Washington Watch: Public diplomacy, not threats, needed
Getting the Israelis and Palestinians to the peace table wasn’t easy, and keeping them there is proving a challenge for a very determined Secretary of State John Kerry.
By DOUGLAS M. BLOOMFIELD
Getting the Israelis and Palestinians to the peace table wasn’t easy, and keeping them there is proving a challenge for a very determined Secretary of State John Kerry. His greatest worry has to be that both sides may be looking for a blame-avoiding excuse to take a walk.That may have been part of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s decision to announce he was calling off the fourth session of secret talks, which was to have been held Monday in Jericho. His excuse was the violent clash in the Kalandiya refugee camp near Ramallah earlier that day that left three Palestinians dead and several wounded when a large crowd attacked Israeli soldiers who had gone in to arrest a suspected terrorist.But Abbas may have had something else in mind.Instead of saying such encounters emphasize the need for a peace agreement he went in the opposite direction, focusing instead on escalating his threats against Israel and using the incident to press his demand for direct American intervention in the talks.His spokesman repeated old threats to file charges of war crimes, ethnic cleansing, genocide and other offenses in the World Court and various other international agencies in response to the Kalandiya incident and continued settlement construction. That doesn’t sound like a confidence-building measure by one who says he wants a peaceful end to the conflict.Abbas has to decide whether he wants to poison the well or make peace. He can’t have it both ways. Similarly Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s expanded settlement construction is also well poison in the eyes of many.In Palestinian-Israeli negotiations it has become irritatingly common for each side to declare its purity of heart and genuine desire for peace while questioning the other’s intentions and integrity.It would appear that the last thing the Palestinians want is to be alone in the room with the Israelis.And the last thing Netanyahu wants is to have the Americans at the table, where he fears he could be outnumbered.The Palestinian leadership is accusing the US of not taking the talks seriously enough and demanding Washington “immediately intervene and block a complete collapse of the peace process.”