
    right thing to do."24

    Where, then, did Abu Mazen's reputation for political moderation come
    from? Part of this emanated from the mythology of the Oslo peace
    process, with the famous Beilin-Abu Mazen document of October 31,
    1995, which many observers felt proved that Israeli-Palestinian
    differences were indeed bridgeable. Yet Abu Mazen personally told one
    of the authors of this Jerusalem Viewpoints back in 1996 that there
    never was a Beilin-Abu Mazen agreement, for Abu Mazen never signed
    the document. Arafat called the document "a basis for further
    negotiations," which only meant that he hoped to lock in the Israeli
    concessions that were made and continue the discussions to achieve
    further concessions. The myth that Yossi Beilin and Abu Mazen struck
    a detailed understanding, nevertheless, served as critical background
    for the efforts of Israeli and U.S. negotiators to keep working at
    the failed Camp David summit.



    Arafat's Sordid Legacy and the Question of Jerusalem
    Arafat's political legacy endures. Arafat had told an amazed Clinton
    at Camp David that the ancient Jewish Temple never stood in Jerusalem
    but rather in Nablus. Clinton understood, as Dennis Ross has noted,
    that a formula for peace that denies the very foundation of the
    Jewish religion is no solution at all, and only sows the seeds of
    further hated and conflict.

    Yet this isn't just Arafat's contention. PA Minister for
    International Planning and Cooperation Nabil Sha'ath has said,
    "Israel demands control of the Temple Mount based on its claim that
    its fictitious temple stood there."25 PA negotiator Saeb Erekat also
    claimed there is no proof that the Jewish Temple is at the site of
    the Temple Mount.26 PA Prime Minister Abu Ala noted, "The Israelis
    claimed that under the Mosques there is something that belongs to
    them."27 Even so-called moderate Abu Mazen stated that the Jews
    "claim that 2000 years ago they had a temple. I challenge the claim
    that this is so."28

    This denial of the core of Jewish history reflects a potent
    xenophobia that permeates throughout Palestinian society. For
    example, the PA minister for culture and information was infuriated
    at the idea of allowing Jews to even pray on the Temple Mount,
    arguing that the reaction from the Arab and Muslim world would be "a
    thousand times worse" than the 1996 riots.29 Can one imagine a
    similar proposal that denied Christians the right to pray at the
    Vatican, or Muslims the right to pray at the Kaaba in Mecca?

    Palestinian negotiator Hasan Asfour, who was a part of the Oslo
    process since its inception, viewed allowing Jews to pray at the
    Western Wall as "a Palestinian concession. They [Jews] should not
    view this as a right."30 Abu Ala dismissed any discussion of Israeli
    rights to the Western Wall. "It is pointless to discuss [these]
    details before Israel recognizes Palestinian sovereignty in
    Jerusalem."31 And he did not say "east Jerusalem." This is classic
    Arafat. In Ramallah in 2000, Arafat said that the demand for
    sovereignty in Jerusalem "does not only refer to the Church of the
    Holy Sepulchre and the Temple Mount Mosques, and the Armenian
    quarter, but it is Jerusalem in its entirety, entirety, entirety"
    (authors' emphasis).32

    Abu Ala's position on Jerusalem is clear: "We want complete
    Palestinian sovereignty on the Mount of Olives, on the tombs of the
    prophets and on all that you call 'The Holy Basin."33 Similarly, Abu
    Mazen stated that "Jerusalem must return to our sovereignty, and we
    will establish our capital in it."34

    These statements are fueled and inspired by Palestinian religious
    leaders with positions of great influence. For example, the mufti of
    Jerusalem asserted that "no stone of the Al-Buraq [Western] Wall has
    any relation to Judaism. The Jews began praying at this wall only in
    the nineteenth century."35

    Former Arafat advisor Akram Haniya, who also participated in the Camp
    David summit, warned that "[the Americans] are making a grave mistake
    [if they] believe that Arafat can sign an agreement that does not
    answer to their minimum national rights" (authors' emphasis).36 The
    demand for total sovereignty over Jerusalem is a maximalist position
    disguised as a minimalist one that completely disregards the
    centrality of Jerusalem to the Jewish people. Only by shedding this
    facade of minimalism - a myth that was powerfully exposed at Camp
    David - can negotiations progress.

