False Covenant of ‘Peace and Security’: JARED KUSHNER BACK TO GAUGE POLITICAL CLIMATE TO DETERMINE PLAN ROLLOUT…AGAIN. “Kushner’s plan is now ready. It is 50 (5) pages long. Coincidence?
BY HERB KEINON. OCTOBER 28, 2019. Jerusalem post.
US presidential adviser Jared Kushner
is expected to meet on Monday with Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and prime ministerial hopeful Benny Gantz to test the
political waters here and determine when it will be
possible to release the oft-delayed US peace plan.
Kushner and other members of the US peace team last visited in July in a visit
that was also seen as an attempt to gage the Israeli political climate and
determine when to release the plan. Nothing has changed since then in terms of
certainty about who will be the next prime minister or what the next government
will look like.
Kushner, is
expected to be accompanied by Treasury Minister Steven Mnuchin, new Mideast
negotiator Avi
Berkowitz – who is replacing the departing Jason Greenblatt – and the
US special envoy on Iran, Brian Hook. The delegation is expected to meet with
both Netanyahu and Gantz on Monday.
The delegation is scheduled to travel
from Israel to Riyadh for an economic conference in Riyadh on Tuesday, a
conference the US skipped last year due to the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal
Khashoggi in Turkey.
Just prior to the September 17 elections, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
said that the US would be releasing the plan within days of the election – a
prediction that has proven way off the mark.
US Ambassador David Friedman told The
Jerusalem Post last month that he was “fairly confident” the plan would be
rolled out in 2019.
He also said that the administration wanted to wait until after a government
was formed so that there would be a government in place able to deal with the
plan.
“We would
like to deal with a formed government, so they are in a position to react and
respond and talk to us about it,” he said, adding, “I think we will respect the
Israeli democratic process through the coalition formation.”
Friedman’s assumption at the time, however, seemed to be that a government
would be formed and that Israel would not need to hold yet another election. If Israel goes to third elections, it is
not clear whether the US would continue holding off releasing the plan until a
government is formed. – something that could last until the late spring of 2020.
By that time the US would be in full campaign swing, and releasing the plan
then would make it a hot issue in the campaign – something it is questionable
whether the administration would want to do.
The plan, which has been rejected by the Palestinians sight unseen, and mocked
by numerous pundits and former officials involved in the Mideast diplomatic
process, received some support on Sunday from an unlikely quarter: former
French ambassador to Israel and then to the US Gérard Araud.
Araud, who caused a kerfuffle in April by stating that Israel was an apartheid
state, a comment he latter walked back, penned an op-ed for the Lebanon’s Daily
Star on Sunday stating that US Presdient Donald Trump’s model of “proposing an
agreement instead of merely trying to broker one between the two sides” could
be the right move and “establish a model for his successors to
follow.”
Araud wrote that previous US diplomatic efforts have always aimed to lead the
two sides to negotiate a deal themselves under US auspices. Trump’s new
approach, he wrote, is to unveil a
detailed peace plan, which he said is “not necessarily a bad idea, because
both sides seem incapable of moving forward on their own.
“Kushner’s plan is now ready. It is 50
pages long, he told me a few months ago,” Araud wrote. “Although the plan’s contents are a well-kept secret,
they are likely to be close to Israel’s position. The US proposal might,
therefore, offer the Palestinians a large degree of autonomy rather than a
full-fledged state, and maintain most of the Israeli settlements in the West
Bank.”
Araud, who served in Israel from 2003-2006, wrote that the Palestinians “face a
choice between an unsatisfactory compromise and a continuous (and soon
irreversible) deterioration of their situation. Perhaps
they will conclude that taking a deal will be a good first step.
That, at least, is the calculation of Kushner, who repeatedly says that his
plan will be ‘better for the Palestinians than they think’.”
Araud wrote that whatever Trump decides to do regarding the plan, “one thing is
clear: Israel and the Palestinians are unable
to reach a peace agreement by themselves, as even Israel’s most ardent US
supporters now acknowledge. Any subsequent attempt to mediate the conflict will
have to be based on recognition of that reality.”
