By Barry Rubin
Secretary of State John Kerry doesn’t seem to grasp his job.
Now he has referred to Palestine as a country already. He said:
“It’s my hope that…as procedures are put in place both countries
in order to empower” progress toward peace
Of course, it was a slip of the tongue. Yet the secretary of
state is not supposed to contradict directly policy. The U.S. position is that
Palestine is not yet a country and won’t be unless it makes peace with Israel
on terms that Israel will accept. This comes in a little document known informally
as the 1993 Oslo agreement.
Last year, the United States fought hard in the UN against
acceptance of Palestine as a state. What escaped any notice is that the Obama
Administration didn’t get to work until almost a year after it was clear that
this was the strategy of the Palestinian Authority (PA), not to make peace with Israel but to go around it and try to get a state
unilaterally.
If the Obama Administration had done its job and threatened
the PA against such an action, it probably would have stopped it.
If the Obama Administration had done its job and pressured
allies and clients against voting for such a thing, it probably would have persuaded
them.
Now the U.S. government is begging the PA—a body that doesn’t
even control the Gaza Strip where another government is in power that opposes a
deal and openly advocates committing genocide against its supposed
interlocutor!—to do something, anything, to let is support statehood.
But no deal will happen because why should the PA make any
concession—including anything that would block the PA or Hamas from continuing
their long-term effort to wipe Israel off the map—if it can hope to get
everything for nothing.
Mind you, I’m not saying they will ever succeed in doing
that but they will keep trying.
Remember that direct negotiations have basically been going
on for 22 years and they will probably go on for much longer, especially with
these tactics.
NBC executive: “How is that a show?”
Jerry Seinfeld [pitching a show] : “Well, uh, maybe
something happens on the way to work.”
NBC executive: “No, nothing happens...”
Seinfeld: “Well. Something happens.”
NBC executive: Well, why am I watching it?
George Costanza: Because it’s on TV.
NBC executive: “Not yet.”
--“Seinfeld”
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