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3 October, 2013
Article 1.
NYT
America Mustn't Be Naive About Iran
Vali R. Nasr
Article 2.
The Moscow Times
Obama's Doomed Reset
Sergei Karaganov
Article 3.
Hoover Institution
Barack Houdini: Making Syria Disappear
Fouad Ajami
The National Interest
Saudis Stung by Obama Iran Initiative
David Andrew Weinberg
The Washington Institute
Israeli-Egyptian Peace: Forty Years After The
1973 War And Holding
Ehud Yaari
Article 6
The Washington Institute
Time To End Palestinian Incitement
David Pollock
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Article 7.
Bloomberg
Shutdown Gives U.S. Allies One More Reason
for Anxiety
Jeffrey Goldberg
The Council on Foreign Relations
How the Shutdown Weakens U.S. Foreign
Policy
Interview with Richard N. Haass
Article I.
NYT
America Mustn't Be Naïve About Iran
Vali R. Nasr
October 2, 2013 -- THE international agreement to destroy
Syria's stockpile of chemical weapons has put diplomacy back
at center stage of American foreign policy. But enforcing
America's "red line" in Syria is only a prelude to dealing with
the thicker, redder line around Iran's nuclear program. Last
week's charm offensive by Iran's new president, Hassan
Rouhani, and his seeming show of flexibility augurs well for a
diplomatic resolution.
But America would be naive to assume that Iran is negotiating
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from a position of weakness. To the contrary, Iran has come out
of the Arab Spring better positioned than any of its regional
rivals, and the turmoil in Syria, its ally, has paradoxically
strengthened it further. Witness Mr. Rouhani's statements that
distinguished Iran from its Arab neighbors and asserted that it
was uniquely positioned to broker a resolution.
Over the past five years America has thought that only an Iran
weakened by economic sanctions would agree to a nuclear deal.
Iran's economy is indeed in dire straits, which helps explain the
decision by its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to put
forward Mr. Rouhani, a former nuclear negotiator, as his
interlocutor with the West.
It's also true that Iran has been isolated as the sectarian tenor of
the civil war in Syria incensed the country's largely Sunni
population against Shiite Iran and its clients: the governments in
Syria, Lebanon and Iraq.
Iran's diplomatic flexibility is serious, but should not be
mistaken for willingness to surrender.
Iran does not see itself as vanquished. Its political system is still
the most steadfast and resilient in the region. It is reveling in a
newfound stability on the back of a surprisingly smooth
presidential election. There were no street protests in Tehran this
year, like those that paralyzed Tehran in 2009, Cairo in 2011
and Istanbul earlier this year. Indeed, Mr. Rouhani's
government, by freeing political prisoners and potentially
relaxing controls on the press and social media, is showing its
confidence. Arab anger notwithstanding, there is agreement
across the region that Iranian support for Syria's president,
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Bashar al-Assad, has been effective. That consensus buttresses
Iran's claim to regional power and influence. Syria has showed
Iran to be the only regional actor capable of successfully running
a war in another country — and one with which it does not share
a border. Iran has given the Assad regime money and weapons,
deployed fighters in Syria and created a regional alliance with
the Shiite government in Iraq and its proxy militia Hezbollah in
Lebanon to help Mr. Assad. The West thinks of Russia as Mr.
Assad's vital ally, but it is Iran that holds the cards to his
survival. Hope that Turkey and America's Arab allies would
form an alliance that would isolate Iran has not come to pass.
Those allies have been divided over what to do with Egypt, and
now Syria. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are bickering over
whom to support in Syria. Saudi support for Egypt's generals,
who ousted the democratically elected Islamist president
Mohamed Morsi in July, has alienated Turkey, which supported
Mr. Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood, now outlawed. For
decades the Persian Gulf monarchies bought the support of the
Muslim Brotherhood. Now the Islamists and the gulf rulers are
competing for support of the Sunni Arab world. This gives Iran
a strategic opportunity to exploit its role as a regional power
broker.
Iran's main nemesis, however, remains the United States.
America's withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan, and its
strategic "pivot" toward Asia, have been welcome news in
Tehran. American standing in the region has taken a toll with the
Obama administration's decision not to enforce its own red line
against Syria's use of chemical weapons. That created an
opening for Iran's chief ally, Russia, to play a critical role at the
United Nations as a diplomatic broker. Meanwhile, after Mr.
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Obama's historic (though brief) phone conversation with Mr.
Rouhani, pressure from Israel led Mr. Obama to reiterate, after
meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, that
he would not rule out the use of force to prevent a nuclear-
armed Iran. Mr. Netanyahu went before the United Nations to
call Mr. Rouhani "a wolf in sheep's clothing." In short, as
America approaches talks with Iran over its nuclear program, it
must not assume that Iran is ready to surrender. America's
reduced credibility in the Middle East, because of its waffling
over Syria, is an equally important dynamic in the equation.
