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Middle East & Israel Breaking News » Middle East » Article

Is Obama's ME plan going the way of the Saudi peace plan?


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The past week may have sounded the death knell of the Saudi initiative, at least as far as Israel is concerned.

US President Barack Obama...

US President Barack Obama bows before the Saudi king.
Photo: AP [file]

SLIDESHOW: Israel & Region  |  World

Faced with the stubborn refusal of Saudi Arabia and other Arab states to yield an inch on proposals for token gestures of normalization in exchange for the implementation of the first stage of the road map - and specifically the total freeze of building in the settlements - it is now hard to see how US President Barack Obama will push his stated objective of restarting negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians.

On September 13, the Saudi ambassador to Washington publicized the king's answer to the bipartisan letter he had received from 225 members of Congress in late July, concerning the Saudi initiative also known as the Arab Peace Plan. The congressmen had asked him "to make a dramatic gesture toward Israel as a confidence-building measure to promote peace."

The letter was intended to show support for Obama, who, according to press reports, had sent a letter to seven Arab states urging them to take small positive measures such as opening Israeli interest offices in their countries or letting Israeli planes transit their airspace.

Another suggestion had been not to refrain publicly from shaking hands with Israeli delegates encountered in some international forum corridors. These measures, he believed, would lead to a more relaxed atmosphere while demonstrating that Arab hostility was not as absolute as Israel believed.

The Saudi answer as made public by the ambassador was unambiguous. The Saudi position was that achieving peace on the basis of confidence-building had been tried and had failed over the past 30 years; the Saudis did not believe it could succeed today.

The ambassador stated that "it is the kingdom's firm view that resolution of this conflict does require outlining the final settlement at the outset, followed by prompt resumption of negotiations on all final-status issues - borders, Jerusalem, water, security and refugees - with a deadline set for their early conclusion."

"It is also absolutely imperative for the United States to play an active and robust role in the negotiations," the ambassador concluded.

This was nevertheless a none-too-subtle slamming of the door in the face of the president.

It did not come as a complete surprise. A number of high-ranking Saudis had expressed themselves in a similar vein. In a recent visit to Washington and following a meeting with the secretary of state, the Saudi minister for foreign affairs stated that "incrementalism and a step-by-step approach" would not lead to peace.

The problem was not what the Arabs would give to Israel, but what Israel was ready to give in return for the Arab initiative, he later stated - adding, in effect, that the Arabs had only normalization to offer Israel as an incentive, and if they gave it away while the territories were still under occupation, they would lose their only leverage.

According to American sources, Obama himself got a dusty answer when, on his first visit to Riyadh a few weeks after he assumed office, he asked the Saudi king for some small normalization steps.

Saudi Arabia was not the only Arab state to say no. A wave of negative reactions and articles against Israel swept the Arab world.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who visited Washington in mid-August, said in a number of interviews that since the Madrid peace conference in 1991, no Arab attempts at dialogue with Israel had encouraged them to normalize ties. Arab states, he added, would only recognize Israel and normalize their relations after a full and comprehensive peace was achieved with the Palestinians.

In Morocco, there were demonstrations against normalization when the content of the Obama letter was made public. In Lebanon, Shi'ite spiritual leader Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah issued a fatwa forbidding normalization with Israel.

On September 6, Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa said in a joint press conference in Cairo with Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal that a discussion on steps toward normalization with Israel were not on the agenda, in view of its intransigence on building in the settlements. He added that no Arab country would dare make a move in that direction for fear of the violent reaction of the Arab world. For his part, Mashaal stated that America was trying to mobilize the Arabs against Iran and deflect their attention from the Palestinian issue.

Arab media followed suit as usual and stoutly defended the position of the leaders while detailing the dangers of normalization with "the Zionist enemy."

Obama made an all-out effort to promote his policy. Beyond talks with Arab leaders, about which we know little, he enlisted the support of congressmen and, of course, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and special envoy to the Middle East George Mitchell.

So far, it has been to no avail. The US president has been turned down time and time again by states having close links with the United States on a series of vital issues - countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Jordan, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait.

