TOPICS: The Mideast land-for-peace deal
Two new high-level players have emerged in the tangled Middle East peace process. One is Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah. The other is the new UN secretary-general Ban Ki Moon. At last week’s Arab League summit in Riyadh, King Abdullah sought and gained the renewed support of Arab leaders for an initiative he first proposed in 2002 to end the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. The core of the proposal is full recognition of Israel by the Arabs in exchange for Israel’s return of Palestinian lands seized in the 1967 war.
Settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian problem would do much to create an environment for stability in the Arab world. Many believe it would also greatly diminish the reason for Arab extremists to continue their campaign of hatred and terror against the US, which is seen as Israel’s champion. The move for traction in the maneuvering to bring Israelis and Palestinians together has gained new impetus recently in largely Sunni Saudi Arabia. It has watched with concern as Iran, largely Shiite, is emerging as a challenger for influence and dominance in the region. The Saudis are alarmed by Iranian meddling in Syria and Iraq, concerned by Iran’s backing of Islamist extremist and terrorist groups, and extremely worried at the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran.
While King Abdullah has sought with his criticism to put a little distance between himself and the US, he expects the US to work on Israel to get Israel to the negotiating table. The onus is on Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to move the peace process forward. First reaction from Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was not positive. He is balking particularly at a provision in the Abdullah proposal that would have Palestinian refugees return to their original homes in what is now Israel. Many Israelis fear that such an influx would dilute the Jewish character of Israel.
Meanwhile, Ban Ki Moon, who emerged from relative obscurity as a South Korean diplomat to head the UN, has been a veritable dervish of diplomacy in the Middle East. In Iraq, he promised Iraqi and American officials that the UN, which had withdrawn from Iraq in 2003 after being targeted by insurgents, would return in greater strength. Although nobody is talking about the insertion of lightly armed peacekeepers, once some semblance of stability returns there could be an enormous role for the UN in the reconstruction of Iraq. At the Arab League summit, Ban promoted the Abdullah peace proposal and urged the Israelis to “take a fresh look at it.”
On the sidelines, the secretary general brokered a deal for a UN-African Union force in Darfur and sought reduction of tension in Somalia. In Lebanon, he urged a crackdown on arms being smuggled in from Syria for Hizbullah. In Israel, he met with the families of two Israeli soldiers captured by Hizbullah. On Iran, he rued the Tehran regime forging ahead with its nuclear programme “heedless of international concerns.” Peace may not be at hand, but diplomacy is vigorous. — The Christian Science Monitor