America will be going to the negotiating table without the
credible threat of war, facing an Iran basking in newfound
domestic stability and benefiting from its pivotal role in Syria.
Negotiations between the two, for the first time, cannot be based
on threatening Iran into submission, but on persuading it to
compromise. That demands of America an approach to match
the "heroic flexibility" that Ayatollah Khamenei has called for.
Expect no grand bargain with Iran in the short run, but rather,
the lifting of specific sanctions in exchange for concrete steps to
slow down Iran's nuclear program and open it to international
scrutiny. That would be an important first step, which could
build bilateral trust and give diplomacy the impetus it needs to
succeed.
Vali R. Nasr, dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies, is a contributing opinion writer.
Article 2.
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I he Moscow Times
Obama's Doomed Reset
Sergei Karaganov
3 October 2013 -- When he canceled his scheduled summit
in Moscow in early September with President Vladimir Putin,
U.S. President Barack Obama effectively terminated his four-
year effort to "reset" the bilateral relationship. The meeting
of the two presidents at the recent Group of 20 summit in St.
Petersburg was civil but did not change the situation.
The exchange of rhetorical barbs has continued, despite Russia's
new initiative on Syria's chemical weapons.
The failure of the "reset" should come as no surprise, owing
to its deeply flawed foundations. The bilateral relationship had
been faltering long before Russia gave former U.S. Intelligence
leaker Edward Snowden temporary asylum in early August.
In 2011, after the U.S. and its allies convinced then-President
Dmitry Medvedev not to block a United Nations resolution
to impose a no-fly zone over Libya, they launched a full-scale
military bombardment of Libya that helped to bring down
the regime, a move that Russian officials called "deceptive."
The U.S. and Russia need to acknowledge that nuclear weapons
cuts should not serve as the basis for bilateral relations.
Since Putin's return to the presidency last year, the relationship
has deteriorated further, owing to disagreements over arms
control, missile defense and human rights. For example, late last
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year the U.S. Congress imposed sanctions against Russian
officials implicated in human rights abuses, prompting Russia
to institute a ban on adoptions of Russian children by U.S.
families.
Moreover, while Obama and Putin may come to terms over
the removal of chemical weapons from Syria, U.S. policy still
backs Syrian President Bashar Assad's removal, whereas Russia
continues to support the regime, owing to the fear that its
collapse would usher in a radical Sunni-led government — or
chaos. Farther east, the U.S. and Russia are not cooperating as
expected on Afghanistan's postwar transition.
But while disagreement on these issues has undoubtedly
weakened U.S.-Russian ties, the real reason that the bilateral
relationship is crumbling is more fundamental. Instead
of acknowledging geopolitical shifts and adjusting their
relationship accordingly, U.S. and Russian officials remain
committed to an obsolete post-Cold War dynamic.
While Russia and the U.S. remain capable of destroying each
other many times over, they have had no intention of doing so
for a long time. But admitting that there was no longer any
threat of direct attack would have been politically impossible
in the aftermath of the Cold War, when the bilateral standoff still
seemed to be a cornerstone of international stability.
Today, the prospect of either country launching a nuclear attack
against the other seems almost ridiculous. Given this, the legacy
of the Cold War should give way to issues like ensuring that
China's rise remains peaceful, preventing the current chaos
in the Arab world from spreading beyond the region, limiting
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the scope of nuclear weapons proliferation, and contributing
to global efforts to address climate change, water scarcity, food
security and cybercrime.
But rather than pursuing joint initiatives aimed at advancing
the two countries' shared interests in these areas, the U.S.
proposed nuclear weapons reductions as the primary mechanism
of the diplomatic reset. Russian diplomats, whose outlook also
remains largely shaped by the Cold War, seized on the proposal.
And just like that, the old disarmament dynamic was renewed, as
if by nostalgic old friends.
The subsequent negotiations produced the much vaunted New
START, which, despite doing little to advance disarmament,
provided a political boost to both sides and bolstered
the bilateral relationship. But progress soon stalled with Russia
rejecting U.S. proposals for further reductions — especially
of tactical nuclear weapons, an area in which Russia dominates.
Russia, whose nuclear arsenal represents one of the last
remaining pillars of its "great power" status, declared that it
would agree to further cuts only after the U.S. offered a legally
binding agreement that its proposed missile defense shield
in Europe would not be aimed at Russia. In Russia's view, which
is probably fanciful, such a shield could intercept its
intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs, thereby posing
a strategic threat.
In the hope of breaking the deadlock, Obama signaled his
willingness to compromise. But Putin had little reason
to reciprocate, not least because agreement on the issue would
have opened the way to further nuclear arms reductions.