    The European Union as well bears a measure of responsibility for
    fueling Palestinian irredentism. On March 1, 1999, the German
    ambassador to Israel, whose country was serving as the rotating
    president of the European Union, sent a Note Verbale to the Israeli
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs reviving the UN General Assembly's
    outdated proposal for internationalizing Jerusalem. After seven Arab
    armies invaded the nascent State of Israel and the UN did nothing to
    protect Jerusalem, Israel's first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion,
    declared the old UN proposal "null and void." Still, the Germans were
    prepared to state in 1999: "The European Union reaffirms its known
    position concerning the specific status of Jerusalem as a corpus
    separatum. Abu Ala seized this opportunity to challenge Israeli
    sovereignty over any part of Jerusalem, stating, "The [EU's] letter
    asserts that Jerusalem in both its parts - the western and the
    eastern - is a land under occupation.37

    In 2002, the head of Israeli military intelligence, Major General
    Aharon Ze'evi (Farkash), noted: "According to the assessment of the
    Intelligence Branch, it is impossible to reach an agreement with
    Arafat on the 'end of conflict,' even if Israel would agree to the
    implementation of the right of return, withdrawal to the '67 borders,
    division of Jerusalem, and handing over the Holy Places to
    Palestinian rule."38 Former Prime Minister Barak said IDF
    intelligence gave the Camp David talks a less than 50 percent chance
    of succeeding.39

    After Camp David, Abu Ala stated that "in order for an additional
    summit to be convened, the Israeli position must come closer to the
    Palestinian position, rather than the other way around."40 Abu Ala's
    position regarding borders is that the Palestinian "state has
    internationally recognized borders, which are the borders set in the
    [1947] partition resolution."41 Ironically, it was the Palestinians
    who rejected the 1947 UN partition plan.

    Some in the Arab world understood the enormity of Barak's offer at
    Camp David and the lengths to which Israel was willing to go for
    peace. Prince Bandar, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Washington, placed
    the blame squarely on Arafat, saying, "Clinton...really tried his
    best...and Barak's position was so avant-garde that it was equal to
    Prime Minister Rabin...it broke my heart that Arafat did not take
    that offer."42 The long-serving Saudi ambassador believed Barak's
    offer indeed met the Palestinians' "minimum national rights."



    The Questions of Security and Land
    The need for an Israeli security presence in the West Bank,
    especially the right to deploy in an emergency, is a security
    imperative founded on the historical reality of repeated attacks by
    surrounding countries and cross-border incursions. Nevertheless,
    Palestinian security chief Mohammed Dahlan categorically rejected any
    such arrangement. Dennis Ross writes, "Mohamed Dahlan was dead set
    against any Israeli or foreign presence in the border crossing and
    rejected the idea that the Israelis should have guaranteed access
    routes into the West Bank."43 Ross seems genuinely surprised that
    Dahlan was most resistant on security - the issue on which he
    expected the least difficulty in reaching a compromise.44

    Dahlan's hard line on security was additionally surprising because he
    came from the younger generation of Palestinian leaders who were
    expected to be more pragmatic than the old PLO ideologues. But that
    clearly was not the case. In fact, the main security issues were not
    resolved at Camp David, including early warning stations, control of
    air space, demilitarization, Israeli presence in the Jordan Valley,
    and management of border crossings. Even on the issue of Israeli
    emergency access to the West Bank, Ross writes that the parties faced
    "basic disagreements."45

