Mike Ghouse for security of Israel and Justice for Palestinians
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Why is Israel so afraid of the Arab Peace Initiative?
It promises full diplomatic ties with the Muslim world, including Iran. It’s the ‘best idea ever,’ says an ex-Likud minister. So why does the government reject the Arab world’s ostensible path to peace?
                                      By Raphael Ahren
                                     June 18, 2013, 12:43 pm
                                        105
                
Israel
 could easily make peace with Iran: it only needs to evacuate some 
settlements, allow a few Palestinian refugees to enter Israel, and the 
bitter enmity between Jerusalem and Tehran is a thing of the past. 
Of course, it’s not quite that simple — but there is a theoretical kernel of truth to the aforementioned proposition. According
 to the Arab Peace Initiative, 57 Arab and Muslim states will establish 
“full diplomatic and normal relations” with Israel, in exchange for a 
“comprehensive peace agreement” with the Palestinians. The Islamic 
Republic of Iran is among the countries that endorse the initiative. 
Though not Arab, Iran is a member state of the
 Organization of Islamic Cooperation, which time and again expressed its
 support for the Arab Peace Initiative, including this past May in 
Cairo.
A decade earlier, in May 2003, a conference of the member states’ foreign ministers in Tehran
 “reaffirmed its support to, and adoption of, the Arab peace initiative 
for resolving the issue of Palestine and the Middle-East.” Indeed, an information leaflet about the peace initiative
 posted on the Arab League’s official website shows the flags of all 
countries that endorse the proposal, including those of Libya, Syria — 
and Iran.
First adopted by the Arab League in 2002, the 
Arab Peace Initiative has become a hot political item again since the 
organization mentioned for the first time the possibility of mutual 
agreed land swaps. The move was widely understood as a nod to changed realities on the ground that would allow Israel to retain major settlement blocs in the West Bank in a future final-status agreement.

The
 Arab Peace Initiative as presented on the Arab League website. Note the
 Iranian flag at the bottom. (photo credit: screenshot via 
lasportal.org)
Yet Jerusalem remains steadfast in rejecting 
the overture, or at least in assertively ignoring it. Just this Friday, 
in Washington, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon dismissed the Arab 
initiative as “a spin” and “a dictation” that would force Israel to make
 great concessions before being able to present its own demands.
Why the objections, the reservations, the 
mistrust? Okay, the likelihood of peace with Iran may sound beyond 
improbable, but why doesn’t Israel at least ride the initiative toward 
normalization with ostensibly moderate Arab states, many of which appear
 to be interested in teaming up with Israel against their common enemies
 in Tehran? (Some analysts say that the Gulf states are especially 
willing to normalize relations with Israel, mainly because they seek 
allies in their struggle against the Iranian threat.)
Skeptics say the Arab Peace Initiative is 
unacceptable to Israel because of certain clauses that no government can
 ever agree to. Well, if so, why doesn’t Jerusalem at least try to 
engage with the Arab world by professing interest in the initiative, if 
only to demonstrate the will for peace and avoid being labeled as the 
party that prevents an agreement? There is so much to gain — politically
 and economically — in making peace with the entire Arab world. What is 
Israel afraid of?
Originally, the Arab Peace Initiative
 offered Jerusalem diplomatic relations with the entire Arab world in 
exchange for a “full Israeli withdrawal from all the Arab territories 
occupied since June 1967,” the establishment of a Palestinian state with
 East Jerusalem as its capital, and a “just” and “agreed upon” solution 
to the Palestinian refugee question.
In 2002, the Israeli government was curious 
but perceived the initiative as a take-it-or-leave-it proposition it 
couldn’t possibly embrace. “On the surface, the proposal looked 
appealing, with its provision that the Arab states welcome peace with 
Israel — something they had been unwilling to do since the state’s 
inception,” the son of then-prime minister Ariel Sharon, Gilad Sharon, 
wrote in a 2011 memoir of his father. “But the details made the offer 
unacceptable.”
Today, Israel’s leaders make very similar comments.
But in the interim, it wasn’t always like 
this. Six years ago, then-prime minister Ehud Olmert welcomed the 
initiative, and in a remarkable but little-known episode of Arab-Israeli
 interaction, a semi-official Arab League delegation came to Jerusalem 
and discussed the peace proposal with Olmert and then-foreign minister 
Tzipi Livni.
In March 2007, after an Arab League summit held in Riyadh reaffirmed the original peace offer, the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem asserted that “Israel is sincerely interested in pursuing a dialogue with those Arab states that desire peace with Israel.”