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Moreover, members of Russia's military and political elite hoped
to use some of the country's oil revenues to deploy a new
generation of ICBMs. And it seems that some Russians began
to believe their own propaganda about the danger posed by a
European-based missile defense shield.
By focusing on nuclear disarmament and New START, Obama's
reset strategy remilitarized the U.S.-Russia relationship while
marginalizing issues that could have reoriented bilateral ties
toward the future. In this sense, the initiative was doomed
from the start, and the whole world has suffered as a result.
Both countries' leaders should acknowledge what should now be
obvious: Nuclear weapons reduction can no longer serve as
a reliable basis for bilateral relations.
Either the U.S. and Russia resort to undercutting each other
whenever or wherever they can, or they can use the current
break in their relationship to devise a new, future-oriented
agenda for cooperation that focuses on global problems, such as
the ongoing chaos in the Middle East. Neither Russia nor
the U.S. can resolve global problems alone. But together,
and with China, they could lead the world toward a more stable
and prosperous future.
Sergei Karaganov is dean of the School of International
Economics and Foreign Affairs of the National Research
University Higher School of Economics. © Project Syndicate
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I loover Institution
Barack Houdini: Making Syria
Disappear
Fouad Ajami
October 01, 2013 -- The online publication, Politico, put it well:
Barack Obama tripped over Syria and fell on Iran. That
remarkable Obama luck, the luck that saw him through his bid
for the United States Senate, the obtuseness of the Hillary
Clinton campaign that had her win practically all the primaries
that matter only to lose the nomination, to a rival who had
gamed the system by prevailing in caucuses in Montana and
Idaho, the financial hurricane that erupted in September 2008
and doomed the candidacy of Senator McCain — that luck was
there for him in the matter of Syria as well.
President Obama made a mockery of his authority, and of much
of America's reputation abroad, when he threatened dire
consequences for the Syrian dictatorship over the use of
chemical weapons only to pull back and propose a congressional
vote on the use of force in Syria. Luck again intruded: Right in
the nick of time, when it was clear that he would be rebuffed by
the Congress, deliverance materialized in the shape of a Russian
proposal put forth by Vladimir Putin that held out the promise
of ridding the Syrian regime of its chemical weapons. The
Russian proposal was defective. The only guarantee in it was a
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break for the regime of Bashar al-Assad. The dictator was
suddenly off the hook. The war crimes of three years were
forgotten, it was the crimes of a single day, August 21, when
Bashar al-Assad's forces used chemical weapons in an attack on
a Damascus suburb, that became the focus of the Russian-
American diplomacy. The Syrian ruler, a monster who had
brutalized his own population and laid waste to ancient, proud
cities, was turned into a key diplomatic player. He was needed
now to account for the chemical stockpiles and to make good on
turning them over to international inspectors. The Syrian
rebellion had been waiting for mercy and help; its leaders, if
only for a moment, believed that the cavalry — the American
cavalry — was on its way. These hopes were shattered, Mr.
Obama had not changed his ways. He had done his best to
ignore the ordeal of Syria, and his policy had not altered. He
was grateful for the exit given him by the master of the Kremlin.
It was amid this confusion, and this display of American
irresolution that Hassan Rouhani descended on the United
Nations. The Iranian had been dispatched by the Supreme
Leader, and the commanders of the Revolutionary Guard, to
strike a deal with an American president in need of a diplomatic
breakthrough — or what could be passed off as a foreign policy
achievement. The Iranian theocracy was possessed of clarity: It
wanted the economic sanctions imposed on it lifted, as it held
onto its nuclear quest. Rouhani, and the Supreme Leader who
had given the agile politician his mission, believed that they
were in a seller's market. The eagerness with which Barack
Obama pursued Hassan Rouhani was destined to favor the
Iranian theocrats. They had given nothing concrete away. They
had helped Bashar al-Assad turn the tide of war in his favor but
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were now promised a role in the international diplomacy over
Syria. They had been steadfast in support of their client in
Damascus, while the democracies had abandoned and left
defenseless the forces of the opposition. No wonder Hassan
Rouhani could speak of Syria as a "civilizational jewel" as the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah were raining death
and destruction on what remains of that tormented country.
Grant Barack Obama the advantage of his guile. He was sure he
could run out the clock on the Syrian rebellion, he had paid no
heed to the devastating consequences of the Syrian war on
Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, and Turkey. He had bet that there would
be no pressing demand at home for a mission of rescue in Syria.
He had presented the American people with a false choice:
abdication or boots on the ground. He reminded them, again
and again, how weary they were of the exertions of war.
Then came the tsunami: the government shutdown. No one
recalled the name of that country by the Mediterranean where a
war had been raging for nearly three years. Hail Barack Obama,
the Houdini of his time. He had made the accumulated
American influence of decades vanish before a distracted
audience.
