Ever since September 2001, the President's central operative image has been "war" specifically, his "global war on terror" (promptly transformed into the grim acronym GWOT). With it went the fantasy that we had been plunged into the modern equivalent of World War II with as George loved to put it "theaters" of operation and "fronts" on a global scale. Remember how, as we occupied Baghdad in April 2003, administration pronouncements almost made it seem as though we were occupying Tokyo or Berlin, 1945? And when things went badly in Iraq, that country quickly became "the central front in the war on terror" in the President's speeches. Well, now it may indeed be just that.
In the framework essentially a fundamentalist religion of global force and "preventive" war adopted by the Bush administration, the only place for diplomats was assumedly on the sidelines, holding the pens, as the enemy surrendered to the military. (Too bad, when we hit Baghdad, there was no one around to surrender, no way to put a John Hancock on our "victory.") Otherwise, as classically happened in Iraq, where the State Department, despite copious planning for the postwar moment, was cut out of the process and left in the Kuwaiti or Washingtonian dust by Donald Rumsfeld's Pentagon, all issues of diplomacy were essentially relegated to Wimp World. After all, as the infamous neocon slogan once went, "Everyone wants to go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to Tehran." And it was well known that diplomats were not "real men."
Nowhere on the planet was a diplomat worth a sou. Not surprisingly, then, the two central figures in George W. Bush's second-term diplomatic non-endeavors became his two key female enablers, Condoleezza Rice, now secretary of state, and Karen Hughes, now undersecretary for public diplomacy and public affairs. Not surprisingly, Rice has managed to do nothing of significance on our planet even the great diplomatic "success" of this administration, its shaky deal with North Korea, was basically crafted by the Chinese on terms worse than could have been obtained years earlier and Hughes, as diplomacy's spinmeister, has managed to put less than no polish on our globally disastrous image.
By now, of course, we've arrived at a moment in the Middle East so
grim, so fraught with dangers, so at the edge of who knows what, with
so many disparate crises merging, that it's even occurred to Rice
something must be done. As Tony Karon, savvy guy, senior editor at Time.com, and the creator of the ever-thoughtful and provocative blog Rootless Cosmopolitan points out, Rice has so far gotten a free ride here. Her approval ratings, until recently,
hovered well above 50%, while the President's were sinking close to
30%. Let Karon now explain to you where we really are in the Middle
East, diplomatically speaking. Tom
Condi's Free Ride
The Fantasy of American Diplomacy in the Middle East
By Tony Karon
They must serve up some pretty powerful Kool Aid in the press room down
at Foggy Bottom, judging by U.S. media coverage of Condi Rice's latest
"Look Busy" tour of the Middle East.
Secretary of State Rice's comings and goings have long been greeted
with a jaded disdain by the Arab and Israeli media. As Gideon Levy
wrote plaintively (and typically) in Israel's Haaretz last August,
"Rice has been here six times in the course of a year
and a half, and what has come of it? Has anyone asked her about this?
Does she ask herself? It is hard to understand how the secretary of
state allows herself to be so humiliated. It is even harder to
understand how the superpower she represents allows itself to act in
such a hollow and useless way. The mystery of America remains unsolved:
How is it that the United States is doing nothing to advance a solution
to the most dangerous and lengthiest conflict in our world?"
The fact that this time Rice professes to be advancing just such a
solution has hardly convinced Middle Eastern scribes. As Beirut's
secular, liberal Daily Star
put it in an editorial on Monday, "Already this is Rice's fourth Middle
East tour aimed at reactivating a stalled peace process, but so far the
only measurable progress she has achieved has been racking up extra
mileage on her airplane."
Mainstream U.S. media outlets were alone in their willingness to
swallow the preposterous narratives offered by Rice's State Department
spinners on the significance of her latest diplomatic efforts. For
months, we have been reading a fantasy version
of American diplomacy in which Rice was at the center of a realignment
of forces in the Middle East, building a united front of Arab moderates
to stand alongside the U.S. and Israel against Iran and other
"extremist" elements. Last week, we were asked to believe that Rice was
now about to head back to the region to choreograph a complex and
dramatic diplomatic dance that would include such "challenges" as
"trying to get the Saudis to talk to the Israelis." Perhaps none of her
aides bothered to let her in on the open secret
that the Saudis have been doing that for months and not under the
tutelage of, or at the prompting of, the Secretary of State either.
