'Peace processes' winners and losers
In the current issue of Foreign Policy, former über-peace processor Aaron David Miller offers a refreshingly honest assessment of what he calls "the false religion of Mideast Peace." "Like all religions," he writes, "the peace process has developed a dogmatic creed, with immutable first principles." He then goes on to enumerate all the reasons why the administration's current push to midwife a credible and lasting Arab-Israeli peace deal is doomed to fail.
Mr. Miller's case is mostly unobjectionable; indeed, he could have written the same piece about the administration's failed diplomatic overtures toward Syria and Iran.
But he misses a deeper point. Even as peace processes almost invariably fail between the warring parties, they also almost invariably succeed as political theater for the peace processors themselves. Kim Dae Jung, Arafat and Shimon Peres all burnished their prestige with Nobel Peace Prizes. President Obama won one pre-emptively. And Mr. Clinton still basks in an ill-founded reputation as a peacemaker. Ironically, the only real peace he ever achieved, in the Balkans, was through the strength of American arms.
So the ship will be hoisted again. The peace processors will bask in the glow of their good intentions. And wicked men, convenient partners in this game of self-congratulation, illusion and deceit, will plot their own advantage.
What could go wrong?
Israel Matzav: 'Peace processes' winners and losers
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