Amick 4
The National Interest
Saudis Stung by Obama Iran Initiative
David Andrew Weinberg
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October 3, 2013 -- President Obama's Friday telephone call with
Iranian president Hassan Rouhani—the first at such a level in
over three decades—has exacerbated existing problems between
the United States and its Saudi ally. Now we learn that Saudi
Arabia cancelled its address at the United Nations, evidently in
protest at recent shifts in U.S. policy. The Saudi royal family
has seen Iran as a threat to their survival ever since 1979, when
Iranian leaders began encouraging Shi'ite communities in Saudi
Arabia's oil-rich Eastern Province to rebel. Subsequently, the
Kingdom has been engaged in a regional battle for influence
with Iran, and the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq
removed a traditional counterweight to Iranian power. Sunni
rulers now fear a Shi'ite crescent stretching from Iran to the
Mediterranean—and possibly south into the Arab Gulf states.
Fearing Iranian advances, the Kingdom spearheaded a 2011
military intervention by the Gulf Cooperation Council that was
designed to rescue the minority Sunni regime in Bahrain from its
Shi'ite opposition. But of late, Syria has been the biggest
regional source of conflict between Riyadh and Tehran. Saudi
officials insist that Syria's Assad regime is guilty of genocide,
and they see Iran's efforts to rescue Assad as aiding and abetting
this slaughter.
The Saudis were therefore incensed when the U.S. backed away
from launching a military strike against the regime in Damascus.
President Obama's telephone diplomacy, part of a broader effort
to reach an agreement on Iran's nuclear program, was the
proverbial straw that broke the camel's back. Although Israeli
sources said that PM Netanyahu would singlehandedly "spoil
the party" on Iran at the United Nations, his concerns are
actually shared by America's Arab allies, especially in the Gulf.
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While Oman facilitated the recent contact between Washington
and Iran, the administration has privately received warnings or
complaints on this issue from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain,
Kuwait, Jordan and Egypt.
Like Israel, these countries fear that drawn-out negotiations or
even an agreement could allow Iran to achieve a nuclear
breakout capacity. Regardless, they oppose sanctions relief so
long as Iran continues to threaten them with terrorism or
political subversion. The Saudi reaction—cancelling an
opportunity to address the world community—may be the most
blunt articulation of those concerns to date, perhaps trumping
even Netanyahu's tough UN speech.
Of course, the U.S. should not predicate its foreign policy on
trying to keep the government of Saudi Arabia happy. However,
it is important to recognize that the current diplomatic effort to
engage Iran may come at the expense of our relations with the
Saudis.
There are several ways the Saudis could respond to this latest
challenge. One possibility is to grumble but ultimately give in,
recognizing at the end of the day that they depend upon us for
regime survival. However, cancelling their address to the UNGA
is probably a sign Riyadh is not prepared to let the latest dispute
blow over.
Another possibility is for Saudi Arabia to decrease its
dependence on the U.S. alliance, either in a fit of anger or as a
cold-blooded strategic calculation. The Saudis might turn to
Europe or Asia for future military sales or energy transactions.
They may also revisit their posture on Syria, arming more
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extreme rebel groups and sending weapons that the U.S. opposes
such as MANPADS.
But paradoxically, a third possibility is for the Kingdom to cut
its own limited deal with Tehran. Although the Saudis' enmity
toward Iran runs deep—and involves a prominent sectarian
dimension—they have responded this way before when U.S.
overtures toward Iran left them feeling exposed. For instance,
when the Clinton administration reached out to Iran's Khatami
government in late 1990s, the Saudis signed their own
cooperation agreement with the Iranians and obstructed an FBI
investigation into the Khobar bombings because its results
would implicate Tehran. During the George W. Bush
administration, Condoleezza Rice said the U.S. had trouble
engaging Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies on regional
cooperation at two key moments: when the U.S. decided to talk
with Iran over the future of Iraq, and after the release of the
controversial 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that let Iran's
nuclear program off the hook. Following the 2007 NIE, Saudi
Arabia's King Abdullah invited Ahmadinejad to visit the
Kingdom for Hajj, even while privately browbeating U.S.
officials to bomb Iran's reactors. However far-fetched such a
scenario may currently seem, it is not out of the question.
Rouhani played a personal role in negotiating the 1998 Iranian-
Saudi agreement to expand economic cooperation, including in
the energy sector. Since coming to power, he has also described
rapprochement with Saudi Arabia as a top priority since coming
to power. Although Iranian officials on Tuesday ruled out the
possibility, there had even been speculation that Rouhani would
be visiting Mecca for the Hajj this month. In short, the Saudis
are deeply unsettled by America's recent policy shifts on Syria
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and Iran. In the wake of President Obama's historic phone call
with Rouhani, White House officials worked over the weekend
to reassure Arab allies that their interests will factor into any
potential diplomacy with Iran. Evidently, more reassurance will
be needed if we want to keep the Saudis onboard.