Olmert at the time keenly expressed his desire
 to meet the Saudi king to further explore the proposal, but no meeting 
was scheduled. Surprised by Olmert’s enthusiasm, the Arab League refused
 an encounter lest it be seen as engaging in “normalization” with the 
Zionist regime. The only Arab officials who could meet with the Israeli 
government were those whose countries already had peace treaties with 
Jerusalem, it was clarified,
 and so, months later, Livni met with Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed 
Abul Gheit and her Jordanian counterpart Abdul Ilah Khatib.

Then-foreign
 ministers Tzipi Livni, of Israel, Abdul-Ilah Khatib, of Jordan, and 
Ahmed Aboul Gheit, of Egypt, in Jerusalem, July 25, 2007. (photo credit:
 Orel Cohen/Flash90)
The Arab world could play an “important role” 
in helping Israel and the Palestinians make peace, Livni said in Cairo 
on May 10. At the end of this meeting, Gheit said an “Arab League 
preparatory team,” consisting of himself and his Jordanian colleague, 
intended to visit Israel “within the next few weeks as representatives 
of the Arab League,” the Israeli Foreign Ministry stated at the time, adding this would be “the first visit by official representatives of the Arab League in Israel.”
Gheit and Khatib indeed came to Israel, on 
July 25, but they insisted on diplomatic protocol that would “make it 
evident they’re representing their countries and not the Arab League,” 
according to an Israeli Foreign Ministry official. “So much for 
confidence building measures,” he scoffed.
Still, at a joint press conference in Jerusalem,
 Gheit said he was “very happy to be here as the foreign minister of 
Egypt on assignment by the Working Group of the Arab Summit.” Khatib, 
the Jordanian foreign minister, said the offer he and his colleague came
 to Jerusalem to present is an “opportunity of historic magnitude — it 
will provide Israel with the security and recognition and acceptance in 
this region to which Israel has long aspired.”
Gheit added that he planned to present a 
report to the Arab Ministerial Council within days and “relate to them 
what we have heard and convey the proposals we have listened to, and 
then we shall probably suggest some ideas to strengthen and ensure the 
continuation of this process.”
In other words: the two foreign ministers said
 they had good and constructive talks, and would take them back to the 
Arab League — “and were never heard of again,” the Israeli official 
said. “We did try to reach out to the Arab League, but they disappeared.
 We did it openly and publicly, but it did not help moderate Hamas, 
whose extremism and striving for power and violence is still there.” 
Later that summer, Hamas took over Gaza in a bloody coup. The rest is 
history: the Palestinian Authority fails to accept Olmert’s 2008 offer 
for a Palestinian state, two wars with Hamas in Gaza, a stalled peace 
process.
Enter US Secretary of State John Kerry, who 
has been working tirelessly to restart negotiations between Israelis and
 Palestinians ever since he took office in February. On April 29, he hosted an
 Arab League delegation in Washington, during which Qatari Prime 
Minister Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr Al Thani for the first time signaled 
that a “comparable and mutual agreed minor swap of the land” would be 
acceptable.

US
 Secretary of State John Kerry, second from right, with an Arab League 
delegation led by Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr 
Al-Thani, in Washington, April 29 (photo credit: AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
While most analysts and pundits said this was 
nothing new, as it was clear to everyone that a future peace agreement 
would entail land exchanges, for some Israeli lawmakers it showed that 
the Arab world is still interested in peace and that Israel should not 
waste this opportunity.
Some 40 MKs signed a petition that forced 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to appear in the Knesset for a special
 session dedicated to the Arab Peace Initiative. In his speech, 
Netanyahu called on
 PA President Mahmoud Abbas to “give peace a chance” and enter 
negotiations without preconditions, yet barely addressed the Arab 
League’s reissued peace proposal.
“We are attentive to any initiative and we are
 ready to discuss any initiative that is proposed and that is not a 
dictate,” Netanyahu said, referring to a much-cited argument that some 
of the Arab Initiative’s demands — such as a return to the 1967 lines 
and the right of return — are non-starters for Israel yet appear 
non-negotiable for the Arabs. Some understood Netanyahu’s
 statement to mean that he “signaled readiness” to consider the peace 
initiative, pointing out that he did not explicitly reject it, but his 
words could hardly be considered a ringing endorsement.
