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This is a losing game. Why did a clear-eyed, results-oriented man like George W. Bush decide to play? Why did a president who is as committed to victory in the war on terror as Ronald Reagan was in the Cold War embrace a plan that brought us a decade of failures? The press-reflex answer is "because there's no alternative," but in fact, there's a good one: the Elon Plan. It's a compassionate variant on the pre-Oslo plan for two states: an Arab state called Jordan with three quarters of the original 1920s Mandate land; an Israeli state with one quarter; and the River Jordan between them a clear, mutually defensible border. Why did Dubya ignore the Elon Plan, and march down the bloody Oslo Road, one more time. Does he really like the odds this time? Maybe, but I don't think so. I think Dubya knows the odds against ever reaching peace on the Oslo Road are a million to one. I don't think he's counting on the Arabs who call themselves Palestinians to stop celebrating and practicing terror any more than he counted on the U.N. to stop appeasing it. I think he is giving the Palestinians a last chance to choose statehood or continued terror for the same reason he gave the U.N. a last chance to choose between defeating Saddam Hussein's terror state or continuing to appease it. He did it because a democratic leader cannot simply tell his countrymen that widely believed fantasies are just that. He has to show them. THE
U.N.'S CHANCE Ordinary Americans
wanted the U.N.'s blessing because back in September 2002, they still
saw the building on the East River through a fantasy haze. The reality
of the U.N.'s actions in Srebrenica, Rwanda, and other horror sites was
largely invisible to them. They had felt no stake in those places, and
paid too little attention to understand the ugly role the U.N. played.
They didn't see that the U.N. had become a profoundly corrupt marketplace
a bazaar where all-hat-and-no-cattle, old-Europe types strut about,
making deals with third-world dictators to appease terrorists, humble
"the hyperpower," and reap lavish profits from the world's misfortunes.
They thought that the U.N. had something to do with justice, that Kofi
Annan was a humanitarian, that the French and the Belgians were our friends,
and that we needed the U.N.'s blessing to give our actions moral
legitimacy. But the American people paid attention to the real U.N. this time they had a felt stake in the outcome and they hated what they saw. When their illusions were stripped away and their patience was exhausted, Dubya went to war. He still didn't have the backing of the U.N., but he had what he needed: strong support for necessary military action from an American public that understood, at last, that there is no "international community," only friendly nations and hostile ones, and that the U.N. is dominated by the latter. GEORGE
W. BUSH, LEADER When Dubya went to Aqaba in June, 2003 to give the Arabs who migrated west of the River Jordan in the last half century one more chance to choose statehood over terror, most Americans approved. They care about the tiny triangle between the River Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea because it is the birthplace of monotheism, the earthly home of Jesus of Nazareth, and the source of the Judeo-Christian tradition that molded this nation in the past, and molds it still. Americans see television images of the slaughter of innocents there, year after year, the bloody aftermath of repeated suicide bombings of Israeli busses, markets and cafes, and they want their president to do something to make it stop, to end the terror, and bring peace to the Holy Land. On TV, they see one brightly hyped peace summit after another, and they see the terror continue as before, year after year. They know something always goes wrong, but they don't know why, and the eye-glazing morass of details they get in the press gives them no clue. They don't know there is an honest, one word answer: Terror. They don't know that every peace plan of the last ten years has failed because the Palestinians wouldn't stop launching terror attacks. They don't know that given the choice between terror and statehood, the Palestinians chose terror every time. They don't see it because they see the Arabs who call themselves Palestinians the way they saw the U.N. ten months ago: through a fantasy haze. By the time President Bush went to Aqaba, most Americans had already shed their fantasies about Yasser Arafat. They understand that he is a corrupt and evil tyrant, much like Saddam Hussein, but many still think the great majority of Palestinians are ordinary people like us, people who just want to raise their families in peace. They think the Palestinian people hate and fear the terror warriors who rule them, the way most Iraqis hate Saddam Hussein and his Baathist thugs, and an even larger majority of Iranians hate their ruling mullahs and the revolutionary guards and foreign mercenaries often, Palestinians who keep them in power. Americans see the frequent Palestinian-street demonstrations on TV, see Palestinians in their thousands, hero-worshipping terrorists and celebrating one bloody act of terror after another against us on 9/11 and against Israelis week after week but they think most Palestinians really want peace, and only embrace war in public to avoid being tortured and killed, as so many Iraqis and Iranians were. THE