David Andrew Weinberg is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for
Defense of Democracies. He previously served as a Democratic
Professional Staff Member at the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Anicic 5
The Washington Institute
Israeli-Egyptian Peace: Forty Years
After The 1973 War And Holding
Ehud Yaari
October 2, 2013 -- As the anniversary of the 1973 Yom Kippur
War approaches, recently declassified U.S. documents and
archival material released in Israel confirm that the Arab military
offensive was intended to serve as a prelude to intensive
diplomacy that would transform the political landscape of the
Middle East. Known to many Arabs as the October or Ramadan
War, the watershed confrontation was conceived by Egyptian
leader Anwar Sadat as a necessary breakthrough in the region's
longstanding diplomatic deadlock. Indeed, after costing some
15,000 lives, the war inaugurated a procession of agreements
between Egypt and Israel leading up to the March 1979 peace
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treaty. It also proved to be the last war waged by any Arab state
against Israel, despite the fact that other players -- particularly
Syria, Egypt's main partner in the conflict -- did not share
Sadat's postwar peace strategy. As the late president was fond of
saying, there could be "no war without Egypt, and no peace
without Egypt."
How has this state of relative peace endured for four decades
despite numerous regional challenges and Egypt's refusal to
fully normalize relations with Israel? As more revelations
emerge, it is important to assess the treaty's track record thus far,
as well as its future prospects in the chaotic strategic
environment that has unfolded following the ouster of two
Egyptian presidents.
THE COLD PEACE
Over the past forty years, Egypt has sought to manage its
relations with Israel using a restrictive format often referred to as
"cold peace." Thus, during the reigns of Sadat and Hosni
Mubarak, Egypt's huge public sector initiated a comprehensive
boycott, preventing Israeli firms from winning tenders while
various syndicates and antinormalization committees imposed
strict limits on the development of bilateral ties.
Indeed, Egypt has always stuck to its traditional anti-Zionist
stance while maintaining the peace. Efforts to widen various
forms of nonmilitary cooperation have invariably met with
failure, including the clearly unrealistic idea of bringing Nile
water to Israel via canal, the plan to connect the two countries'
electrical grids, and the 2005 deal for exporting Egyptian natural
gas to Israel. The latter initiative was scrapped in 2011 after
years of often-interrupted supply -- the pipeline was sabotaged
fourteen times by Sinai Bedouins, and Egypt lacked sufficient
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gas reserves to maintain a steady flow. The one field that seemed
to gather momentum early on -- Israeli assistance with
modernizing Egyptian agriculture, sponsored by visionary
politician Yousef Wali -- was gradually abandoned in the face of
strong anti-Israeli sentiment. Similarly, Israeli tourism to Egypt
dramatically declined after the first few years of peace, and
terrorism-related travel warnings have since slowed it to a trickle
of mainly Arab Israelis vacationing at Red Sea resorts.
On the economic front, Israel's annual volume of trade to Egypt
has never exceeded $150 million of exports, mainly chemicals.
The two economies are simply not complementary. The lone
success is the Qualifying Industrial Zones (QIZ) initiative,
which provides Egyptian plants in seven designated locations
with duty-free export privileges to the United States as long as
their products contain at least 10 percent Israeli-made
components. Several large Israeli textile factories have moved
their lines of production to these zones, and their annual income
now exceeds $1.5 billion.
On the people-to-people front, Cairo has implemented only
limited portions of the eleven normalization agreements signed
in quick succession after the peace treaty, and not as envisaged
at the time. For example, cooperation between national radio
and television networks came to an end after only one joint
program was produced to celebrate the Israeli withdrawal from
the Sinai in April 1982. Today, Israeli journalists cannot obtain
visas to Egypt, and Egyptian reporters do not come to Israel
because of a ban by their union. The Israeli airline El Al has
stopped flying to Cairo due to business and security concerns.
The Israeli Academic Center in Cairo is still open but mainly
serves local students studying Hebrew. And the Egyptian
government discourages citizens from seeking the required
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permit to visit Israel -- most of the 15,000 Egyptians now
residing in Israel are job-seekers who took advantage of the
arrangement allowing them to enter southern Israel at the Taba
border crossing without a visa, in the same way that Israelis can
visit the hotel strip along the Red Sea coast without obtaining a
visa in advance.
ENDURING STRATEGIC BENEFITS
Although the treaty has failed to produce closer socioeconomic
ties between the two nations, it has survived several potent
challenges, including two Lebanon wars, two rounds of fighting
between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, two Palestinian
intifadas, and an endless series of bilateral disagreements, most
notably during the Muslim Brotherhood's recent reign in Cairo.
