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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
John Kerry returns to Middle East amid lowered expectations
2013-04-09
What other expectations could you possibly have?
It's a journey that John Kerry will come to know well. The plane descends either from the west, over the glittering Mediterranean sea and the bauhaus architecture of Tel Aviv, or from the east, across the stark biblical landscape of the West Bank. From there it's uphill – literally and, perhaps, metaphorically – to west Jerusalem, the seat of the Israeli government, and to Ramallah, the home of the Palestinian Authority.

The US secretary of state is expected to make this journey many times in the coming months of grinding shuttle diplomacy between the two sides of the 65-year-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He will need stamina, patience, resourcefulness, determination; a strong sense of history, a clear grasp of the present, and a vision of the future; plus an instinct for when to tread delicately and when to diplomatically bang heads.

Kerry is in the Holy Land this week, for the third time in less than a month, as part of a drive by the second-term Obama administration to get the so-called peace process back on track after the miscalculations and setbacks of Barack Obama's first term. Amid carefully lowered expectations, Kerry will strive to bridge the gaps between the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, and the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, that have caused a two-and-a-half-year impasse. But a long history of failed efforts and aborted talks cannot be far from his mind.

Obama's charm offensive on Israel last month went down well. During his three-day visit he showed warmth towards "my friend Bibi", repeatedly using Netanyahu's nickname, in contrast to earlier chilly encounters, and paid tribute to the history and achievements of the Jewish state.
And lost ground with everyone, especially the Israelis...
He made an impassioned appeal for peace, delivered over the heads of government to the people of Israel. Look through Palestinian eyes, he said, recognise that peace is in Israel's interests, face the hard choices and take the necessary risks.

The president was received with markedly less warmth in Ramallah, where the Palestinians feel betrayed by the past four years and deeply cynical about the future.
The Paleos really, really know betrayal. They're specialists at it so they recognize an expert when they see one...
Despite focusing on settlements early in his first term, Obama barely mentioned Israel's continuing colonisation project, which many diplomats say is close to eliminating the possibility of the Palestinians ever creating a viable state. There was little acknowledgement of the Palestinians' painful history and bleak lives under occupation.

Obama left the Holy Land with his stock higher than ever among Israelis,
...no, but let him think that for now...
but even lower among Palestinians. It's now down to Kerry to try to move forward.

Kerry's efforts to bring the two sides together will focus initially on measures to instil confidence in their stated commitment to negotiations.

Israel may be asked to release more than 120 Palestinian political prisoners who have been in jail since before the 1993 Oslo accords. The Palestinians would also like a settlement construction freeze. Israel's formal position is that this is a non-starter, but it may avoid announcing new building projects in the next two or three months in an unstated gesture.

The Palestinians have said they will refrain from pressing ahead with taking Israel to the international criminal court – a key Israeli concern – for up to 12 weeks. But they also want to see a proposed map with defined borders at the start of any talks.
Whereas the Israelis think the map comes at the end, after the Paleos agree that Israel has a right to be on the map...
Kerry is believed to be keen to dust off the 11-year-old Arab (or Saudi) peace plan, under which regional states would normalise relations with Israel in return for the establishment of a Palestinian state. And he is likely to ask Turkey to play an active role in any revived process.

It all seems reasonably promising on paper, but the reality on the ground looks rather different.

The new Israeli government, sworn in two days before Obama's visit, is a rightwing pro-settler coalition. One of its key partners, the Jewish Home party led by Naftali Bennett, is vehemently opposed to a two-state solution. Netanyahu also has a long track record of saying he wants peace talks while pursuing a colonialist policy in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

On the Palestinian side, frustration is growing at the lack of a political horizon and the continued suffocated existence under occupation. Cynicism about the "peace process" abounds, faith in Abbas is plummeting and the mood among young men in villages and refugee camps is growing more radical. Talk of a new Palestinian intifada (uprising) is common both on the street and in Israeli military-intelligence circles.

In Gaza, perhaps the most complicated and least discussed aspect of any peace talks, rocket fire has resumed on a limited scale over recent weeks. Another conflict like those in 2008-9 and 2012 would likely derail Kerry's ambitions.

Kerry will also focus on Iran's nuclear programme, as well as the worsening situation in Syria and its knock-on effect in Lebanon. The secretary of state will have his hands full. "It's too early to be optimistic," said a western diplomat.
Posted by:Steve White

#6  The most tragic part of this is that he actualy thinks he is capable of doing something. It is a fitting display of American decline under the Progressive Administration of Champ into theater of the absurd that this assh^le is viewed by the world as a clown with cash, an utter fool, but capable of giving goodies if you tell him the right lies.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2013-04-09 14:32  

#5  I expect him to drop the ball.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2013-04-09 12:01  

#4  I've had lowered expectations since he got in as SoS
Posted by: Frank G   2013-04-09 09:40  

#3  Foggy bottom is boring, full of unenlightened gov't employees and office politics. Fancy dinners, sending back cables which Champ never reads. Hey, wat's not to like? This job be easy. Oh well, "anywhere for per diem" as they say. It worked for the Hildebeast.
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-04-09 07:01  

#2  Ours? Theirs? Bowf a dem?
Posted by: Bangkok Billy   2013-04-09 06:47  

#1  Total waste of Jet-A.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2013-04-09 00:25  

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