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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Not a scintilla of authenticity

August 9, 2013 14:12
2 min read

Believe me, if I thought for one moment that the so-called “Middle East Peace Process Talks” (the phrase is that of the US State Department) had a chance in a trillion in bringing genuine peace between Israel and its Arab neighbours I would back them to the hilt. If I thought that the eloquent words of US Secretary of State John Kerry had a milligramme of credibility to back them, I would sing their praises — and his.

There, in the ornate Benjamin Franklin room of the State Department on July 30 last, flanked by Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat, a dapper Mr Kerry insisted that “with capable, respected negotiators, like Minister Tzipi Livni and Dr Saeb Erekat, standing side by side here today… with their efforts, their expertise, and their commitment, I’m convinced that we can get there.” What exactly “there” might mean I shall leave for a moment. I want instead to draw your attention to certain brutal realities concerning the precise nature of the “peace process talks” now under way.

These talks are talks about talks. They are not, in the diplomatic sense, peace negotiations. They could be, of course. The demand could be made of the Israelis that they withdraw completely from east Jerusalem, including from the Old City and its Jewish Quarter. Since this is likely to be rejected, if not by Ms Livni, then almost certainly by the government she represents (and if not by that government then certainly by the Israeli electorate in the now-promised referendum) then you can easily understand why the status of Jerusalem will be discussed but not negotiated.

The demand could be made of the Palestinian Authority that it must recognise Israel as a Jewish state and agree to a solemn-and-binding peace treaty with that Jewish state, drawing a line under all claims the Palestinian Arabs might ever have made of and pertaining to that state. But Dr Erekat must know (and if he does not, his boss Mahmoud Abbas certainly does), that the life of whoever on the Palestinian side signed such a treaty would hardly be worth living.