Mr. Olmert Visits Washington

May 16, 2006, 9:00 am
  


 



by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun*
May 16, 2006
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3582
* Cross-posted with permission

It’s a grand occasion when a new Israeli prime minister makes an inaugural visit to Washington. He typically meets with the president, addresses a joint meeting of Congress, appears on plum television shows, talks to influential audiences, and consults privately with a range of leading figures. Personality, pomp, and substance mix together as the two heads of government establish a working relationship, the U.S.-Israel bond is reconfirmed, and issues relating to the Arab-Israeli conflict are reviewed.

When Ehud Olmert arrives in a few days, the key policy issue will concern what he refers to as the “convergence plan,” a follow-up to the Gaza withdrawal of mid-2005 with a comparable but larger removal of Israeli soldiers and residents from the West Bank.

David Makovsky has pulled together the several components of this far-reaching plan in a recent Washington Institute for Near East Policy study, Olmert’s Unilateral Option: An Early Assessment. These include:

Israel’s security fence will serve as the baseline for a boundary with the West Bank, 92% of which will come under Palestinian Authority control. Israel will retain three residential blocs (Gush Etzion, Maale Adumim, and Ariel) with an estimated 193,000 Israeli civilians, but at least 60,000 Israeli civilians will be evacuated by 2010 from the West Bank, using force if necessary. Arab neighborhoods in Jerusalem will be incorporated in the West Bank, reducing that city’s Arab population by 140,000. Conspicuously, the plan does not address the future of Israel’s military presence.

The Israeli plan may be unilateral in nature, but Mr. Makovsky notes that even unilateralism requires negotiations. Accordingly, Mr. Olmert will seek U.S. diplomatic and financial support for withdrawal during his forthcoming Washington visit. That support appears inevitable, for the U.S. government never opposes Israeli withdrawal from territory.

But before the president and congress rubber-stamp Mr. Olmert’s initiative, they might consider some of its negative implications for American security as spelled out in an important report by Caroline Glick for the Center for Security Policy. In Ehud Olmert’s “Convergence” Plan for the West Bank and U.S. Middle East Policy. Ms. Glick cautions that Mr. Olmert’s plan likely will harm U.S. security interests by destabilizing Israel and Jordan.

In painstaking detail, she documents how the 2005 Israeli retreat from Gaza radicalized Palestinian Arab society, caused Gaza to descend into anarchy, opened it to global terror forces, jeopardized Israel’s national infrastructure, tied down Israeli troops, permitted the build-up of a substantial Palestinian arsenal, and created a range of new Israeli problems with Egypt.

She predicts that, in similar fashion, handing territory to the Palestinian Authority will destabilize the West Bank, harm Israel, and “directly threaten the survivability of the Hashemites” in Jordan. This damage will have many negative implications for the United States, she argues, by:

  • Endangering U.S. military assets warehoused in Israel and Jordan.
  • Enhancing the prestige of states that sponsor Palestinian Arab terrorists.
  • Strengthening the Hamas-run Palestinian Authority which, with its Syrian, Iranian, and Hezbollah allies, will provide what Ms. Glick calls “a training, logistics and information warfare base” for terrorist groups at war with the United States.
  • Threatening the land routes through Israel and Jordan that supply U.S. forces in Iraq.
  • Enabling terrorists fighting American forces in Iraq to establish training bases in the West Bank.
  • Creating a perception of weakness, given that Israel is so widely seen as an agent of Washington.
  • Gratuitously handing a victory to Islamists and jihadists.

The U.S. government has since the 1950s invariably encouraged Israeli governments to withdraw from territory, and I expect that pattern to continue. But it bears notice that several members of Congress – including Senators Charles Schumer and Jesse Helms – have voiced their concerns when they see Jerusalem endangering its security by giving up too much land. Could such caution not conceivably take hold within the executive branch too?

