The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict:
Imperatives And Choices
24 Jan 2012
By Alon Ben-Meir
This article was filed under following categories:
Arab-Israeli conflict, Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
US Foreign Policy, Middle East, Israel, Hamas, West
Bank
For more than two decades I have been involved as a
researcher, writer and as a back-channel interlocutor
in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The question that
has puzzled me as well as the multitude of observers,
researchers and even those directly involved in the
peace negotiations is why, after 64 years of blood and
toil, successive Israeli governments and Palestinian
authorities have failed to find a solution when, in
fact, peaceful co-existence based on a two-state
solution is the only sane choice.
Certainly there is an explanation to every aspect of
the conflict and how it has evolved over the last six
decades but the one thing that has largely escaped the
public domain is the psychological dimension of the
conflict and its impact on every contentious issue
between the two parties. Moreover, the fact that the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been punctuated by
intense violence has increasingly deepened the
suspicion and mistrust between the Israelis and the
Palestinians. As a result, many on both sides have
resigned themselves to the belief that it is futile to
continue the peace negotiations and hopeless to think
they will ever reach an agreement.
What seems to have also escaped the public discourse
are the facts that for the past three years, the level
of violence has greatly diminished due mainly to two
developments: a) the Palestinian Authority has
officially abandoned violence as a means to achieve
its political objective of founding a Palestinian
state in the West Bank and Gaza; and b) Israel's
incursion into Gaza in 2008-2009 forced Hamas to
recognize that militant resistance towards Israel
might have run its course. Moreover, the outbreak of
the Arab Spring has demonstrated that whereas the Arab
governments have portrayed Israel in the past as the
primary culprit behind their socio-economic and
political ills, the Arab youth held their own
governments responsible for their ailments and refused
to use Israel or other foreign powers as the
scapegoats to justify the failure of their
governments.
Due to the fact that this is an election year in the
US, Israel and perhaps among the Palestinians, many
noted observers suggest that not much can really be
done to during this period advance the peace process.
I disagree. These developments between Israel and the
Palestinians and in the Arab world offer a momentous
opportunity to mitigate the psychological aspects of
the conflict within, and outside, the governing
bodies, while addressing each conflicting issue in
that context and in an atmosphere devoid of daily
violence. Failing to seize the moment will only
strengthen the anti-peace camp on both sides and make
the conflict inevitably more intractable, thereby
deferring any solution for many years to come at an
extremely high cost in blood and treasure.
To provide the rationale behind this thesis and allay
some of the reservations some may have about the
prospects of finding a solution, I wrote an eight-part
essay. Each part deals with one aspect of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and offers, I trust, a
practical, equitable and mutually-beneficial solution.
Each part of the essay stands on its own and will be
sent for publication and to my general distributors on
Thursdays beginning the 26th of January in the
following order:
1) The Psychological Dimension of the
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
2) Reconciling Between Hamas and Israel
3) Maintaining the Jewish National Identity of Israel
4) Borders and Israel's National Security
5) The Disposition of the Settlements
6) The Solution to the Palestinian Refugees
7) The Future of Jerusalem
8) Developing a Structure for a Sustainable
Israeli-Palestinian Peace
I hope that you will find my analysis and approach in
the search for a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict compelling and I look forward to receiving
any comments or observations you may have. I would be
most grateful if you share this series of articles
with your contacts in the hope of creating a much
wider discussion to help contribute to bringing an end
to one of the most debilitating conflicts of our time.
A noted journalist and author, Dr. Alon Ben-Meir
is professor of international relations and Middle
East studies at the Center for Global Affairs at New
York University. Ben-Meir holds a masters degree in
philosophy and a doctorate in international relations
from Oxford University.