    During the Taba talks, Gilead Sher noted that on security issues,
    "the main disputes remained."46 Similarly, Shlomo Ben Ami wrote,
    "Regarding security the Palestinians opposed the fundamental
    assumptions of the [Clinton] outline, and practically are retreating
    from what was conceded at Camp David....'You have no need,' [Dahlan]
    says, 'for emergency deployment areas; the Arabs world will not
    accept this kind of deployment in the territory of the Palestinian
    state against another Arab state.'"47

    Regarding Israel's territorial offers as well, the gaps were
    unbridgeable. In discussing the Israeli offer of 3 percent of Israeli
    territory in exchange for annexing 6 percent of the West Bank, Ben
    Ami concluded: "we reached the end of our ability to show further
    flexibility."48 Yet Abu Ala viewed this formula as unacceptable.49 At
    Taba, Abu Ala expressed dismay at an Israeli map that showed the
    annexation of the Latrun salient. He continued, "we have a problem
    with Gush Etzion and there is no chance that we can accept the
    annexation of [Jerusalem suburbs] Maale Adumim, Givat Ze'ev, and Har
    Homa [within municipal Jerusalem] to Israel."50



    "Only Arafat"
    Chief U.S. negotiator Dennis Ross, in his 840-page account of Camp
    David and the peace process, The Missing Peace, wrote: "Whenever my
    exasperation with Arafat was reaching its limits, Abu Mazen, Abu Ala,
    or Mohammed Dahlan (or Yossi Ginossar) would remind me that only
    Arafat had the moral authority among Palestinians to compromise on
    Jerusalem, refugees, and borders....Often Abu Mazen or Abu Ala or
    other Palestinian negotiators would tell me 'You prefer dealing with
    us because you see us as more moderate, but we cannot deliver, only
    he can.'"51 Thus, even if Abu Mazen or Abu Ala were moderate and
    willing to compromise on primary issues, by their own account, they
    would not be able to carry out such agreements. It is vital to
    recognize the inherent limitations of the PA.

    Furthermore, it remains an open question whether Abu Mazen will act
    to disarm the radical groups. On January 1, 2005, he told a campaign
    rally in Rafiah in Gaza that the Palestinian leadership had a duty to
    protect militants wanted by Israel and indicated that he did not
    intend to crack down on them.52 This view is shared by Abu Mujahed,
    one of the local commanders of the Aksa Martyrs Brigades in Balata
    near Nablus, who said, "We don't believe that Abu Mazen will allow
    anyone to confiscate our weapons."53

    This would be in line with Abu Mazen's previous record when he was PA
    prime minister during the short-lived hudna (temporary cease-fire) in
    the summer of 2003, when he stated, "Cracking down on Hamas, Jihad,
    and the Palestinian organizations is not an option at all."54



    Israel's Post-Arafat Position
    For more than four years, Israel has been subject to a relentless
    barrage of suicide bombings, sniping attacks, and Kassam rockets.
    Over 1,000 Israelis have been killed and thousands more have been
    injured. Throughout this period the Palestinian Authority either
    explicitly aided terrorism or did nothing to curb it. Israel cannot
    disregard the record of the past four years and cede its very real
    security needs for defensible borders, early warning stations,
    intelligence-gathering capabilities, and freedom of movement.

    Were Israel to withdraw from the Jordan Valley, for example, then
    many of the armaments today being used by insurgents in Western Iraq
    and Saudi Arabia could be diverted to the hills of the West Bank.
    During the Oslo years, Israel was prepared to take risks based on the
    hope that Palestinian intentions had changed. This time Israel will
    not take the same risks, but will instead preserve its defensive
    capabilities, particularly those pertaining to territory.

    Israel's claim has been bolstered by President Bush's April 14, 2004,
    letter to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon recognizing Israel's right to
    "defensible borders" that would enhance Israel's own self-defense
    capabilities instead of using the kinds of international forces
    envisioned in President Clinton's post-Camp David proposals. In
    short, today, after four years of bloodshed and painful losses,
    Israel has more robust requirements for its defense compared to what
    was being considered in 2000.



