Reuters
By Robin WrightThe Arab world may be in turmoil, but its leaders actually need an enduring peace—now in Gaza and long-term with Israel—because regimes across the region are vulnerable as never before.
Whether they like it or not, that’s true for newly
elected Islamists. And old-order autocrats need resolution to prevent protests at
home from turning against them.
The challenge for
Washington is taking advantage of the vulnerability to work with the new
political roster, including players it doesn’t know all that well. The tectonic
political shift over the past two years offers a rather dynamic opportunity.
Committed U.S.
diplomacy could not only spur meaningful movement on the 64-year conflict. It
could enhance Israel’s security and prevent a whole new type of tension with
the region’s new governments.
The potential is
visible in budding relations between President Obama and Egyptian President
Mohamed Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate who has evolved since June from
an unknown engineering professor to the most powerful Arab leader. They’ve
talked often during the crisis. He is
now brokering what happens next.
Washington's relationship with Morsi will also influence Phase 2 of the Arab awakening. U.S.-Egypt relations under a Muslim Brotherhood president will shape American ties with the wider Islamic world too.
The Obama administration needs to move through three
phases. Phase 1 is a lasting truce—not just a “period of calm.”
Ceasefires never last if not followed by substantive
solutions. So Phase 2—in weeks, not months—is tackling immediate flashpoints,
including real security for Israel, easing the crippling blockade of Gaza and a
settlement freeze in the West Bank.
Hamas has no incentive to end military pressure on
Israel unless Israel eases economic pressure on Gaza, and vice versa. Hamas can
never win militarily, but it can thrive politically by not losing—the Hezbollah
model from the 2006 war. The now weakened West Bank government of President
Mahmoud Abbas Bank won’t convince Hamas rivals to consider any deal without
proof that Israel is seriously engaging.
Phase 3 is negotiations on a broader
Palestinian-Israeli peace. Ironically, after four years of virtually neglecting
the peace process, Hillary Clinton now has an opportunity to pick up where Bill
Clinton left off in his final days as president. The working assumption has
long been that the Camp David plan outlined 12 years ago would form the basis
of any peace. Phase 3 needs an urgent deadline that doesn’t slip, as have efforts
since the original 1993 accords.
Diplomacy short of all three means indefinite rounds
of these conflicts which neither side can win militarily. The
administration needs to move at a clip to ensure events on the ground don’t
again overtake diplomacy. The moment of opportunity is short.
Phase 3 could begin to take shape when Morsi makes his maiden visit as president to Washington next month. The new Egyptian government reflects the broader political reality today: Fragile new Arab governments are no longer resistance movements. Their primary focus is on creating jobs, writing constitutions, reconstruction, and disarming militias.
Phase 3 could begin to take shape when Morsi makes his maiden visit as president to Washington next month. The new Egyptian government reflects the broader political reality today: Fragile new Arab governments are no longer resistance movements. Their primary focus is on creating jobs, writing constitutions, reconstruction, and disarming militias.
They don’t have a lot of time. Egypt, Tunisia and
Libya all face elections over the next year for permanent parliaments, after
writing constitutions. They know there is more power on the streets today than
in presidential palaces. They also know utopian expectations are not being
met. Over the past two months, I’ve
tasted the growing public disillusionment in travels from North Africa to the
Gulf.
Islamist parties have stronger ties to Hamas than
their secular predecessors. But ideology may not be preeminent—at least now. Tunisian
Foreign Minister Rafik Abdessalem, son-in-law of Islamist leader Rachid
Ghannouchi, visited Gaza Saturday. Yet when I saw Abdessalem and Ghannouchi
last month in Tunisia, both were consumed with staggering domestic challenges.
Unemployment was 17
percent, but 40 percent among the young, Abdessalem lamented. “Among the young,
half are college graduates. So it’s not finding them just any job.”
Economics triggered the
greatest change in the modern Middle East. A young Tunisian fruit vendor set
himself on fire over the right to a job, not to vote for the party of his choice.
Enduring hardships can’t be overestimated as the pressing political factor.
In Libya, Tripoli
literally stinks from garbage lining streets while the ingénue state figures out
how to function. Last month, the capital was without water for six days. And a
Muslim Brotherhood parliamentarian fretting about disarming 240,000 armed men
from 300 militias. “So far, integration
into the military and security institutions is not going all that well,” Neizar
Kawan told me.
Only Syria has no interest in either a short or
long-term peace. Gaza diverts attention from the daily slaughter. That says a lot about the changing Middle East—and
the possibilities for U.S. diplomacy. A real peace process may have a rippling
impact too.
I’ve covered every Middle East war since 1973. This
conflict really has critical differences—and opportunities.
Robin Wright, a joint fellow at the US Institute of
Peace and the Woodrow Wilson Center, is author of “Rock the Casbah: Rage and
Rebellion across the Islamic World.”
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