Danny Danon: ‘You have to sacrifice a lot, and on the other hand you’re not really going to get peace. I don’t think we should even consider this offer’
Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon, a declared opponent
 of a Palestinian state, suggested that those behind the Arab Peace 
Initiative don’t really intend to ever accept Israel in their midst. 
“You have to sacrifice a lot, and on the other hand you’re not really 
going to get peace,” he told The Times of Israel last week. “Maybe if 
you sit in Qatar or Abu Dhabi it sounds good,” but those who know what 
happened in Gaza after the Hamas take-over fear that the terror group 
could also conquer the West Bank and rain rockets on central Israel from
 there, he suggested. “I don’t think we should even consider this 
offer.”
Indeed, security is one of the main arguments 
for opponents of the Arab Peace Initiative, because they argue that the 
’67 lines, land swaps notwithstanding, are indefensible.
“I don’t foresee any Israeli government 
willing and/or capable of returning to the 1967 lines, with or without 
territorial swaps,” said Dani Dayan, a former chairman and current chief
 foreign envoy of the pro-settler Council of Jewish Settlements. True, 
Dayan contended, Netanyahu formally endorses a two-state solution, but 
he also made it amply clear that Israel is not ready to return to the 
Green Line.
“Territorial swaps do not make the 1967 
borders more defensible. Territorial swaps have to do with demography, 
they have nothing to do with security,” Dayan said. “I do not see any 
territorial compromise that can reconcile Israeli and Palestinians 
demands. Therefore the Arab Peace Initiative, exactly like Oslo and John
 Kerry’s initiative, are a waste of time.”
Everyone agrees that Israel has legitimate 
security concerns, but if a regional peace agreement is implemented, 
they should be much less serious, countered Galia Golan, a professor at 
Herzliyah’s Interdisciplinary Center who specializes in the Arab-Israeli
 conflict. In addition, “demilitarizations and international border 
monitoring have also been agreed at various times in the past,” said 
Golan, a veteran Peace Now and Meretz activist. “At the very least, in 
circumstances of 21st century warfare, continued occupation of the 
territories — or even part of them without equal swaps — probably does 
not offer more security than the creation of a Palestinian state and 
taking a chance on peace and end of the conflict.”
Besides security, there are other troubling 
demands that make the Arab initiative a nonstarter in the eyes of 
critics, such as the refugee issue. True, proponents say that the text 
of the initiative specifies that any solution needs to be “agreed upon” 
by both sides, meaning that Israel will not forcibly be flooded by 
millions of Palestinians. However, it also says that any such solution 
needs to be in accordance with UN General Assembly Resolution 194,
 which resolved that “refugees wishing to return to their homes and live
 at peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do so at the 
earliest practicable date.”
Another little-known clause in the Arab Peace 
Initiative rejects “Palestinian patriation,” which implies that refugees
 living in camps on Israel’s borders will not be granted citizenship of 
their current host countries. This issue seems resolvable in the 
framework of a future Palestinian state, but critics fear it could 
further complicate issues.
International Relations and Strategic Affairs 
Minister Yuval Steinitz, who principally accepts the idea of a 
(demilitarized) Palestinian state, is less than enthusiastic about the 
proposal. “Every peace initiative is welcome but no peace initiative can
 replace bilateral negotiations between us and the Palestinians,” he 
told The Times of Israel last week. “We need to worry about genuine 
peace with genuine security — these items are not included in the Arab 
Peace Initiative.”
Steinitz was unwilling to even consider the 
proposal as a framework for peace talks. Negotiations are supposed to be
 bilateral, between Israelis and Palestinians, he said. “There are 
bilateral issues and it would not be right to discuss them with the 
entire Arab world, such as demilitarization and security arrangements 
that are essential for us.”
‘The Arab League has not been able to make peace in the Arab world. Why should anyone trust the Arab League with peacemaking?’
Peace can only be made with countries which 
with one is in a territorial conflict, a veteran diplomatic official 
concurred. “Peace is a worthwhile objective, yet all promises of 
regional peace are futile and groundless,” he said. Negotiations and 
agreements occur when two parties sit down and try to resolve their 
conflict, he asserted. It is true that every time the Palestinians 
entered negotiations with Israel they did so with the encouragement of 
Arab states such as Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and at some point also 
Morocco, he allowed. But while those countries were able to make a 
difference in the past, the Arab League as an umbrella organization 
never did, asserted the official, who asked to remain anonymous due to 
the sensitive nature of the issue.