    Camp David III: Slim Chance for Success
    In 2001, Abu Mazen admitted, "Had the Camp David summit been convened
    again, we would have taken the same position" on the permanent status
    issues.55 Abu Ala, too, expressed no regret at any missed
    opportunity, asserting that he would not agree to what was offered at
    Camp David "even if it were to be proposed in another 100 years from
    today."56 He also insists that all Palestinian refugees should return
    to their homes in Israel, saying, "the principle of the right of
    return is sacred."57

    True, Abu Mazen does not wear Arafat's military uniform; he has
    openly stated that violence does not serve the Palestinian interest;
    whether he will crack down on armed groups still remains extremely
    doubtful. Nevertheless, even his most forthcoming statements do not
    indicate that Abu Mazen has rejected Arafat's political legacy in any
    way, and that he is more prepared to show flexibility on key issues
    that separate Israel from the Palestinians.

    Moreover, Palestinian leaders such as Abu Ala have yet to overcome
    their fundamental rejection of Israel's right to maintain its Jewish
    character. After President Bush referred to Israel as a Jewish state
    at the 2003 Aqaba summit, Abu Ala said Bush's words "aroused great
    concern among us. These words should not have been said....These are
    definitions that will bring the region into turmoil."58 Abu Ala has
    even voiced interest in "starting new negotiations on Haifa, Jaffa,
    and Safed."59

    Diplomatic initiatives must be preceded by a very careful assessment
    of the real positions of the parties in order to first ascertain
    whether bridgeable differences actually exist. Unfortunately, during
    the Oslo years, the explicit declarations of Palestinian leaders were
    often ignored and treated as statements for internal consumption
    alone. Wishful thinking was frequently substituted for hard analysis.
    This does not mean that in 2005 no "window of opportunity" exists;
    rather, its actual size must be accurately measured. Indeed, in the
    present context, a partial cease-fire is more realistic than
    significant progress on any of the substantive issues raised at Camp
    David in 2000. What emerges from the foregoing analysis is that a
    full-blown, final status peace accord between Israel and the
    Palestinians is probably more remote today than five years ago.

