DavidWarrenOnline
NEWSPAPER COLUMNS

COMMENTARY
June 7, 2003
Hopeless
I have previously described the peace plan President Bush is now advancing as the "road map to hell" and I did not do so lightly. Those who have been reading me will be aware that I am not ill-disposed towards the U.S. President and I have tried to convey what I think are the large but essentially reasonable premises upon which he is acting. A large solution is necessary to a very large problem; and what became fully visible on Sept. 11th 2001 cannot be fixed with silver bullets.

Here before we take another step is a bitter truth especially unpalatable to those with small and compressive minds who want to blame a person a party a class even a people for everything wrong in the world. Now it happens there is something wrong that has grown so large that it cannot possibly be ignored and yet also cannot be fixed by any conceivable exertion of human will. In politics and diplomacy such a problem typically resolves itself in a large conflagration.

Example you may argue that Neville Chamberlain should have behaved differently at Munich in September 1938; that he should never have attempted a peace treaty with Hitler on any terms; and in retrospect I agree. But the person who thinks the Second World War could have been avoided by anything Chamberlain or any other elected politician might have done is a fool. It was too late for that; the mistakes that had led Hitler to power had long since been committed and were too numerous and consequential to be undone. Those who blame everything on the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 equally miss the point: no Versailles could "justify" the rise of Nazism which had much deeper causes as well as much shallower. It had happened and once it had happened and had developed past a certain indeterminable point there was no way out. No matter which direction was chosen there would be catastrophe.

I fear that is the situation today in the Middle East. Our eyes may be fixed on the issue of Israel/Palestine and Mr. Bush is addressing it for the very reason that the eyes are fixed there (rather than on say the Congo where millions seem to have been killed but in wars of only local consequence). Israel/Palestine is a proxy battle; the fuse but not the bomb. Mr. Bush's thinking is: "Put out the fuse and we may then disarm the bomb at our leisure." But he's too late; even Clinton was too late.

That dull sense at the pit of the stomach -- "no escape" -- came to me yesterday as I read the Reuters report that Hamas was refusing even to talk with the new Palestinian premier Mahmoud Abbas. I could not tell you in 850 words how we came to this situation only give you the far simpler news of what the situation is.

It is terminal. It doesn't matter whether Mr. Abbas is sincere in his promise to end the Intifadah and pursue a negotiated settlement that will lead to the creation of a democratic and constitutional Palestinian state. He hasn't the power to deliver on it anyway. Others have the power and entirely lack the will. The whole Palestinian society is in the hands of terrorists and it doesn't matter how many individual Palestinians approve or disapprove. Those who may actually want peace with Israel have neither the leadership nor the physical means to defeat Hamas Islami Jihad Hizbollah Fatah or even their dancing-master Yasser Arafat. And nothing short of a Palestinian civil war could possibly remove them.

That is the fuse but the bomb must also be considered. The entire Arab world and most of the Muslim beyond it is too deeply and emotionally invested in that proxy war against Israel to embrace what must be done to avoid the catastrophe which I fear lies ahead. As we now learn even King Abdullah of Jordan very nearly withdrew as host of the summit between Ariel Sharon Mr. Abbas and Mr. Bush. He is the best-disposed of all the Arab leaders towards a permanent peace acknowledging Israel's existence within whatever borders and terms can be agreed. The political heat from below and around was nearly too much even for him. It must quickly become too much.

I cannot predict how things will fall out incident by incident. Israel itself could soon face something suggestive of civil war when it tries to remove heavily armed settlers whether legal or illegal from West Bank settlements; but I believe as Mr. Sharon says he does that the Israeli political order can withstand this and deliver on very painful agreements. It won't matter however: for the Palestinians cannot. And those who will not can count on the backing of the whole "Arab nation". As the pressure rises from Washington and elsewhere to do the impossible the point of combustion must be reached.

I'm sorry I can't see any way out: no solution no alternative course that does not rest on some sort of fantasy -- everyone is trapped. The more peace is sought the more war becomes inevitable; and yet peace must be sought.

David Warren