November 24, 2009

Looking at this city, you can imagine what a Palestinian state could someday be like if folks got serious: The streets are clean, there’s construction in every direction and Palestinian soldiers line the roads. A visitor sees new apartment buildings, banks, brokerage firms, luxury car dealerships and even health clubs.

These are “facts on the ground,” as the Israelis like to say. And they are the result of a determined Palestinian effort, with U.S. and Israeli support, to begin creating the institutions of a viable Palestinian state. Even Israeli hard-liners, including Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, agree that the improvement in Palestinian security forces is real.

But here’s the tragedy: At the same time there is brick-and-mortar progress in Ramallah and some other West Bank cities, the peace process has nearly collapsed. A wary Netanyahu has been dragging his feet, a frustrated Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has been talking about quitting and the Obama administration has been spinning its wheels trying to revive negotiations.

I have a suggestion, drawn from a visit here and several days of conversations with Israeli, Palestinian and U.S. officials: Follow the lead of Salam Fayyad, the prime minister of the Palestinian Authority and the man who’s largely responsible for Ramallah’s turnaround. He has drawn up a plan for a two-year transition to statehood. The United States should endorse this goal, explicitly, and call for an immediate start to negotiations about the details. Access the full article>>



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In-Depth Coverage

Original Commentaries

02/04/10
Highlighted Voices  —
02/02/10
Paving the Way for Palestinian Statehood  —Ziad Asali, president & founder, American Task Force on Palestine. Interview with Middle East Bulletin.
01/28/10
Moving Forward on Afghanistan  —

Setting the Record Straight

Economic Development No Substitute for Negotiations

“The focus in the latter years of the Bush administration and the first year of the Obama administration on negotiation seems to me to marginalize what should be central and instead [makes] central what is not essential to the building of a Palestinian state. Israeli-Palestinian negotiations can come later.”
—Elliott Abrams, former deputy national security adviser to President George W. Bush; senior fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, interview, “Focus on West Bank, Not Negotiating,” January 13, 2010
 
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  • “Look, I’m an economist by training, not someone who would cast any doubts on the importance of economic improvements. Nevertheless, economics is just one leg on which a future Palestine must stand. To think that ‘economic peace’ is going to be a substitute for the political tract—that’s not something I would agree with.”
    —Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, interview with Tablet Magazine, December 8, 2009
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