White House peace plan leaves Palestinians in the dust, according to Baker Institute expert

T. Belman.  Need I say that The Baker Institute and the Peres people were not successful in acheiving a deal for decades.  Who are they to give advice to Trump.  They should keep their mouths shut and wait for events to unfold.

At least we agree that the White House’s Peace to Prosperity plan all but assure Palestinian failure.

Report provides suggestions for more constructive strategy

HOUSTON – (May 21, 2020) – The terms of the White House’s Peace to Prosperity plan all but assure Palestinian failure, according to an expert at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.

Under the plan, “Palestinian statehood is conditioned upon a compilation of unreasonable and impractical thresholds,” according to Gilead Sher, the Isaac and Mildred Brochstein Fellow in Middle East Peace and Security in Honor of Yitzhak Rabin at the Baker Institute.

“Given the total absence of Palestinian involvement in planning and implementing the deal, the current deal has no way of serving as is as a driver to resolving the conflict (between Israel and the Palestinians),” he wrote in a new report. “Instead, it will further blur the borders between two states, as the Israeli right wing looks to ensure a continued presence in Judea and Samaria.”

Sher examined the proposed framework, the problems he sees with its implementation and how the parties involved can navigate a negotiation process — noting that the plan will shape negotiations for years to come, regardless of the results of the U.S. election in November.

“The Trump plan could harden the Israeli center-right to tolerate fewer compromises in future negotiations, enter a new potential spoiler into the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, and lead Israel down a perilous path to international demonization and social upheaval,” he wrote.

According to Sher, the Peace to Prosperity plan allows Israel to initiate unilateral annexation — or accomplish its equivalent by “extending Israeli law” — over Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the Jordan Valley. Sher also argues that the proposed map that define the new borders “offers Palestinians a piecemeal state and renders statehood moot by proffering Palestinian autonomy without sovereign self-rule.”

The report argues that the plan gives Israel “overriding security responsibility” over a future Palestine. This includes responsibility for all international crossings into Palestine and control of the state’s airspace, electromagnetic spectrum and water rights, offering Palestinians “little more than they already have: autonomy and self-governance without ultimate jurisdiction,” Sher wrote.

The plan calls for Jerusalem to remain the undivided capital of Israel and for a new capital for Palestine — leaving the Christians and Muslims of Palestine without direct access to the Old City and the Temple Mount.

“The Trump administration has boldly proclaimed that Israel’s current capital in Jerusalem will remain, while deceptively claiming to offer the Palestinians a capital in East Jerusalem,” Sher wrote. “Rather, the neighborhoods selected to be the Palestinian capital were chosen because they lie to the east of the security barrier.”

Sher argues that the proposed map not only creates problematic borders, but creates friction by “further entangling mixed populations:”

“Rather than advancing a reckless and irreversible annexation project detrimental to a two-state-for two-people solution, Israel and the U.S. should clarify and resequence the negotiations under the plan,” Sher wrote. “Trump and (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu must eschew unilateral action in favor of multilateral good-faith negotiations. This is necessary but not sufficient for advancing negotiations, as the deal contains significant nonstarters regarding Jerusalem, Palestinian sovereignty, borders and water rights.”

Though the plan abandons the parameters of previous Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and lacks coherent policy, Sher argues, it will continue to sit on the table for years to come. Inasmuch as it is meant to be a bilaterally implemented plan for peace, it will fail without significant Israeli restraint, complete resequencing and resourceful Palestinian initiative, he said.

May 21, 2020 | 5 Comments »

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  1. The Baker Institute. The festering essence of the Arabist State Department of James A Baker Secretary of State of the George H.W. Bush Administration. THE SWAMP. So glad the State Department has been decimated and the Arabists have left en mass. Now they can be truly and unceremoniously ignored for their institutional antiSemitism.

  2. Bear Klein has it exactly right 1 million percent.
    If the Baker Institute is something created by James A Baker, literally no one will benefit from its advice.

  3. NO PEACE PLAN with a TWO STATE SOLUTION CAN CREATE PEACE!

    The conflict stems from the fact that the Pal-Arabs want to get rid of the Jews and not make peace with a democratic Jewish State (Israel) no matter the borders. This makes the conflict zero-sum. So the ONLY path to peace is an Israeli victory over all Pal-Arab terrorist groups (PLO, Fatah, Islamic Jihad, Hamas…….) with no other state, entity or terror organization that is armed west of the Jordan River.