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Doni Remba, a veteran pro-Israel
peace advocate and Middle East political analyst, is Executive
Director of the Jewish Alliance for Change (JAFC) www.Jews4Change.com, a
nonprofit organization which advocates within the American
Jewish community for a progressive domestic and foreign policy
agenda. JAFC played a major role in building American Jewish
support for Senator Barack Obama's presidential bid through its
Israelis for Obama web video and creative pro-Obama TV and
internet ad series Ain’t Funny with legendary
comedians.

JAFC is sponsoring a benefit concert in New York
City called “BROADWAY FOR A NEW AMERICA” —
Standing Up for Marriage Equality and a Progressive Agenda for
Change, on Monday, April 13.
The concert features a host of Broadway singers,
performers and cast members from leading shows, including Tony,
Emmy and Grammy Award winners, stars from the worlds of
television, film, music, and comedy, plus prominent political
leaders, progressive Jewish and LGBT activists. Performers
include Stockard Channing; Richard Belzer, Tovah Feldshuh, and
many others. To learn more about the event and for tickets,
please visit www.Jews4Change.com
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The results of the Israeli election this week, coming on
the heels of the Gaza War, have been confounding for many of us
in the pro-Israel, pro-peace camp, as we simultaneously breathe
a sigh of collective relief that President Obama's
Administration is reality. In her post-election Town Hall
meeting with Brit Tzedek, former member of Knesset Naomi Chazan
commented on the parallels between this election and the 2004
re-election of President Bush, when the majority of Americans
still supported the Iraq War. It was a time of deep
concern, but also grew into a time of deep possibility. It is
clear that strong leadership for Mideast peace by the Obama
administration has become even more critical -- as does our role
as pro-peace advocates. We asked veteran policy
analyst Doni Remba, Executive Director of the Jewish
Alliance for Change (JAFC), to assess the election and its
implications for a new peace paradigm.
Brit Tzedek Election Resources:
Barack, Bibi and
Tzipi: A Chance for Peace?
By Gidon D. Remba
While the U.S.has just moved leftward with the election of
Barack Obama as President and a more Democratic Congress,
Israel's election consummated a long-building rightward tectonic
shift. Both were aftershocks from eight years of
Bush-Cheney misrule, which ravaged the U.S. economy while
inflaming the political and security environment in which Israel
lives. But Israel's main centrist parties and leaders--Ehud
Olmert, Tzipi Livni and Kadima, Ehud Barak and Labor--share the
blame for Israel's predicament, and their own electoral
fates. The failures of Labor and Kadima stem not
from tactical error, but rather from banking their future, and
that of the Jewish state, on deeply flawed and fundamentally
misguided policies towards the Palestinians and the regional
security threats the country faces from Iran to Lebanon to
Gaza.
Kadima's paradox is to have won the election, still Israel's
largest party (by a hair), while losing its ability to govern in
a "centrist" coalition with Labor. It can now govern
only with Netanyahu and the Likud, a constraint which will
challenge diplomatic efforts with Israel's Arab neighbors and
heighten the importance of the U.S. in pushing them
forward. Labor has now fallen from Israel's second
largest party to fourth place, while Bibi Netanyahu's Likud more
than doubled its size, growing from 12 to 27 seats. Anti-Arab
racist and former Kach member Avigdor Lieberman's Yisrael
Beitenu (Israel Our Home) party has grown from 11 to 15 seats,
now the third largest. The entire right-wing bloc has
grown to a majority of 64 seats, while the center-left bloc has
declined to 56, including 12 Israeli Arab Knesset Members who
won't be invited into any governing coalition.
Why the Right Won and the Center Failed to
Hold
Two Israeli wars of choice—one in the north
against Hezbollah in 2006 and the other in the south against
Hamas this past month—were products of Kadima and
Labor’s earlier philosophy of unilateral withdrawal and
their shared myopic approach to Hamas. This clouded vision
could not but have led to confrontation and war, fostering an
even more insecure neighborhood for Israelis.
Israel’s Pyrrhic victories in these conflicts strengthened
Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran politically and militarily, weakening
Israel’s peace partner Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
and his Fatah party. These blunders, coupled with the rise
of a nuclearizing Iran and its Shiite allies under Bush’s
New Middle East, further reinforced Israeli anxieties, lending
added thrust to the Israeli electorate’s rightward
momentum. The failure of the centrists’ Bush-endorsed
brand of peace diplomacy to bear even the smallest fruit for
either the Palestinians or Israel, exacerbated a mounting
popular Israeli skepticism in the utility of peace
talks.