The document's impressive resilience no doubt contributed
greatly to Israel's 1994 peace treaty with Jordan and its past
negotiations with the Palestinians (particularly the first Oslo
Accord of 1993, which was assisted behind the scenes by top
Egyptian diplomat Taher al-Shash). Cairo has also quietly
facilitated informal Israeli ties with Oman, Saudi Arabia, and
certain other Persian Gulf states.
Yet the treaty's most salient benefit is the mostly unpublicized
military and intelligence cooperation between the two countries,
which reached unprecedented levels this year. Today, Israeli and
Egyptian officers hold almost daily meetings and have
established an efficient system of communications. This
cooperation stems from a mutual interest in curbing the terrorist
factions that have emerged in Sinai over the past decade,
threatening both the Israeli border and Egyptian control over the
peninsula. And now that Muhammad Morsi and the Muslim
Brotherhood have been ousted, both governments view the
Hamas administration in Gaza as an adversary to be contained.
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In light of these threats, Egypt has requested and received Israeli
consent to temporarily deploy its forces into portions of the
eastern Sinai normally prohibited by the treaty's military annex.
This change was achieved through the Agreed Activities
Mechanism coordinated by the Multinational Force of Observers
(MFO), which allows for ad hoc temporary troop movements in
restricted areas. Egypt now has the equivalent of two
mechanized brigades in Zones B and C of the peninsula,
including tanks and Apache helicopters. In addition to uprooting
terrorist safe havens in the Sinai, these forces have sought to
block infiltration and smuggling from Gaza by shutting down
some 800 tunnels running under the border, establishing a half-
kilometer-wide barren strip along the fourteen-kilometer
frontier.
This close security cooperation has also spurred Cairo to
delegate responsibility for maintaining relations with Israel to
the General Intelligence Directorate (GID) and, to a lesser
extent, the military. The Foreign Ministry is much less involved.
For example, the go-to official at the Egyptian embassy in Tel
Aviv is the GID representative, who is usually granted the
modest title of consul. Meanwhile, the Israeli embassy in Cairo
lost its premises after a 2011 attack by angry demonstrators, and
no new offices have been leased. The Israeli ambassador now
operates out of a hotel room, spending only a few days a week in
his post and meeting with very few Egyptian officials.
THE FUTURE OF ISRAELI-EGYPTIAN PEACE
In the wake of Morsi's removal, Egypt and Israel share a fairly
similar interpretation of their strategic environment, regardless
of their differences over the Palestinian issue. Both governments
are uneasy with the direction of U.S. policy in the region; both
are interested in cementing closer Israeli cooperation with Sunni
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Arab states in order to counterbalance Iran; both perceive the
Muslim Brotherhood as a major threat and view Hamas as the
Palestinian extension of this movement; and both are concerned
about the potential ascendency of extreme Islamists in Syria,
despite their mutual delight at the prospect of Bashar al-Assad's
ouster. Thus, even as Cairo carefully restricts the scope of its
contacts with Israel, it has a growing interest in enhancing
cooperation on Sinai, Gaza, and wider regional issues.
If the Obama administration and the U.S. Congress encourage
this trend, they could help buttress perhaps the only solid
cornerstone of stability in a highly volatile area. Whoever is
elected president in Egypt next year -- perhaps commander-in-
chief Gen. Abdul Fattah al-Sisi himself -- may be willing to go
beyond the cold peace formulated by the 1973 war heroes Sadat
and Mubarak, especially in view of the strong anti-Hamas
sentiment that is now widespread in Egypt. Maintaining current
levels of U.S. aid could facilitate such a shift, helping the new
president sidestep public calls to pursue a neo-Nasserite
approach that would result in anti-American and anti-Israeli
policies.
Finally, the unprecedented deployment of Egyptian troops in
central and eastern Sinai has shown that the two countries do not
need to resort to the highly risky exercise of revising the peace
treaty or the military annex. As Egyptian presidential candidate
Amr Mousa has noted on several occasions, removing one
"brick" in those agreements would cause the whole wall to
collapse. Instead, the two governments have been able to work
out a new semipermanent arrangement in the peninsula that
enhances security efforts while allowing Egyptian officials to
reassure their people that past "restrictions on sovereignty" in
the Sinai are no longer in place. As a result, the peace treaty
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brought about by the 1973 war has a good chance of surviving
the upheaval still playing out on the Nile.
Ehud Yaari is a Lafer International Fellow with The
Washington Institute and a Middle East commentatorfor
Israel's Channel Two television.
Article 6
The Washington Institute
Time To End Palestinian Incitement
David Pollock
Autumn 2013 -- Even as Israeli-Palestinian peace talks begin
again, official Palestinian Authority (PA) media are still
broadcasting girls singing about Jews as 'the sons of apes and
pigs,' and still paying effusive tribute to Palestinian terrorists
convicted for murdering Israeli civilians. To get these
negotiations started, Israel agreed to release over one hundred
such prisoners; but the Palestinian government continues to
glorify them as heroes, offering them as role models for the next
generation. If this kind of incitement keeps up, how can Israel
reasonably take risks for peace -- and how could any peace
agreement endure?
