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Help Abbas Succeed
by Yossi Beilin
The election of Mahmoud Abbas (also known as Abu Mazen) in Palestinian
voting Sunday came as no surprise. The organized election process, the
lively campaign and the openness to the media have all proved once again
that if a Palestinian state is established it will be the first Arab
democracy. But the state has not yet been established, and the system now
headed by Abbas is not much more than a stage set.
The real question is not whether Abbas is genuinely ready for peace and
will start combating terrorism tomorrow but whether the United States,
Europe and Israel are prepared to seize this rare opportunity: the election
as Palestinian leader of a pragmatic person who has taken part in all the
peace processes with Israel and who courageously came out against the use
of violence in the most recent intifada.
Today Abbas does not need to prove himself. At 69, he is one of the more
"transparent" politicians in the region. His books, speeches, interviews
and actions are well known. Even during the most difficult moments of the
recent election campaign, he went out of his way to condemn the rockets
fired against Israel by Hamas, for which he and his policies came under
heavy criticism from Islamic elements.In 1995, after two years of negotiations, we agreed upon what came to be
known as the Beilin-Abu Mazen Agreement. This unsigned document was to
serve as the basis for the Clinton plan five years later, and to form the
basis for negotiations leading up to the Geneva accord, inaugurated a year ago.
On a personal level, Abbas is a pragmatic person, but not necessarily a
moderate. He has no sympathy for the Zionist enterprise, but he understood,
before many of his colleagues, that the distress of the Palestinian people
could be resolved through an independent state next to Israel, rather than
in place of it. In principle, his permanent-status agreement is no
different from Yasser Arafat's, and at the moment of truth, he may flaunt
it, positioning himself as continuing Arafat's legacy. But the real
question is not the principles; it is the details. In my opinion, it will
be possible to reach a detailed peace agreement with Abbas.
Abbas has won the genuine and extensive support of his people for his new
role. Born in Safed and himself a refugee (which means it will be easier
for him to persuade refugees to accept the payment due them), he has gained
the confidence of President Bush, of the Arab world, of Europe and of many
Israeli citizens on both the right and left wings. He opposes violence of
any type and has been struggling for a long time to achieve an
Israeli-Palestinian permanent-status agreement. His election to head the
Palestinian Authority represents a rare opportunity indeed.
But if from this point onward we do nothing more than wait for Abbas to
move, it is an opportunity we are likely to miss. Abbas stands at the head
of a system that has been destroyed over the past four years. There is no
law and order in the Palestinian territories; people are afraid to leave
their homes at night. Only part of the security forces obey the head of the
Palestinian Authority. Half of Palestinians live under the poverty line,
and unemployment is rampant. Abbas may well set up a "government," appear
at assemblies, give interviews, try to reach understandings with Hamas and
even make visits to other countries. But if he wants to bring about genuine
change in conditions, he needs us -- not sitting on the sidelines but out
there on the stage, with him.
If President Bush makes do with implementing the "road map" without
updating it and setting realistic deadlines, without sending an envoy to
the region to supervise and monitor events, without someone on his behalf
working day and night to implement the plan that Israel and the
Palestinians agreed on (each side according to its own interpretations),
then Abbas will fail. Without major political vision, he will not be able
to preserve his political existence.
If the Europeans do not provide assistance in financing economic plans, in
rehabilitating the infrastructure and in helping the Palestinian security
system to train and to function as an effective police force, Mahmoud Abbas
will become history even before one of the warlords takes control of the
Palestinian Authority. He must prove that he is capable of changing the
day-to-day situation and that tranquility is beneficial to the Palestinians.
If Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon proceeds with the withdrawal plan
from Gaza as if his partner in peace is Yasser Arafat, if the targeted
assassinations continue, if the number of checkpoints is not reduced, if
the parties do not return to the negotiating table to discuss the
permanent-status agreement after four years during which they have not
exchanged a single official word -- then it will be a waste of time to
prepare profile reports on Abbas. Then we will have missed this
opportunity, too. And we are so very good at missing opportunities.
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* The writer, a former justice minister of Israel, was initiator of the
Oslo peace process. He is the leader of the Yahad Party-SDI (Social
Democratic Israel).
Source: The Washington Post, January 14, 2005
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Distributed by the Common Ground News Service.
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