The entire world
knows what an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement looks like.
Our leaders know, most of the Israeli and Palestinian people
know, US President Barack Obama, special envoy George Mitchell,
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Quartet envoy Tony Blair,
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, UN Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon
– they all know it. There are no secrets. This is the most
researched conflict in the history of conflicts and there are
more detailed plans on how to resolve even the minutest of
details in this conflict than any other.
Collectively, those of us working for peace over the past 20
years have conducted thousands of hours of meetings between
Israeli and Palestinian experts on every aspect of the conflict.
The best universities in the world have convened
Israeli-Palestinian peace projects and presented their findings
to the international community and to the local leaders.
Israeli and
Palestinian negotiating teams have explored every possible issue
in depth and have identified all of the red lines of each side.
Time is running out. Options for resolving the conflict that
exist today may not be there tomorrow. Our main problem is that
until now this has been a failed peace process.
One of the ironies is that a majority of Israelis and
Palestinians say that they want peace. They say they are ready
to make painful compromises. But they also both say there is no
partner on the other side.
History, thus far has proven them right.
Objectively speaking, Israelis and Palestinians have no good
reason to trust each other. Both sides have proven to be
terrible partners. Both sides have breached, substantively, all
of the agreements that they signed. Sure, each side will place
more responsibility on the other side than take responsibility
for its own breaches. So why should we trust each other? We
shouldn’t – is the answer, but that is our challenge and not a
curse of a doomed fate.
We have no choice but to make peace.
Any other option is catastrophic. Our very survival and
existence as a nation – both nations – depends on our ability to
make peace. The survival of the Jewish people in our land, of
the Zionist enterprise in its entirety is based on our ability
to extricate ourselves from the occupation of the Palestinian
people and to make peace on the basis of two states for two
peoples. The fate of the Palestinian people and their survival
as a nation is based entirely on their ability to demonstrate
that they are responsible members of the community of nations
and that they are committed to living in peace with their Jewish
neighbors on the basis of two states for two peoples.
There is no other solution to the conflict.
Whoever says he has another solution is fooling himself and
others. Yes, there may be federative or confederative
possibilities in the future for varying degrees of cooperation
and open borders, but all of those options grow from the
two-state solution and not before it or instead of it.
SO WHAT must we do now? We must enter this process with the
working assumption that we don’t trust each other. We don’t
expect each other to fulfill our most basic obligations. That is
simply the reality. If this is the case, developing a peace
agreement cannot be based on a bilateral process which is
predicated on mutual trust, and no amount of artificial
confidence-building measures will create that trust. After years
of failure, violence and suffering, new trust can only be based
on the actual fulfillment of obligations and commitments agreed
to in the context of treaties. But if we don’t trust them and
they don’t trust us, how can we possibility proceed? We must
insist that there be a reliable third party who will monitor
implementation and verify that all aspects of all agreements are
being fully implemented.
We must insist that the reliable third party be able to act
immediately when there are breaches. It must be able to call the
parties to task, to demand explanations and to insist on
implementation. It must act with full transparency so that the
public on both sides knows what their governments are fulfilling
and what they are not doing. We must insist that the reliable
third party has the capacity and the authority to resolve
disputes in real time, before they blow out of proportion.
Not every single dispute needs to rise to the level of a cabinet
decision, as it did in past situations.
We need to insist that Obama get directly involved and that
direct negotiations mediated by Mitchell take place immediately
and intensively. We need to insist that the mediator put
bridging proposals on the table because we know each other’s red
lines, but we will both wait until the last minute before we
expose our own. We need the mediator to conduct cooperation
based negotiations, not competition based negotiations where the
emphasis is on problem solving and not “your losses are my
gains.” We need a good agreement, we need an agreement that both
sides can live with, we need an agreement that the leaders of
both sides will support enthusiastically and not present as a
bad deal to their people.
GETTING TO the agreement will be hard work. We need both leaders
to look directly into the eyes of their people and to tell them
the truth.
Netanyahu must state clearly that the Palestinian state will be
established in about 96 percent of the West Bank. We will give
the Palestinians land inside of Israel to account for the 4% of
the West Bank that we will annex as part of the agreement.
Some 80% of the settlers in the West Bank and east Jerusalem
will remain where they are and will be part of the sovereign
State of Israel, but some 20% will have to relocate – either to
the annexed lands in Judea and Samaria or to Israel.
Netanyahu must say to the Israeli people that Jerusalem will be
the capital of both countries. We will have sovereignty over the
Western Wall and they will have sovereignty on the Temple Mount,
but they will agree not to dig or to build there, nor will we
tunnel underneath. We will trust God to change the arrangement,
if need be, when He decides to send us the messiah. Until then
we will recognize that the Muslims have control there and we do
not.
Abbas must look in the eyes of his people and say we will not
return to our lost homes inside Israel. Our return will be to
our state. Our mission is to build our state and to create the
first real democracy in the Arab world. Palestine will be a
model state using the latest technologies and have the best
school system in the Middle East.
Palestine will be prosperous and all Palestinians will be
invited to share the dream and to build the state. We will share
Jerusalem with our Jewish cousins, our Israeli neighbors and we
will resolve all disputes through diplomacy not violence.
And both states will dwell in peace.
The writer is the co-CEO of the
Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information (www.ipcri.org)
and an elected member of the leadership of the Green Movement
political party.