Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, April 2003, pages
58-59
New York City and Tri-State News
Bush Has Abandoned Long-Time Consensus On Mideast, Says
William Quandt
By Jane Adas
Under the current Bush administration, U.S. policy toward the
Middle East has undergone a paradigm shift, William B. Quandt told
the audience at a Jan. 19 talk jointly sponsored by the Princeton
Middle East Society and the Near Eastern Studies Department of Princeton
University. Quandt, who served on the National Security Council
in the 1970s, during the first Camp David accords, now is vice provost
for international affairs at the University of Virginia. He is the
author of seven books, including Peace Process (1993) and
Between Ballots and Bullets: Algeria’s Transition from Authoritarianism
(1998).
From Presidents Truman through Clinton, Quandt said, there had
been a consensus on American policy, albeit with variations and
obvious exceptions. First, Washington viewed the Middle East as
a region that was slowly emerging from colonialism and traumatic
intervention, and was therefore concerned not to be seen as a colonial
interloper. He described President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s response
to the 1956 Israeli, British, and French attack on Egypt as the
high water mark of American distaste for colonial adventurism.
Secondly, according to Quandt, U.S. policy accepted nationalism
as a legitimate, if difficult, force—although, he added, this became
confused in the context of the Cold War, when the U.S. identified
nationalist leaders such as Nasser with Communism.
Thirdly, Quandt continued, there was agreement that the Arab-Israeli
conflict was a major issue. Prior to 1967, the U.S. assumed the
conflict was not ready for diplomacy and put it on the back burner.
After that, however, each succeeding administration felt it important
that Washington be seen as trying to promote peace, with each president
offering an initiative. Tactics differed, but the visions were all
based on land for peace.
The fourth concern for U.S. policy, Quandt said, was to maintain
stability to protect the oil resources of the Gulf countries.
Among the successes of the American consensus, Quandt cited the
Israeli-Egyptian peace agreement, the avoidance of direct confrontation
with the Soviets, and the fact that, with the exception of the 1973
war and its aftermath, oil interests were well served. Against these,
Quandt counted the U.S. failure to anticipate and forestall the
Iranian revolution, and, under the Reagan and Bush Sr. administrations,
the failure to reassess our relationship with Saddam Hussain after
supporting him during the Iran-Iraq war.
Under George W. Bush the consensus has broken down, Quandt argued,
characterizing the administration’s sharp shift to a neo-conservative
perspective as actually radical, with the intent to dramatically
transform the Middle East. The neo-conservatives first emerged in
the Reagan administration, Quandt said, but were discredited by
two set-backs: the U.S. failure to discourage Israel from its 1982
invasion of Lebanon, and the Iran-Contra scandal. Now, with Donald
Rumsfield, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Douglas Feith and Elliott
Abrams, among others, in policymaking positions, they have made
a comeback.
Quandt characterized the administration’s sharp shift
to a neo-conservative perspective as actually radical.
In contrast to the former American policy consensus, neo-conservatives
gloss over colonialism, struggles with Zionism, and the effects
of U.S. policy. Instead, Quandt said, they view the Middle East
as having distinct pathologies that stem from Arab nationalism and
Islam, and consider Israel and Turkey the only worthy countries
in the region.
Stability, Quandt observed, is now redefined as stagnation. The
major themes of the current Bush administration are that Iraq is
too dangerous for containment and that the entire region is ripe
for fundamental transformation—not by nurturing indigenous movements,
but by getting rid of the bad guys.
The Bush team expects to go to war soon and to achieve a quick
and painless victory. They predict the Iraqi people will welcome
U.S. soldiers as liberators, other leaders in the region will realize
that their time is up, and the Palestinians will admit defeat.
Neo-conservatives base their military models on the first Gulf
war, Kosovo and Afghanistan, in none of which were many American
casualties. Quandt suggested, however, that the models instead might
be Lebanon in 1982, Somalia and Vietnam. If the neo-conservatives
succeed, nobody knows what will happen next. If they fail, Quandt
said, anti-Americanism will be at an all-time high.