Against all hope in December 2000, I appealed to the Clinton administration to buck up its faltering ally by adopting several measures, in particular the discouragement of further Israeli territorial concessions. Today, I appeal to the Bush administration to recognize how wretchedly the Gaza withdrawal is turning out, to look beyond the easy attractions of another Israeli retreat, and to be aware of the dangers of a unilateral retreat by Israel on the West Bank for it, for Jordan, and for the United States.


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One Response to “Mr. Olmert Visits Washington”

  1. Bill Narvey Says:

    Daniel Pipes is no fan of Ehud Olmert’s “Convergence Plan”.

    Dr. Pipes notes the substantial preliminary analysis of Olmert’s “Convergence Plan” by David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy study, entitled “Olmert’s Unilateral Option: An Early Assessment”. Though providing the full text of Mr. Makovsky’s report, he only briefly comments on same.

    Where Dr. Pipes stands on Olmert’s “Convergence Plan” can be readily seen from his more detailed and favorable comments on Caroline Glick’s conclusions in what he describes as her important report for the Center for Security Policy, entitled “In Ehud Olmert’s “Convergence” Plan for the West Bank and U.S. Middle East Policy.” That report sets out in detail the reasons for Ms. Glick’s caution that Mr. Olmert’s plan likely will harm U.S. security interests by destabilizing Israel and Jordan.

    With Olmert securing a majority coalition, being more comfortable therefor to more boldly state and explain his “Convergence Plan”, he is meeting in Washington to try to secure support. As Dr. Pipes notes, any Israeli move to withdraw from the West Bank will find a favorable hearing to an extent, though the Bush Administration will be cautious in not giving Olmert the green light for unilateral withdrawl.

    Olmert however should be able to walk away from Washington with some semblance of support.

    There is a recent factor that has come to light which the Israeli government thus far seems to have ignored.

    A recent poll in March 2006 by the Israel Democracy Institute and reported by Angus Reid Global Scan, concluded that a majority of Israelis believe their country should remain predominantly Jewish. The poll that had a very low 2.9% margin of error, found that 62 per cent of Israeli respondents believe the government should encourage Arabs to emigrate.

    This poll result might be a blip, having to do with a brief dreamy flirtation with the notion advanced by a group of Israelis who were offering to pay Palestinians to leave Israel.

    On the other hand, it could well reveal a substantial and growing trend in Israelis’ mood and thinking. If this trend is as real and substantial as the numbers suggest, giving political expression to the majority Israeli electorate’s views and wishes requires the government to back off its “Convergence Plan” and turn to making emigration of Palestinians from Israel and the West Bank attractive and a very real option.

    Mr. Makovsky notes that Olmert’s “Convergence Plan” will cost a great many billions of dollars to implement. Israel certainly cannot afford that cost and would need financial support to carry it off.

    Appeals to Palestinians sense of decency to get them to swear off terrorism against Israel have to say the least not been successful. With a majority of Palestinians supporting the goals of Hamas as regards Israel, such appeals to Hamas and the Palestinian people will not register.

    Where such appeals to Palestinians to unequivocally recognize and respect Israel’s right to exist in peace have failed, appeals to the pocketbooks of Palestinians may have greater success.

    Combined with Israeli Shekels and the much greater billions of dollars now thrown down the Palestinian sewers with nothing to show for it, generous payments directly into the pockets of Palestinians in the West Bank to leave for either Arab/Muslim nations or to other nations in the world prepared to accept them may provide a much more plausible and feasible means of resolving the Palestinian - Israeli conflict and which plan could see Israel extending its permanent borders to Jordan.

    Jordan and Egypt would certainly feel good about having an Israeli neighbor that posed no threat to them, whereas already Egypt has reason to worry about Palestinian radicalism in Gaza and Jordan has that same concern with Palestinians in the West Bank.

    Certainly buying off Palestinians to leave the territories is not ideologically acceptable to the Arab/Palestinian leaders, but ideology has not filled their stomachs and given them a modicum of a good and stable life.

    Show the Palestinians the money and see what happens!

    Cross posted - Israpundit

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