The Ritual Flaying of Jimmy Carter
But enemies can be transformed with time
Nobody with a functioning memory
should be too quick to condemn Jimmy Carter for daring to speak with
the leadership of Hamas, as nearly everyone along the American
political spectrum suddenly has felt obliged to do. From Condoleezza
Rice and John McCain to Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, along with
every congressional backbencher in both parties, expressions of
disapproval have rained down upon the former president, who is old
enough and tough enough to pursue his own beliefs to their logical
conclusion.
“The United States is not going to deal with Hamas,” said Secretary of State Rice,
“and we had certainly told President Carter that we did not think
meeting with Hamas was going to help.” The justification for that
policy was explained helpfully by Obama, whose willingness to meet with
foreign adversaries does not extend to Hamas, at least not during the
primary season. The Illinois
senator “does not support negotiations with Hamas until they renounce
terrorism, recognize Israel’s right to exist and abide by past
agreements,” according to a spokesman for his presidential campaign.
As for McCain, he reacted reflexively and demagogically, which should come as no surprise. He denounced any engagement with Hamas as a “grave and dangerous mistake” and scorched Carter for meeting with “a terrorist group that has also killed innocent Americans.” A moronic congresswoman from North Carolina—who will have to live a very long time before she achieves a tiny fraction of what Carter has— proposed to revoke his passport.
Partners in Negotiations
Certainly
Carter understands the nature of Hamas, an Islamist group not so
different in its orientation from the radical students whose takeover
of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran, ultimately ended his presidency.
What
he also understands these many years later is that those once shunned
as terrorists and criminals, forever beyond redemption, may eventually
be recognized as the only possible partners in negotiation. For that,
of course, is the very transformation he has observed in the Palestine
Liberation Organization during the past three decades.
When Carter hosted the historic Camp David meetings that established peace between Israel and Egypt,
the Jewish state’s prime minister was the late Menachem Begin, a former
terrorist who firmly declared that he would never talk with Yasser
Arafat and the PLO. Even as the Palestinians quietly began to consider
the notion of a two-state peace settlement, American and Israeli
policymakers could hardly contemplate any engagement with Arafat, whose
responsibility for atrocious attacks on civilians was as clear as his
commitment to driving the Jews into the sea.
Indeed, Israel’s
leaders regularly proclaimed that they would never talk with Arafat
under any circumstances because of the Jewish blood on his hands. Then
things changed, slowly but irrevocably. Today the PLO leadership,
legatee of the unmourned Arafat, is not only welcomed but also
financially supported by the United States,
with its shaky authority on the West Bank bolstered by the Israel
Defense Forces. The government of Israel and the Palestinian Authority
remain far from the final agreement that would achieve a just peace,
but each acknowledges the legitimacy of the other.
This short
history lesson is not meant to minimize the obstacles to a real peace.
Most prominent among those obstacles is Hamas, which will continue to
undermine and embarrass Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas so long as
it is excluded from any and all diplomacy. Despite the repugnant
ideology and brutality of the Hamas leaders, there is no doubt that the
Islamist organization enjoys substantial popular support, even among
Palestinians who do not share its religious worldview.
So
there can be no sustainable deal between Israel and the Palestinians
that is not accepted by Hamas. Yet our current policy not only rejects
any direct discussion with the Islamist party, but condemns any effort
to learn what might bring them into the diplomatic process—or induce
them to accept a negotiated settlement between the Palestinian
Authority and Israel. Instead, we would require them to effectively
surrender every point before we will even talk to them. It is the same
mindless policy once directed by the White House toward our adversaries
in Iran and North Korea until its uselessness became too obvious to
ignore.
With ongoing violence in Gaza, Carter’s critics have
already pronounced his mission a failure. But he elicited an official
pledge that Hamas would honor a semipermanent truce under certain
conditions and accept a Palestinian referendum to ratify a peace
settlement. That hint of moderation, halting and reversible, suggests
that he may yet be vindicated.
2008 Creators Syndicate Inc. What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com or comment on this story online at www.expressmilwaukee.com.



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