The Road Map:
International All, Nothing or Something?
by Gila Ansell Brauner
The battle for Washington
By David Landau, Friday 28th March, 2003
reprinted with the permission of Haaretz Daily © (English)
Original
Edition
Next Tuesday, about 3,000 activists of the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the pro-Israel lobby, will
come to Capitol Hill in Washington in an impressive display
of support for Israel. They have a complex mission this time,
as the United States is at war, and it's not a convenient
moment to clash with the administration.
Nevertheless, prominent Jewish leaders told Haaretz correspondent
Nathan Guttman (March 26), they will not mute their criticism
of the "road map" that is being drawn up in Washington.
Abe Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League,
doesn't like the "timing" of the map or the fact
that President George Bush has created a connection between
the war in Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Malcolm
Hoenlein, executive vice president of the Conference of Presidents
of Major Jewish Organizations, promises that if the Israeli
government expresses reservations about the road map, it will
have the support of the Jewish community, and "we will
not hesitate to make our voice heard."
Before their annual conference concludes, the 3,000 AIPAC activists
will undoubtedly be asked, upon their return home, to encourage
their friends and relatives to write to their representatives
in Congress and make known their concern about the road map
and about the linkage the administration is creating between
the war in Iraq and peace here. Senators and members of the
House of Representatives will duly receive stacks of letters
and telegrams, along with faxes and e-mails, from which they
will conclude that the American Jewish community, like the
Israeli Jewish community, has fears and anxieties about the
road map that the administration officials are preparing.
That's how it works. AIPAC has plenty of influence and clout,
and it tilts to the right. The majority of the other Jewish
organizations are also on the right when it comes to the conflict.
So sweeping is the success of the Israeli right and its allies
among the Jews (and Christians) in the United States that
an unchallenged political axiom has emerged, to the effect
that if the president decides to push ahead with the road
map, he will generate hostility among millions of voters.
This is presented as an unassailable fact in the political
discourse and in newspaper commentaries. The only point that
remains unclear is whether Bush will accede to the urgings
of British Prime Minister Tony Blair and of his own State
Department and adopt the map despite the political risk that
step entails.
Other voices within the American Jewish public, of a more moderate
character, are shunted to the margins of organized Jewish
life. The trouble is that what is shunted aside along with
them is Israel's vital interest - as many Israelis view it
- that the hoped-for allied military victory in Iraq will
indeed usher in a period of vigorous activity by the United
States in our region, with the aim of imposing a phased settlement
on the warring sides and thus bring the conflict to an end.
It is truly difficult to imagine a more absurd missed opportunity
than one in which some 300,000 American troops are sent to
the Middle East to fight Saddam Hussein and make peace in
Iraq - and then leave while the bleeding wound known as the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict continues to fester.
Israelis who take this approach are pinning their hope - almost
a last hope - on the emergence of a new order in this region
in the wake of the war. True, those same Israelis pinned the
same hope on a different Bush and a different war, 12 years
ago. And that hope was actually almost realized, but in the
end was shattered, largely because of Yasser Arafat. Now,
as a first stage in the new order, even before the removal
of Saddam, Arafat has been removed from his status as sole
decision maker within the Palestinian leadership.
According to the road map, that achievement is meant to open
the way to the resumption of security cooperation between
the sides, to a general cease-fire and to an Israeli withdrawal
to the pre-intifada lines. By the terms of the draft road
map of December 20, 2002, Israel is also called upon to freeze
the settlements, "including natural growth," and
to agree this year to the establishment of a Palestinian state
with provisional borders.
That scenario is a nightmare for the Israeli right, and it
is operating in Washington, by the accepted democratic means
of lobbies and pressure groups, to effectively get the plan
shelved. The right wing believes that this is a patriotic
act par excellence.
However, what about the peace camp? How do people there give
expression to their patriotism? After all, they too believe,
from their point of view, that the country must be saved from
an approaching existential danger in the form of a demographic
conquest by the conquered nation.
The region would appear to be at a decisive juncture, and the
decision will be made mainly in Washington. The peace seekers
in Israel must stop whining over the fact that the Jewish
organizations there have turned right, and instead of that
act - by taking the same action that those organizations implement
so successfully. If every Israeli who agrees with the road
map and wants it to be translated into practice were to write
a letter or an e-mail to one Jew in the United States, a relative
or a friend, explaining his position and making it clear that
many other Israelis think the same way, a minor earthquake
would undoubtedly be created in Jewish-American opinion. If
every such Israeli were to write to two Jews, the result would
be a genuine tectonic shift. And if he were to suggest that
his two friends or relatives write to their Congressman -
who knows, maybe that would completely undermine the despairing
axiom that peace efforts are bad politics.