On the eve of her departure, the Washington Post
informed us, Rice would remake the peace process via a new math: 4+2+4.
This was cute jargon for grouping various discussions among the
Israelis and Palestinians, the "Quartet" (the U.S., the European Union,
the UN, and Russia), and an "Arab Quartet" comprising Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, and the United Arab Emirates. By Monday, only three
days later, however, the new math had mysteriously disappeared as if
Rice had suddenly entered a world of innumeracy replaced
by "parallel discussions." With the Israelis unwilling to talk to the
Palestinians about the "contours of a Palestinian state," each side was
instead to discuss such things separately with Rice in a kind of
diplomatic confession booth.
For anyone disappointed by the sudden demise of "4+2+4," Condi assured
all involved that "we'll use many different geometries, I'm sure, as we
go through this process." A day later, the trip's crowning achievement
was reported by the New York Times:
"After three days of shuttle diplomacy between Israeli and Arab cities
and a late night of haggling, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said
Tuesday that she had persuaded Israeli and Palestinian leaders to hold
talks twice a month." But not, it turned out, on the "final-status
issues" the contours of a Palestinian state. They would simply chat
to "build confidence," while, presumably, regularly reentering her
confession booth.
As Lebanon-based Jordanian journalist Rami Khouri put it,
"To overcome the chronic stalemate of bilateral
Palestinian-Israeli diplomacy, [Rice] is now expanding this into a
trilateral failure, as the principal parties who won't talk to each
other only to talk to her. It's hard to decide if this is a comedy or a
horror show."
It may be a sign of the contempt with which
the Bush administration treats the American media that Condi expects
such a Pollyannaish pantomime to be reported as if it were
history-in-the-making. And it may be a mark of the naivetι with which
much of the U.S. media has, over these last years, chronicled Condi's
adventures that, in fact, it is reported as if it were
history-in-the-making. The Secretary of State has not only chalked up
the miles in the air recently, in media terms here in the U.S., she's
invariably been given a free ride.
Whose Diplomacy Is This Anyway?
In reality, if significant diplomatic maneuvering is currently underway
in the Middle East, it is the work of the Saudis. The Saudi royals had
grown so alarmed by the passivity and incompetence of the Bush
administration and by the rising influence of Iran as well as
Islamist movements in the Arab world (whose popularity and credibility
is boosted by their willingness to stand up to Israel and the U.S.)
that it launched an uncharacteristically robust diplomatic campaign on
a number of fronts. The Condi-spun media tends to explain this as the
Bush administration coaxing Riyadh's royal wallflowers onto the
diplomatic dance floor. The Saudi efforts are, however, so clearly at
odds with administration policies and desires on key issues that this
characterization is impossible to sustain.
As Washington pressed for the isolation of Iran, Riyadh supposedly
the leader of a new Axis of Moderation being constructed by Washington
spent the winter vigorously engaging Tehran
at the highest level. The purpose was to begin to calm Shiite-Sunni
tensions across the region, aggravated by the catastrophic situation in
Iraq, and to bring Lebanon's warring factions back from the brink of
confrontation. While the U.S. press was generally reporting that the
Saudis were entering a period of muscular confrontation with Iran, that
country appeared to be searching for mechanisms to manage Saudi/Iranian
differences based on a mutual recognition of each other's regional
roles. Not exactly what George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, or Condoleezza
Rice seems to have had in mind.
Then came the Saudi attempt to bring the warring Palestinian factions
together in the Mecca Agreement. Here, the Saudis brokered negotiations
to draw Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah party into a unity government with Hamas
even as Washington continued to warn Abbas against doing so. Abbas,
the president of the Palestinian National Authority, has rarely
exhibited any independence from Washington. His willingness to take
this step offered a clear signal that the Saudis
were orchestrating things on the Israeli-Palestinian front with little
patience for indulging Bush administration fantasies. The U.S. had, of
course, been seeking the literal overthrow of Hamas since it won
legislative elections in 2006 something the Saudis recognized as
infeasible, given that Hamas is, at this point, far more representative
of Palestinian sentiment than Fatah. Saudi leaders were also aware that
Washington's campaign to isolate Hamas in the Arab world left it little
option but to seek Iranian patronage.