    * * *

    Notes
    1. Warren Christopher, "Diplomacy That Can't Be Delegated," New York
    Times, December 30, 2004.
    2. Shlomo Ben-Ami, A Front Without a Rearguard: A Voyage to the
    Boundaries of the Peace Process (Tel Aviv: Yediot Ahronot Books,
    2004) (Hebrew), p. 215.
    3. Al-Hayat (London), November 23, 2003, cited by Yael Yehoshua, "Abu
    Mazen: A Political Profile," MEMRI Special Report No. 15, April 29,
    2003.
    4. Arnon Regular, "'We Won't Forget the Right of Return,' Abu Mazen
    Says and Earned Praise in Rafiah," Ha'aretz, January 2, 2005.
    5. Ibrahim Barzak, "Abbas Pledges Palestinian Refugees Will Return to
    Homes in Israel, Endorsing Stand That Has Torpedoed Peace Efforts,
    AP/San Diego Union Tribune, January 3, 2005;
    http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20050103-1430-israel-palestinians.html
    6. http://www.pna.gov.ps/Arabic/details.asp?DocId=124 ; and "Yasser
    Arafat and Ahmad Qurei (Abu 'Alaa) Speeches to PA Legislative Council
    Prior to Vote on New Government," MEMRI, January 15, 2004.
    7. Charles Enderlin, Shattered Dreams: The Failure of the Peace
    Process in the Middle East, 1995-2002 (New York: Other Press 2002),
    p. 353.
    8. Ha'aretz, February 17, 2002.
    9. Ben-Ami, A Front Without a Rearguard, p. 190.
    10. Enderlin, Shattered Dreams, p. 354.
    11. Dennis Ross, The Missing Peace (New York: Farrar, Straus and
    Giroux, 2004), p. 705.
    12. Itamar Rabinovich, Waging Peace (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
    University Press, 2004), p. 163.
    13. Uri Horowitz, "Camp David 2 and President Clinton's Bridging
    Proposals - The Palestinian View," Jaffee Center for Strategic
    Studies, January 2001; http://www.tau.ac.il/jcss/sa/v3n4p5.html
    14. Bill Clinton, My Life (London: Hutchison, 2004), p. 944.
    15. Maariv, April 6, 2001; Dore Gold, "Jerusalem in International
    Diplomacy," Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, May 2001, p. 53.
    16. Yigal Carmon and Aluma Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for
    a Final Settlement," MEMRI, August 4, 2000, quoting Al-Ayyam, July
    30, 2000; http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=ia&ID=IA3500
    17. Ewen MacAskill, "Blair May Visit Israel to Revive Peace Process,"
    Guardian, November 24, 2004;
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,2763,1358070,00.html
    18. Carmon and Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for a Final
    Settlement," quoting Al-Ayyam, July 30, 2000.
    19. Yotam Feldner, "The (Revised) Palestinian Account of Camp David,
    Part II: Jerusalem and Territorial Withdrawal," MEMRI, September 7,
    2001, quoting Al-Quds, November 11, 1998;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=subjects&Area=conflict&I D=IA6901
    20. Abu Mazen's speech at the meeting of the PLO's Palestinian
    Central Council, September 9, 2000;
    http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/172d1a3302dc903b85256e37005bd90f?OpenDocument
    21. "Abu Mazen: Had Camp David Convened Again, We Would Take the Same
    Positions, Part I," MEMRI, August 1, 2001, quoting Al-Ayyam, July 28,
    2001;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=middleeast&ID=SP24901
    22. Saul Singer, "Who's Fault Was the Failure of Camp David,"
    Jerusalem Viewpoints no. 474, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs,
    March 15, 2002; http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp474.htm
    23. "Abu Mazen: Had Camp David Convened Again, We Would Take the Same
    Positions, Part I."
    24. Palestinian National Authority, August 2, 2001, quoting Al-Ayyam,
    July 28, 2001; http://www.pna.gov.ps/subject_details2.asp?DocId=245
    25. Ricki Hollander, "CNN.com Mangles Facts in Jerusalem Feature,"
    September 1, 2003, quoting Al-Ayyam, July 27, 2000;
    http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_article=576&x_context=3
    26. Carmon and Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for a Final
    Settlement," quoting Ha'aretz, July 27, 2000.
    27. Carmon and Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for a Final
    Settlement," quoting Al-Ayyam, July 30, 2000.
    28. Yael Yehoshua, "Abu Mazen: A Political Profile," MEMRI, April 29,
    2003, quoting Kul Al-Arab, August 25, 2000;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=sr&ID=SR01503
    29. Amnon Kapeliouk, "Camp David Dialogues," Le Monde Diplomatique,
    September 2000; http://mondediplo.com/2000/09/08campdavid
    30. Gold, Jerusalem in International Diplomacy, p. 52, quoting Voice
