If U.S. Wants to Engage, Analysts See Many Options
By Peter Slevin and Glenn Frankel Washington Post Staff Writers Sunday, March 31, 2002; Page A17
As Israeli tanks rumble and Palestinian suicide bombs explode in a struggle that looks more like war each day, more voices are asking what President Bush could do if he left the sidelines. After all, Vice President Cheney returned from the Middle East to say last week that "there isn't anybody but us" to help resolve the conflict.
The administration says there is very little room for diplomatic maneuver, despite the worsening bloodshed and concern that the conflict could jeopardize the White House's evolving campaign against Iraq. As one official said yesterday: "The administration would be prepared to do a substantial amount, if it thought it would be accepted."
Many analysts contend there is a broad spectrum of policy options and strategies for the United States, short- and long-term, should the president choose to engage. These range from full support for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's military campaign and a full-scale diplomatic initiative to putting U.S. troops in the region as peacekeepers.
A former British foreign secretary, Lord Hurd, has even called for Bush to summon Sharon and Arafat to a remote location where they would not be allowed to leave until they made peace.
Robert Malley, a Middle East adviser to President Bill Clinton, reflected the views of many in that more activist administration when he said that Washington must press the two sides toward a comprehensive final agreement. In a piece he cowrote for the next issue of Foreign Affairs, he insists that the Bush administration cannot wait for the violence to subside.
"In the short run, perhaps, overwhelming Israeli force might quiet the situation," Malley said. "But then there'll be more terrorist attacks, and attacks on the occupying troops, and once those attacks hurt Israel enough and threatened stability in the region, the United States would feel compelled to come back in -- as has happened time and time again."
In contrast, Richard Perle, chairman of the Pentagon's advisory Defense Policy Board, believes the administration should give Sharon full support, including pressing the European allies to lean on Arafat to fulfill his promises to suppress terrorism. "We need to bring the maximum pressure to bear on Arafat, not Israel," Perle said.
U.S. participation at critical junctures has often made a difference in Israeli-Arab conflicts. U.S. presidents intervened forcefully with Israeli prime ministers during the 1973 Yom Kippur War, to persuade Israel not to destroy the surrounded Egyptian army, and in 1982, to halt the destruction of West Beirut during the invasion of Lebanon.
The 1991 Middle East peace conference in Madrid required months of intensive shuttle diplomacy by then-Secretary of State James A. Baker III. Even the 1993 Oslo Accords, which resulted from talks launched secretly between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators without U.S. knowledge, required a U.S. endorsement and earned a White House signing ceremony.
But neither Sharon nor Arafat has shown himself amenable to diplomatic persuasion. The administration is unwilling to get involved beyond the mission of envoy Anthony C. Zinni, a senior official said yesterday, because of the belief that "the effort put in will not equal a successful or a useful outcome." The official said that policy could change depending on events.
In the short term, to win a cease-fire the administration needs a strong, visible Middle East envoy with extensive reach and authority, said Israeli security analyst Yosef Alpher, a former member of Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service. He added that such political issues as the fate of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip should be part of the discussion.
In the long term, Alpher said, Washington needs to lead an international effort to produce a new diplomatic framework for peace. "All of the international mechanisms set up for Israelis and Palestinians to make peace have failed us -- [U.N. Security Council Resolution] 242, the Madrid and Oslo frameworks. We need the U.S. to sit down with the Europeans, the Russians, Israelis and Arabs, and work out a new formula."
"Most of us in Israel realize this administration isn't terribly interested in this conflict and doesn't want to get its hands dirty," Alpher said. But if unresolved, he warned, the fighting will not only do great damage to Israel, a treasured ally, but also spill into Lebanon and Jordan.
The cycle can be broken only with "some kind of formula that will allow each one to save some face," said former national security adviser Brent Scowcroft. "We are hesitant to do anything now for fear that it looks like we're condoning terrorism if we put pressure on Sharon."
Edward S. Walker Jr., until last year the assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, believes a formidable injection of presidential influence is required. "The president has to come out on the podium itself," Walker said, "and he's got to make it credible that he is concerned, that it is affecting our interests. How can you be standing there and saying you care when you're not prepared to do anything?"
Walker said Bush, at a minimum, should recall Zinni to the White House to demonstrate his personal commitment. Even better, he said, would be the appointment of a higher-profile envoy. Walker's own choice? George H.W. Bush, the president's father.
A well-supported U.S. envoy should lead both sides through confidence-building steps while telling Sharon to "offer a proposal that takes us from Point A to Point B -- and Point B is engagement and genuine negotiations," Walker said.
"You step on the Israelis," he continued. "You make it clear that they are now beginning to impinge on serious American interests throughout the region. You don't confront, you don't demand, you don't impose, but you certainly make it clear that this is not a one-sided problem."
On the contrary, Bush has been right to support Sharon and demand that Arafat do more to arrest and disarm militant extremists, said Jason Isaacson, international affairs director of the American Jewish Committee. He believes an aggressive approach is needed because Arafat's "not answering that call."
"What concretely has to happen is there are thousands of Palestinian terrorists who will not tolerate the state of Israel, cannot coexist with the state of Israel, have made it abundantly plain that their mission is the destruction of Israel -- and who must be disarmed, and if not disarmed, then removed from the scene," Isaacson said.
Isaacson said the administration should urge Arab states to squeeze the fundraising operations of the Islamic militant group Hamas. He also said the White House should press the European allies to compel Iran to cut ties to the militant Hezbollah in return for trade.
An administration official said he expects European governments in the coming days to revive the idea of sending international monitors to the region. Proposed last year and brought up again recently by Zinni, the monitors could build confidence by verifying promises made by both sides. Palestinian leaders have long sought a large international presence, but some Israelis fear the monitors would have an anti-Israeli bias.
Sam Lewis, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel, said the White House does not have many good choices.
"It's only after a lot more killing goes on," Lewis said, "that you're going to have either side ready to take advice from outside."
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