Read more
*****
A New Peace
Paradigm
By Gidon D. Remba
A new peace paradigm for the Obama administration
would break with past practice on several key measures:
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It must be based on a holistic, regional
approach which will promote a change in Israeli public opinion
by anchoring peace with the Palestinians and with Syria on
pursuit of a comprehensive Arab-Israeli treaty, providing Israel
with recognition from all Arab states, and with the endorsement
of most Muslim states. This would be coupled with a new
regional security regime that provides Israel with U.S., NATO
and Arab security arrangements and guarantees. To achieve
the painful concessions Israel will be required to make, the
peace dividend to Israel must be equally demanding from the
Muslim and Arab worlds. The Arab League peace initiative
suggests that such a broad rapprochement may be possible, even
if the final framework diverges in some ways from the literal
text of that offer.
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The U.S., along with its allies, must establish
clear principles that lay out the new internationally accepted,
U.S.-backed parameters of this new regional peace initiative and
the treaty it is designed to achieve.
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While past peace efforts placed too many
incentives for the Arab states and Israel at the never-reached
end of the process, the U.S. must now begin offering political
and economic rewards early on, in exchange for reciprocal moves
on the part of Arab states towards the US and
Israel. This approach could begin to change
regional dynamics in key respects, particularly with regard to
Iran and Syria.
Obama should move forward with renewing relations
and dialogue with Syria and laying the basis for exploring,
through direct, unconditional -- but initially mid-level talks
-- a "grand bargain" with Iran after this summer's presidential
elections there. The US should offer to create a
multinational consortium with Iran to produce enriched uranium
inside Iran, "thus transferring a purely national program to
international ownership, management and supervision." It
would operate under an "enhanced verification system which will
ensure that military nuclear activities are not taking place,"
as has been proposed in a groundbreaking essay by Bill Luers,
Tom Pickering and Jim Walsh ("How to Deal with Iran," New York
Review of Books, Feb. 12, 2009). This
proposal, they report, has the support of "highly placed
Iranians" and possibly the Iranian government. It would be
part of an integrated US negotiations strategy under which, in
return for a mutually accepted resolution of the nuclear issue,
Iran would end its military support for Hezbollah and Hamas and
accept, or refrain from opposing, a comprehensive Arab-Israeli
peace accord, which will include Lebanon.
At the same time that the Obama administration
pursues this new approach with Iran, it would explore a bargain
with Syria: restoration of relations with the U.S., and
end to economic and political sanctions and new international
economic aid for Syria in exchange for Syria's realignment from
Iran with the US (and later with Israel), and an end to its
military support for Hezbollah. Rather than
beginning this process only after Israel signs a treaty
committing to return the Golan, Obama should accelerate it as a
way to make later Israeli-Syrian direct talks (under a different
Israeli government) more likely to succeed, within the framework
of the comprehensive Arab-Israeli accord.
By unleashing a new regional dynamic over time,
the U.S. will gradually change the threat perception in Israel
from its current extremely high pitch, creating new evidence of
the efficacy of diplomacy, and diplomatic opportunities which
the Israeli public will want to exploit. This new dynamic will
ultimately strengthen the Israeli left and center, leading
within a few years to a new and more moderate Israeli governing
coalition, and equally importantly, to a public perception of a
more secure, less fearful environment around Israel. This is not
a sprint, but a marathon. President Obama should start the run
now. Im lo achshav, ei matai? If not now, then when?
Additional Election
Resources:
White House: Obama to push peace process,
regardless of Israel leader by Natasha Mozgovaya, Haaretz
Correspondent, and Reuters. Haaretz. February 12, 2009.
Israeli Uncertainty Buys Obama Time by Nathan
Guttman. The Jewish Daily Forward. February 11, 2009.
Brit Tzedek v'Shalom, The Jewish
Alliance for Justice and Peace 11 E. Adams Street, Suite
707 Chicago, IL 60603 Phone: (312) 341-1205 Fax: (312)
341-1206 info@btvshalom.org www.btvshalom.org
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