    of Palestine, September 17, 2000.
    31. Carmon and Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for a Final
    Settlement," quoting Al-Quds, July 25, 2000.
    32. Carmon and Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for a Final
    Settlement," quoting Al-Hayat Al-Jadida.
    33. Gilead Sher, Just Beyond Reach: The Israeli Palestinian
    Negotiations 1999-2001 (Tel Aviv: Yediot Ahronot, 2001) (Hebrew), p.
    410.
    34. Yehoshua, "Abu Mazen: A Political Profile."
    35. "East Jerusalem and the Holy Places at the Camp David Summit,"
    MEMRI, August 28, 2000, quoting Kul Al-Arab, August 18, 2000;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=subjects&Area=conflict&I D=SP12100
    36. Carmon and Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for a Final
    Settlement," quoting Al-Ayyam, July 29, 2000.
    37. Gold, Jerusalem in International Diplomacy, p. 33.
    38. Singer, "Who's Fault Was the Failure of Camp David," quoting
    Maariv, January 23, 2002.
    39. Benny Morris, "Camp David and After: An Exchange - 1. An
    Interview with Ehud Barak," New York Review of Books, June 13, 2002;
    http://www.nybooks.com/articles/15501
    40. Yigal Carmon and Aluma Solnik, "Camp David and the Prospects for
    a Final Settlement, Part II: Reactions and Implications," MEMRI,
    August 7, 2000, quoting Al-Ayyam, July 30, 2000;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=ia&ID=IA3600
    41. "Abu Ala: 'The Borders of the Palestinian State Are Those Set By
    the 1947 UN Partition Plan,'" MEMRI, December 21, 1998, quoting
    Al-Hayyat Al-Jadida, December 21, 1998;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=subjects&Area=conflict&I D=SP1898
    42. Rabinovich, Waging Peace, p. 166.
    43. Ross, The Missing Peace, p. 703.
    44. Ross, The Missing Peace, p. 725.
    45. Ross, The Missing Peace, pp. 702-703.
    46. Sher, Just Beyond Reach, p. 406.
    47. Ben-Ami, A Front Without a Rearguard, p. 432.
    48. Ben-Ami, A Front Without a Rearguard, p. 435.
    49. Ben-Ami, A Front Without a Rearguard, p. 432.
    50. Sher, Just Beyond Reach, pp. 404-405.
    51. Ross, The Missing Peace.
    52. Greg Myre, "Abbas Sees Duty to Shield the Militants," New York
    Times, January 2, 2005;
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/02/international/middleeast/02mideast.html
    53. Khaled Abu Toameh, "Interview with a Gunman," Jerusalem Post,
    January 3, 2005;
    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowF ull&cid=1104643912526
    54. Nadia Abou El-Magd, "Defiant Abbas Rules Out Crackdown on
    Militants," Associated Press, July 24, 2003;
    http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2003/07/23/1058853137567.htm
    55. Yehoshua, "Abu Mazen: A Political Profile," quoting Al-Ayyam,
    July 28, 2001.
    56. Y. Yehoshua and B. Chernitsky, "Ahmad Qurei'- Abu 'Alaa: A Brief
    Political Profile of the Nominated Palestinian Prime Minister,"
    MEMRI, September 18, 2003, quoting Al-Watan, July 25, 2001;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=subjects&Area=conflict&I D=IA14703
    57. Yehoshua and Chernitsky, "Ahmad Qurei'- Abu 'Alaa," quoting
    Al-Hayat Al-Jadida, December 20, 2000.
    58. "Interview with PLC Head Ahmad Qurei (Abu Alaa)," MEMRI, July 3,
    2003, quoting Al-Nahar, June 12, 2003;
    http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Area=sd&ID=SP53403#_edn1
    59. Yehoshua and Chernitsky, "Ahmad Qurei'- Abu 'Alaa," quoting
    Al-Nahar (Jerusalem), June 28, 1996.

    * * *

    Dore Gold is President of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.
    Previously, he served as Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations
    (1997-1999), Foreign Policy Advisor to former Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu, and advisor to Prime Minster Ariel Sharon. He was involved
    in Israeli-Palestinian negotiations between 1996 and 1998 in both the
    Hebron Protocol and the Wye Plantation Conference. He is the author
    of Hatred's Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global
    Terrorism (Regnery, 2003), and Tower of Babble: How the United
    Nations Has Fueled Global Chaos (Crown Forum 2004).

    David Keyes is specializing on terrorism at the Jerusalem Center for
    Public Affairs and is assisting Dr. Dore Gold. His most recent
    Jerusalem Viewpoints, "Will a Gaza 'Hamas-stan' Become a Future
    al-Qaeda Sanctuary?" (November 2004), was co-authored with Maj.-Gen.
    (res.) Yaakov Amidror.
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