The start of peace talks makes it all the more urgent to examine
incitement and related inflammatory rhetoric -- what would be
referred to in the United States or Britain as hate speech -- in the
official public record of the PA. In recent years that record
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reveals relatively few high-level expressions of religious hatred,
but numerous official messages that nonetheless run counter to
the goal of peace. Addressing the problem of incitement now, at
the start of this current peace effort, will help promote an
atmosphere of good will and improve the chances of success in
the negotiations.
On the whole, the PA messaging trend over the past year has
been negative, and the tone has been reflected by the rhetoric of
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas himself. A comparison of
the UN General Assembly speeches by Abbas in September
2011 and September 2012 shows a much more accusatory and
less conciliatory tone toward Israel in 2012, with just a passing
mention of peace.
When examining day to day cases, the most common form of
recent incitement, with nearly one hundred documented cases
between March 2011 and December 2012 according to Palestine
Media Watch, is that of glorifying terrorists, often manifested in
statements by PA officials. The list of honourees includes
occasional mention of earlier assassinated Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO) leaders like Abu Iyad (Salah Khalaf) and
Abu Jihad (Khalil al-Wazir). Most frequently mentioned,
however, are individuals convicted of terrorism since the PLO
officially renounced it at the start of the Oslo process in
September 1993, and including those recently released from or
currently serving time in Israeli jails.
In a particularly striking case, at the end of 2012, the Fatah
Facebook page posted an image of Dalal Mughrabi, a female
terrorist who participated in the deadliest attack in Israel's
history -- the killing of 37 civilians in the 1978 Coastal Road
Massacre. The image was posted with the declaration: 'On this
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day in 1959 Martyr (Shahida) Dalal Mughrabi was born, hero of
the 'Martyr Kamal Adwan' mission, bride of Jaffa and the gentle
energizing force of Fatah.'
Another theme of recent official Palestinian incitement is the
demonisation of Israelis and Jews, often as animals. For
example, on 9 January 2012 PA television broadcast a speech by
a Palestinian Imam, in the presence of the PA Minister of
Religious Affairs, referring to the Jews as 'apes and pigs' and
repeating the gharqad hadith, a traditional Muslim text about
Muslims killing Jews hiding behind trees and rocks, because
'Judgment Day will not come before you fight the Jews.'
Denying Israel's existence or rejecting the possibility of
coexistence with it is another form of incitement. This may be
either explicit or implicit. Fatah's own websites in Arabic
continue to feature the original PLO and Fatah covenants and
other founding documents, all of which explicitly rule out
recognition or peace with Israel and assert a claim to all of
historic Palestine.
Direct statements by PA officials often deny Israel's historical
legitimacy and accuse it of inherent injustice, even if they do not
deny its existence or explicitly threaten to destroy it. For
example, PA Deputy Minister of Information Al-Mutawakkil
Taha told official PA daily newspaper Al Hayat Al Jadida in
early 2012 that, 'Israel has gone beyond all forms of oppression
practiced by fascism throughout history' and that it 'does more
than racist discrimination and ethnic cleansing.'
But what are the motives behind such incidents? Many
Palestinian officials, academic specialists, and other experts
argue that this is simply an expression of anger at Israeli
occupation, and the absence of any sign of it ending. Some
Israeli analysts see this situation in precisely the opposite terms.
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Incitement, they maintain, is actually a form of political
'insurance,' keeping the fires of popular hostility and irredentist
grievances smouldering, and therefore keeping open the option
of reverting to 'armed struggle' even after signing an accord with
Israel, as Arafat did in the Oslo era. A final, even more
discouraging possibility is that senior PA officials actually
believe some of the anti-Israeli and even antisemitic screeds that
their media propagate.
Some argue that the trading of accusations over incitement is a
secondary matter and a distraction from the substantive issues to
be negotiated between the sides; a problem that will go away on
its own once a peace accord is signed. However, the lesson from
other conflicts is that waiting for a conflict to end before
addressing the incitement which fuels it can be a prescription for
disaster.
The international tribunals held following the end of armed
conflict in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda set new
precedents for the prosecution of incitement, at least of
incitement to genocide. Perpetrators of the most serious forms of
incitement were judged as international criminals deserving
severe punishment. Sadly, these measures were taken only after
the most deadly and destructive phase of conflict was over.
Better late than never, some might say, but too late to avert the
damage wrought by incitement while the conflict still raged.
Furthermore, incitement that does not reach the level of
instigating mass murder has not been prosecuted in international
tribunals -- leaving a vast playing field free for lesser yet still
noxious forms.