The Arab League endorsed the eponymous peace 
initiative but, beyond that, never played a significant role in the 
Israeli-Palestinian peace track, the official continued. “The Arab 
League has not been able to make peace in the Arab world — between 
Algeria and Morocco, between Libya and Sudan, Iraq and Kuwait, and so on
 and so forth. Why should anyone trust the Arab League with 
peacemaking?”
And yet there are those who believe the Arab 
Peace Initiative is an opportunity Israel cannot afford to miss — and 
they aren’t just a bunch of gullible lefties and peaceniks. Former 
minister Meir Sheetrit, who for 25 years sat in the Knesset for the 
Likud party and today serves as faction chairman for Tzipi Livni’s 
Hatnua, has always been a staunch supporter of the plan.
“The Arab Peace Initiative was relevant from 
its first day in 2002, when Saudi King Abdullah proposed it. Today, like
 then, I think that is the best idea that has ever been heard, through 
which we can achieve peace,” the Moroccan-born politician said recently in an interview.
 “It is over a decade later, and it still remains the fastest and best 
path to achieve peace. Because it is a comprehensive initiative bringing
 56 Islamic countries to the table who proclaim, ‘If you return to the 
1967 borders and find a just and accepted solution for the refugees, we 
–all 56 Arab states — are ready to make full peace with Israel.’ That is
 an amazing thing.”
As Sheetrit points out, the initiative has 
been approved four times in Arab League conventions since 2002. “Only 
with us [Israelis] — nothing doing. No prime minister wants to hear 
about it.”
For Yossi Beilin, a former justice minister 
and the chief architect of the Oslo Accords, it is clear why Israel’s 
right-wing governments were and are not interested in the Arab Peace 
Initiative: it refutes their dogma that the Palestinian-Israeli 
conflict, rather than being a territorial dispute, stems from the Arab 
world’s refusal to accept a Jewish state in the region, regardless of 
its borders.
Israel’s right-wing ideologues do not want to 
believe in the Arab offer’s sincerity because this would destroy their 
entire Weltanschauung, Beilin suggested. “Out of the blue, 11 years ago,
 came the Arab world and said, ‘You make peace with your neighbors, we 
will make peace with you.’ It’s as simple as that,” he told The Times of
 Israel. “But rather than saying, ‘Hey, this is a revolution! Say it 
again!,’ we said, ‘No, you don’t really mean it. You can’t mean, after 
all — we know you.’”
This was Sharon’s initial reaction, and since 
then every right-wing leader to date has rejected the initiative for the
 same reason, Beilin said. “Once they accept the idea that we might be 
accepted by the Arab world if we make peace with the Palestinians, it 
puts the entire onus in the Arab-Israeli conflict on Israel… And 
[Israel's right-wing leaders] are not ready, ideologically, to pay the 
territorial price for peace.”
‘We will not get New Year’s cards from Iran, Sudan, or Libya under any foreseeable circumstances. It is nothing but a lack of seriousness to rely on such promises’
The fact that the Arab League adopted the 
peace initiative on the very same day that a suicide bomber blew himself
 up in the dining hall of a hotel in Netanya, during a Passover seder, 
“made it easier” for opponents of the plan to play down its importance, 
Beilin said. Twenty-nine people died and 64 were injured in the March 
27, 2002, Park Hotel attack, for which Hamas claimed responsibility.
According to Elie Podeh, a Hebrew University 
professor focusing on inter-Arab and Arab-Israeli relations, Israelis 
were suspicious of the peace initiative from day one. “This was not the 
result of a rational consideration of the initiative’s inherent 
potential; it’s an emotional reaction,” he wrote in Haaretz
 last month. “The Arab and Muslim world, in our minds, are generally 
linked to threats and danger; when they ‘launch’ a peace proposal at us,
 we don’t know how to react.”
Whether it’s realistic and sincere or not, 
given the nature of Israel’s current government it does not look like 
the Arab Peace Initiative will become a reality any time soon.
And what about Iran? Even optimists and 
incorrigible peaceniks who swear that the Arab world is willing to 
normalize relations with Israel don’t believe in peace with the Islamic 
Republic in our days. “Indonesia, Malaysia and others would have joined,
 but of course with Iran it won’t happen,” Beilin said (adding, however,
 that this is “not only because of them but also because of us”).
An Israeli official who preferred to stay 
anonymous put it even more succinctly: “Peace with Iran, Afghanistan and
 Pakistan — very funny. Let’s be clear: We will not get New Year’s cards
 from Iran, Sudan or Libya under any foreseeable circumstances. It is 
nothing but a lack of seriousness to rely on such promises.”
 


 
 
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