In reality, the Bush administration seems increasingly at odds with the
consensus among the Arab moderates it claims to be leading. Saudi
Arabia's King Abdullah, in particular, appears to have sent a signal of
this in cancelling
with little explanation - a special state dinner that was to be
hosted by President Bush on April 17th. Then, at Wednesday's Arab
League Summit in Riyadh, the King followed up
by demanding an end to the crippling financial siege of the Palestinian
Authority imposed by the U.S. and denouncing the American military
presence in Iraq as an "illegitimate foreign occupation." This is
strong stuff from the Saudis.
Rather than a patient plan crafted by the U.S. Secretary of State as
some miraculous alchemist of grand strategy, the latest flurry of
activity reflects the maturing of a range of crises in the Middle East
that have festered dangerously, while Condi fiddled. These include:
* The fact that the Bush administration has only exerted itself and
then just symbolically on the Israeli-Palestinian front when it was
desperate for favors from allied Arab regimes on other fronts, notably
the roiling crises in Iraq and Iran. With the U.S. struggling
unsuccessfully on both fronts, its vaunted ability to influence events
in the region is in precipitous decline.
* The fact that the Arab regimes most closely allied to the U.S. face
mounting crises of legitimacy at home, damned not only by their
authoritarianism, but also by their paralysis in the face of U.S. and
Israeli violence against Arab populations. Delivering the Palestinians
to statehood is now seen by those regimes as essential to their own
domestic political survival.
* The fact that an Israeli government, which came to power promising
peace through unilateral "disengagement" from Gaza and parts of the
West Bank, having fought a disastrous war in Lebanon and facing a
never-ending struggle in Gaza, is seemingly disengaged from itself, its
policies in tatters. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is drowning in a sea of
corruption, scandals, and recriminations over the strategic and
tactical incompetence he demonstrated in last summer's Lebanon war.
With his own approval ratings at an astonishing 3%, he desperately
needs a new idea to persuade Israeli voters that there's any reason to
keep him in office.
* The fact that the Palestinians are experiencing an unprecedented
humanitarian and political breakdown. All factions of the Palestinian
government share an overwhelming incentive to get the financial siege
lifted from battered, strife-torn Gaza. President Abbas' political
future and legacy rest solely on completing the Oslo peace process;
while for Hamas at least for its more pragmatic political leadership
allowing President Abbas to pursue that course (particularly when it
carries pan-Arab blessing) makes a certain sense. Hamas's political
choices have always reflected a keen sense of Palestinian popular
sentiment. By maintaining a distant and ambiguous stance towards
Abbas's diplomatic efforts, it can plausibly deny complicity if the
outcome proves unpopular on the Palestinian street.
The Failure to "Get There"
It is this combined political weakness, the loss of power among all the
main players, that makes a renewed push for peace suddenly so
attractive and so dubious. In recent weeks, both Rice and Olmert have
expressed guarded enthusiasm for the Saudi peace proposals, as if they
represented some remarkable new set of suggestions. The plan, which
offers Israel recognition for full withdrawal to its 1967 borders, a
Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital, and a solution to
the Palestinian refugee question based on a "right of return," was
actually adopted by the Arab League five years ago. It was simply
ignored by Israeli and American administrations that then felt too
powerful to consider it. Their sudden willingness to embrace it, even
if on their own terms, underscores the failure of their guiding
political strategies.
Secretary of State Rice now treats discussions over the contours of a
Palestinian state as if everyone were beginning with a blank slate.