PALESTINIAN STREET Terrorism is not an alien idea, forced upon the Palestinian people by tyrannical rulers; it's the idea that made Arabs in Judea and Samaria shed their Jordanian citizenship in 1967 and call themselves "Palestinians." They adopted this new name the name Roman conquerors gave the people of Israel 2,000 years ago in order to claim the lands of the Jews for themselves, despite the defeat of the attacking armies of Jordan, Syria, Egypt, and Iraq in the Six-Day War. Calling themselves Palestinians was a way of saying: "The war is not over. Arab armies were defeated; the Arab people were not, and we, the Palestinian vanguard will lead them to victory, destroying Israel from within by bringing terror to the Jewish heartland. Terror will succeed where armies failed, slowly bleeding Israel dry, forcing her to retreat, and great America with her. They'll march together down the road of appeasement, and in the end, our triumph will be total: Israel annihilated; America humiliated." Palestinians are not stupid; they know Arafat is corrupt, but he remains popular, because defeating us is what matters most, and at that, he has been amazingly successful. It's not hopelessness that makes Palestinians resort to terror, over and over again. It is hope, the hope of complete and final victory. Terrorism is the
core of the new Palestinian identity that West Bank Arabs created in 1967;
it has been the sum and substance of their short history and their culture
ever since, the defining mark of all the heroes they teach their children
to admire and emulate. As long as they cling to that identity, they will
continue to embrace terrorism. Trying to create a peaceful Palestinian
state is not like trying to create a peaceful Iraqi or Iranian state,
an endeavor at which we can and will succeed, albeit not easily; it's
like trying to create a peaceful al Qaeda state a contradiction
in terms. A Palestinian state would be a terror state, a victory for terrorists
everywhere, and a stunning defeat for America in the terror war. I may be wrong, but I don't think Dubya will do that. Ever since 9/11, he's been telling us that we're going to win the terror war, to defeat terror, not appease it, and repeating his other favorite saying: "I mean what I say." If he does, he won't accept continuing Palestinian terror; he'll focus a steady, haze-cutting presidential spotlight on it, helping the American people see terror for what it is the raison d'etre of a Palestinian state, west of the River. First, though, he'll go all out to show America and a new Coalition of the Willing that we're giving the Palestinians the best chance they've ever had to create something better. He's already gone the extra mile by refusing to deal with Arafat. He couldn't give the Palestinians a leader uncompromised by terror Abu Mazen's hands are not clean but he's the closest thing to a man of peace that Palestinians have, and Dubya is giving him lots of time to try to consolidate his position and a ton of help to do it, backing him with his personal prestige, leaning on Egypt and Jordan to do the same, sending Condoleezza Rice as well as Colin Powell to meet with him, helping to fund and train a new Palestinian police force, and funneling more money directly to him, to make sure he has the wherewithal to compete with the likes of Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, and the Saudis, Iranians and Syrians, in doling out welfare. And when, despite all this, the terror continues, month after month, or stops for a minute and then flares up again with some grotesque excuse because the Israelis refuse to release prisoners who are covered in the blood of innocents, or to make the entire West Bank Judenrein, or to cut their capital in half again, or to allow only Arabs, not Jews and Christians, to pray on the Temple Mount, I think George W. Bush will finally say: 'It's over. You had your chance to build a peaceful new state called Palestine, and you rejected it. Now, you must go back to being Jordanians.' When? My guess is, in the autumn, but I've been wrong before, not about Dubya's intent, but about his timing. I thought he'd attack Iraq in January. He waited until March. But this time, he may have to be quicker, because some 50 million Evangelical Christians about a quarter of the electorate already see the Palestinians as they are, and they're impatient now. If George W. Bush is the man I think he is, he will surprise and delight them, and a lot of other Americans too, by bringing real peace to the Holy Land before this year is out. The Elon plan offers him a way to do just that, without necessitating massive, forced population transfers of Arabs or Jews. It would make all Palestinians Jordanian citizens again, give those who don't belong to terrorist organizations the option to stay in Israel as peaceful Jordanian guests, and encourage those who cannot abide living in a Jewish state to join their fellows in Jordan by giving them generous subsidies to make new lives for themselves as full citizens not permanent "refugees" on the east side of the River. It envisions a kind of Marshall Plan for Jordan, a chance to turn away from battling and blaming Israel and claiming her lands. A chance for Jordan to do what the people of neighboring Iraq are doing: struggling to build a freer, safer, more prosperous country. Barbara Lerner is a freelance writer in Chicago who spent a month in Israel earlier this year. |
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