It is difficult to make direct links from incitement of the kinds
seen in Palestinian media to violent episodes. However, strong
circumstantial evidence suggests a possible connection between
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particular messages and specific terrorist or other violent
episodes. The Itamar massacre of March 2011 for example, in
which five members of the Fogel family were murdered in their
beds, followed a month of commemorations on PA media of
other Palestinian terrorists -- beginning with a DFLP
(Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine) militant who
murdered two Israelis at the same West Bank settlement in 2002.
A 2011 Pew poll shows that 68 per cent of Palestinians in the
West Bank and Gaza say suicide bombing is justified at least
'sometimes', compared with much lower percentages in other
predominantly Muslim societies.
Finding ways to ensure the PA stop, or at least reduce, official
incitement against Israel would have other positive effects, aside
from potentially reducing the motivation for future would be
terrorists. It would indicate that the PA was willing and able to
take the kind of unpopular steps required to keep an agreement
with Israel. Most important in the long run, it might gradually
accustom or encourage more Palestinians to accept permanent
peace with Israel, making a compromise agreement less risky
and more durable.
So, tackling incitement matters; but how should international
third parties address it? Beginning in the Bush Administration,
the US paid particular attention to the issue of incitement in
Palestinian and Israeli textbooks. In part, as one policymaker
from that period privately explained, the decision to focus on
textbooks reflected a feeling that teaching prejudice and training
a new generation for endless conflict was tantamount to 'child
abuse.' In tandem with the pressure on Arafat to empower Abbas
as prime minister in 2003, and in particular following Arafat's
passing in late 2004, this counter-incitement initiative actually
did produce results.
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Similarly during the Obama Administration, public reproaches
from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other relatively high-
ranking officials in early 2010, along with their push for a halt in
Israeli settlement-building to jump-start peace negotiations,
helped produce a decline in PA anti-Israel media messages. This
time, however, the improvement proved only temporary. Once
the short-lived peace talks and Israeli settlement moratorium
ended in September 2010, PA incitement picked up again,
without eliciting a prompt high-level US or international protest.
The lesson appears to be that unlike with textbooks, which are
less susceptible to change, an improvement in media can easily
retrench without persistent pressure. A counter-incitement effort
should be serious, sustained, and comprehensive if it is to have
any success at all.
It should also be focused on the worst cases: any support on
either side for violence or violent offenders coming from
government officials or institutions with governmental authority
or funding. The less extreme forms of incitement such as
historical denials or distortions should be relegated to the
background for now, however important those might be in the
longer term. Neither side should be allowed to use allegations
against the other to deflect or excuse its own failings. Leaders
must set the right tone, and stick to it without exception or
equivocation.
It is futile to debate whether Israeli settlements or Palestinian
hate speech are more or less to blame for the conflict's
persistence. The major lesson of past successes, failures, and
false starts are that incitement is a serious problem, but also a
fixable one. It is at least as much an obstacle to peace as any
other more tangible issue, so steps to end it should be integrated
into any attempt to address the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. All
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interested parties -- Israelis, Palestinians, Americans, Europeans,
and others -- should now pay at least as much attention to hate
speech as to housing starts.
David Pollock is the Kaufman Fellow at The Washington
Institute, director of Fikra Forum, and author of the new study
"Beyond Words: Causes, Consequences, and Curesfor
Palestinian Authority Hate Speech" (http://washin.st/lbrcOqO).
This article originally appeared in the Autumn 2013 issue of
Fathom (http://www.fathomiournaLorg).
Article'.
Bloomberg
Shutdown Gives U.S. Allies One More
Reason for Anxiety
Jeffrey Goldberg
Oct 2, 2013 -- This is just an assumption here, but I'm guessing
that even those Republican members of Congress who forced the
government to shut down believe in the importance of exporting
American goods overseas. No congressional district is
completely cut off from the global economy. I'm also guessing
that congressional Republicans think that Asia is an important
continent, or at least in the top six.
So it stands to reason that even the hardest of the hard core
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would think that it's necessary, from time to time, for the U.S.
president to visit Asia to solidify relationships with the people
with whom we do business.
This is why it's so embarrassing that the shutdown has forced
President Barack Obama to postpone trips to the Philippines and
Malaysia. Imagine you're the president of the Philippines, and
you receive a call from Obama (as Benigno Aquino just did)
telling you that, because a handful of Republicans in Congress
are holding the government hostage because of their displeasure
with aspects of a new health-care law, he can no longer visit.
You might be tempted to think that the U.S. is not a very serious
place anymore. Or you might be tempted to think that Obama is
actually facing a coup but is too embarrassed to admit it --
because, in years past, one good reason for presidents of the
Philippines to cancel trips was to prevent coups from taking
place in their absence.
I've been trying to report how the government shutdown is
playing overseas. One Arab official I spoke to said the impasse
feeds a growing narrative across the Arab world that the sun is
setting on American power. He said
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