Quandt concluded by noting that, if Osama bin Laden is still alive,
he must be happy with the turn U.S. policy has taken under George
W. Bush.
Arraf, Shapiro Inaugurate Rutgers Divestment Campaign
New Jersey Solidarity inaugurated its campaign demanding that “Rutgers
University immediately divest from any and all corporations that
are financing and benefitting from the apartheid regime in Israel”
with a Jan. 28 talk on the campus by Huwaida Arraf and Adam Shapiro,
co-founders of the International Solidarity Movement.
Shapiro described the divestment campaign as not anti-Israel,
but pro-American. The campaign’s message, he said, is that U.S.
citizens no longer will support oppression with their tax dollars
or with American corporate profits.
Palestinians in the occupied territories, he said, cannot breathe,
cannot make plans. They need politics, not Band Aids. Therefore,
Shapiro urged Americans to use their freedom in a political way
to reach their leaders, as in the divestment campaign.
Israeli assassinations of Palestinian leaders have become Israeli
state policy, Shapiro told the audience. They are deliberately carried
out when there has been quiet from the Palestinian side in order
to ignite a cycle of revenge attacks. He cited two examples: the
Israeli army murdered Raed Karmi after three weeks of no attacks
by Palestinians, although Israelis had killed more than 30 Palestinians
during that same period. Ironically—or perhaps not—Karmi was the
Fatah leader responsible for ensuring the unilateral Palestinian
cease-fire as required by the Mitchell Plan. Last summer, Shapiro
continued, only hours after Palestinian factions had agreed to publish
a cease-fire agreement, an Israeli F-16 bombed an apartment building
in Gaza, killing 15 Palestinian civilians along with Israel’s target.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon described the assault as one of the
most successful military missions in the history of the Israeli
state.
Shapiro observed that, as he was speaking, President Bush was
delivering the State of the Union address and probably pressing
for war. In Israel, Sharon’s Likud Party had just won national elections
by a larger than expected margin. We know what to expect, Shapiro
said, from a right-wing Israeli government that advocates ethnic
cleansing aligned with a pro-war U.S. administration. There will
be more illegal Israeli settlements. No Israeli prime minister,
of either party, has ever halted settlement expansion, he pointed
out, and Sharon is the least likely to do so. With more settlements
and the building of the wall, there will be more Israeli appropriation
of Palestinian land. And there will be more attacks on Palestinian
civilian areas with U.S.-supplied F16 fighter planes and Apache
helicopters.
Huwaida Arraf went to Palestine in April 2000, to work for an
organization that focused on conflict resolution. But she soon realized
that dialogue was not what was needed. Palestinians had no problem
talking with Israelis, but rather with the cementing of the occupation.
During the seven years of the peace process, Arraf noted, Palestinians
saw more of their land confiscated, the settler population double,
Palestinian movement restricted by checkpoints and roadblocks, the
proliferation of settler bypass roads funded by U.S. dollars, Gaza
locked down, and continued home demolitions.
Even before Sharon made his famous visit to the Temple Mount accompanied
by hundreds of armed Israeli guards, Arraf said, Palestinians were
disillusioned and tired. They saw that Israel is not held accountable,
U.N. resolutions are not enforced, and U.S. dollars continue to
flow to Israel. When, within weeks of Sharon’s visit, Israeli forces
had killed and injured hundreds of Palestinians with no reaction
from the official international community, the hope became one for
a different kind of international involvement.
Arraf invited those present to join with volunteers from around
the world and come to Palestine with the International Solidarity
Movement. Volunteers not only provide some protection to Palestinians,
but help in getting the message out that the occupation must end,
that Palestinians need freedom and human dignity. They also see
the situation firsthand and tell their friends and family back home
what the media fails to report. The most important role of international
volunteers, Arraf said, is breaking the isolation of occupation.
Palestinians feel abandoned, but when volunteers say, “We are with
you. We see what is happening,” morale is lifted, if only a bit.
Merely by staying where they are, Arraf said, Palestinians engage
in nonviolent resistance every day. She sees it, she said, when
children insist on learning although their schools are closed, and
when fathers break the curfew to get bread for their families.
Arraf concluded her remarks with an empowering image: during curfews,
when Palestinians are imprisoned in their own homes, in the late
afternoon when the wind picks up you can see scores of home-made
kites painted with the colors of the Palestinian flag flying from
rooftops. To Arraf, these kites flown by fearless and determined
Palestinian kids symbolize freedom, and say “we will not give up.”
Jane Adas is a free-lance writer based in the New York metropolitan
area. |