This is simply a self-serving evasion Israelis and Palestinians are
well acquainted with the parameters of a final-status agreement,
because they've already negotiated over them at length at Camp David
and later at Taba in 2001, where they came pretty close to concluding a final status agreement. Even the "roadmap"
adopted by the Bush administration in 2003 (partly as a reward for Arab
and British support for the Iraq invasion) calls for a settlement that
"will resolve the Israel-Palestinian conflict, and end the occupation
that began in 1967, based on the foundations of the Madrid Conference,
the principle of land for peace, UNSCRs 242, 338 and 1397, agreements
previously reached by the parties, and the initiative of Saudi Crown
Prince Abdullah endorsed by the Beirut Arab League Summit." The basic
assumption that emerges through all of those venues, resolutions, and
initiatives is that the 1967 borders should be the basis for
negotiating a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
It's the Bush administration that has failed, or refused, to grasp
this. "If we all know what [a political settlement] looks like," Condi
said last week, "then why haven't we been able to get there?" That's
the right question, of course, although Condi clearly intended it only
as a rhetorical conversation-stopper. What she refuses to recognize is
that the question has an answer: We haven't gotten there because there
are elements on all sides of the conflict who don't want to get there.
Sure, the U.S. mainstream media will tell you all about the Palestinian
rejectionists. What American reporting seldom makes clear is that Ariel
Sharon was also elected prime minister in February 2001 on a
rejectionist platform. He rejected
the very idea that the conflict could be resolved through a negotiated
settlement with the Palestinians. Instead, Sharon envisaged a
unilateral withdrawal from about half of the West Bank and Gaza,
leaving the Palestinians a little over 42% of the territories they
occupied in 1967. A "non-belligerency agreement" would then be
concluded for a "lengthy and indefinite period." The latter, of course,
sounds not dissimilar to the "long-term truce" advocated by Hamas,
which shares Sharon's distaste for a final political settlement
although nobody in our world pilloried the Israeli leader as an
extremist for holding exactly that position.
Sharon's position was so important precisely because it was so
influential in Washington. Back in 2001, when Secretary of State Colin
Powell warned against the consequences of encouraging Sharon to seek a
military solution to the Palestinian uprising, President Bush reportedly snapped, "Sometimes a show of force by one side can really clarify things." That could be an epitaph for the Age of Bush.
Indeed, to the extent that it was to be addressed at all on President
Bush's watch, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was framed primarily as
a problem of "terrorism." Sharon was encouraged to escalate the war on
the West Bank on the basis that Israel had a right to defend itself.
Under Sharon's tutelage, the administration put the onus for restarting
any peace process purely on the Palestinians. They were not only tasked
with preventing any further violence against Israelis, but also with
dismantling the military infrastructure of the likes of Hamas and
Fatah. The administration did occasionally pay lip service to the idea
of Israel freezing settlement activity, but without conviction (or
significant effect).
When President Bush courted Arab support on Iraq in 2002, he made a
symbolic declaration of support for Palestinian statehood but it was
promptly hedged with qualifications. Not only would the Palestinians
have to fulfill Israel's security demands before there could be any
movement towards such statehood, they would also have to thoroughly
reform their political system: President Arafat would have to transfer
control of Palestinian funds and security forces to the democratically
elected legislature and the cabinet and prime minister it appointed.
(The irony, to anyone paying attention, was that, after Hamas won last
year's election, the Bush administration did a 180-degree turnabout and now insists that funds and security forces be entirely under the control of the politically reliable President Abbas.)
As Rice's erstwhile mentor, former National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft, put it three years ago, "Sharon just has [President Bush] wrapped around his little finger. I think the president is mesmerized."
In fact, far from being orchestrated or designed by Secretary of State
Rice, events currently underway in the Middle East correspond more
closely to a prescription outlined by Scowcroft in an explicit rebuke
of Rice at the height of last summer's Lebanon crisis. As Scowcroft
warned, the grand bargain that would stabilize the region depended,
first and foremost, on the U.S. mustering the political will to press
the parties to make unpopular choices. For the past six years, such
political will has been conspicuously absent in Washington.
Those, Madame Secretary, are some of the reasons why we haven't yet "been able to get there."
As the Daily Star noted in an editorial
last Monday, if Condi Rice wants to revive an Israeli-Palestinian peace
process, then her powers of persuasion would be more productively
deployed not in the Middle East, but in the West Wing.
Tony Karon is a senior editor at TIME.com where he analyzes the
Middle East and other international conflicts. At his own blog, Rootless Cosmopolitan, he offers a more pugilistic take on the universe.