Qatar hosts the Central Command of the American Army; Bahrain is home to the US Navy's Fifth Fleet; American troops pass through Kuwait on their way to and from Iraq. Egypt and Saudi Arabia are staunch allies of America in the strategic fight against Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Egypt is the recipient of massive American aid.

If Obama thought his famed charisma and the kudos he received in the Arab world for his attempts at reconciliation with Islam, as exemplified in his Cairo speech in June, would stand him in good stead with Arab leaders and that they would lead them to unbend a little and help him promote his policy, he must have been sadly disappointed.

The overall response from the Arab world highlighted not only its stubbornness, but also, and more to the point, its visceral hostility toward Israel.

It may have been a mistake to ask Saudi Arabia to make the first step toward normalization with Israel. The Saudi king holds the title of keeper of "the Two Holy Mosques," referring to Mecca and Medina. The stability of his kingdom is founded on an agreement dating to the 18th century with the Wahabi religious establishment, one of the strictest in Islam.

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41. To bring so much SHAME to this great nation in such a short time,Obama should get a prize for it.
sia - usa (09/25/2009 13:13)
40. Political 'gestures'
Ricardo - USA (09/25/2009 06:02)
39. I think it's time..
john - USA (09/24/2009 13:12)
38. Obama and ME peace
gadi - USA (09/24/2009 05:24)
37. Is Obama's ME plain going the way of the Saudi place plan? and bows ?
David MIgdal - Brazil (09/24/2009 03:08)
36. Spin, spin spin.....
David usa - (09/23/2009 23:02)
35. Arab states do Israel NO favour by opening embassies in Israel. As for our tiny Homeland, it's not for sale. Period.
Chaim - Israel (09/23/2009 22:10)
34. Real Middle east peace not on Obama agenda
mike - usa (09/23/2009 21:29)
33. Obama Bowed,submission,Yield To Saudi Arabia,Shows he is 100% against ISRAEL.(!!!!)
Roy C Hudson - USA (09/23/2009 20:46)
32. The Saudis...
jonah - (09/23/2009 20:40)
31. Will Pres Obama finally learn the mendacious mouths of the Saudis. I doubt it!
Sam K - usa (09/23/2009 20:37)
30. Whatever action...
jonah - (09/23/2009 20:33)
29. DWAYNE'S TAKE ON YET ANOTHER FORUM ON ARABS
Dwayne - USA (09/23/2009 20:23)
28. Because they have the oil...
Rafé - Finland (09/23/2009 20:01)
27. Again to # 18 non biased - Australia
Jason - (09/23/2009 19:47)
26. To # 18 non biased - Australia
Jason - (09/23/2009 19:44)
25. Obama is a rookie
David - (09/23/2009 19:39)
24. "Without Preconditions"?! So, why did Abbas {DIRECTLY} REITERATE by saying "The Situation" should "Go Back" to 1967 FIRST B4 "talks" are RESUMED?! RE
CONSUMING WHAT WE SAID: 1967? - (09/23/2009 19:20)
23. Guess what - Arab hostility IS as absolute as Israel believes.
Ben - (09/23/2009 18:15)
22. Edward 17 I think there is a lot of truth in what you say but it is even more urgent to liberate Iran from fascism.
Realist - (09/23/2009 17:59)
21. the saudi plan must be rejected by Israel
art - usa (09/23/2009 17:44)
20. Obama needs an advisor
Jay - USA (09/23/2009 17:07)
19. God remembers and keeps all His covenants
Tom Dickson - (09/23/2009 16:48)
18. What a biased view.
non biased - Australia (09/23/2009 16:48)
17. The first step to peace is the liberation of Arabia from Feudalism and ...
Edward - Germany/USA (09/23/2009 14:27)
16. Obama can start by putting massive pressure on the Saudis to implement the commitments they made to the WTO: end the boycott of Israel
Realist - (09/23/2009 14:15)
15. What a sight !
Danny - GB (09/23/2009 13:18)
14. By recognizing that many Palestinians are potential olim the Saudi Foreign Ministers argument is underminned. Arab intransigence is undermined as well
Chris - USA (09/23/2009 12:04)
13. Obama should ask more from Saoudis
Jitso Keizer - Holland (09/23/2009 11:28)
12. Peace Plan!
DARAGRA - MYANMAR (09/23/2009 11:13)
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