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Jimmy Carter – The Elders View Of the Middle East

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Cartoon By Carlos Latuff

Cartoon By Carlos Latuff

By Jimmy Carter

During the past 16 months I have visited the Middle East four times and met with leaders in Israel, Egypt, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza. I was in Damascus when President Obama made his historic speech in Cairo, which raised high hopes among the more-optimistic Israelis and Palestinians, who recognize that his insistence on a total freeze of settlement expansion is the key to any acceptable peace agreement or any positive responses toward Israel from Arab nations.

Late last month I traveled to the region with a group of "Elders," including Archbishop Desmond Tutu, former presidents Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil and Mary Robinson of Ireland, former prime minister Gro Brundtland of Norway and women's activist Ela Bhatt of India. Three of us had previously visited Gaza, which is now a walled-in ghetto inhabited by 1.6 million Palestinians, 1.1 million of whom are refugees from Israel and the West Bank and receive basic humanitarian assistance from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency. Israel prevents any cement, lumber, seeds, fertilizer and hundreds of other needed materials from entering through Gaza's gates. Some additional goods from Egypt reach Gaza through underground tunnels. Gazans cannot produce their own food nor repair schools, hospitals, business establishments or the 50,000 homes that were destroyed or heavily damaged by Israel's assault last January.

We found a growing sense of concern and despair among those who observe, as we did, that settlement expansion is continuing apace, rapidly encroaching into Palestinian villages, hilltops, grazing lands, farming areas and olive groves. There are more than 200 of these settlements in the West Bank.

An even more disturbing expansion is taking place in Palestinian East Jerusalem. Three months ago I visited a family who had lived for four generations in their small, recently condemned home. They were laboring to destroy it themselves to avoid much higher costs if Israeli contractors carried out the demolition order. On Aug. 27, we Elders took a gift of food to 18 members of the Hanoun family, recently evicted from their home of 65 years. The Hanouns, including six children, are living on the street, while Israeli settlers have moved into their confiscated dwelling.

Daily, headlines in Jerusalem newspapers say that certain areas and types of construction would be excluded from the settlement freeze and that it would, at best, have a limited duration. Increasingly desperate Palestinians see little prospect of their plight being alleviated; political, business and academic leaders are making contingency plans should President Obama's efforts fail.

We saw considerable interest in a call by Javier Solana, secretary general of the Council of the European Union, for the United Nations to endorse the two-state solution, which already has the firm commitment of the U.S. government and the other members of the "Quartet" (Russia and the United Nations). Solana proposes that the United Nations recognize the pre-1967 border between Israel and Palestine, and deal with the fate of Palestinian refugees and how Jerusalem would be shared. Palestine would become a full U.N. member and enjoy diplomatic relations with other nations, many of which would be eager to respond. Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad described to us his unilateral plan for Palestine to become an independent state.

A more likely alternative to the present debacle is one state, which is obviously the goal of Israeli leaders who insist on colonizing the West Bank and East Jerusalem. A majority of the Palestinian leaders with whom we met are seriously considering acceptance of one state, between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. By renouncing the dream of an independent Palestine, they would become fellow citizens with their Jewish neighbors and then demand equal rights within a democracy. In this nonviolent civil rights struggle, their examples would be Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela.

They are aware of demographic trends. Non-Jews are already a slight majority of total citizens in this area, and within a few years Arabs will constitute a clear majority.

A two-state solution is clearly preferable and has been embraced at the grass roots.

Just south of Jerusalem, the Palestinian residents of Wadi Fukin and the nearby Israeli villagers of Tzur Hadassah are working together closely to protect their small shared valley from the ravages of rock spill, sewage and further loss of land from a huge settlement on the cliff above, where 26,000 Israelis are rapidly expanding their confiscated area. It was heartwarming to see the international harmony with which the villagers face common challenges and opportunities.

There are 25 similar cross-border partnerships between Israelis and their Palestinian neighbors. The best alternative for the future is a negotiated peace agreement, so that the example of Wadi Fukin and Tzur Hadassah can prevail along a peaceful border between two sovereign nations.

The writer was the 39th president. He founded The Carter Center, a nongovernmental organization focused on global peace and health issues.

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{ 4 } Comments

  1. Zahir Ebrahim | September 6, 2009 at 9:03 pm | Permalink

    Mr. Carter's "The best alternative for the future is a negotiated peace agreement," is fooling no one. Please see the "Endless trail of red herrings"

    http://humanbeingsfirst.blogspot.com/2007/03/endless-red-herrings.html

    And this letter Open Letter:

    http://humanbeingsfirst.blogspot.com/2007/03/open-letter-to-jimmy-carter.html

    The only real fair solution is the one that Mr. Carter will not address. Red herrings and manufactured/controlled dissent has characterized the Question of Israel-Palestine until fait accompi is complete. The principal modus operandi has involved keep buying time with ineffectual talks and emotional bruhahas while "take 10 and give back 1 if the Palestinians behave, then repeat!" Only fools and traitors will continue to fall in that trap.

    Thank you.

    Zahir Ebrahim
    Project Humanbeingsfirst.org

  2. Lujean Rogers | September 7, 2009 at 2:28 am | Permalink

    President Carter has done more for peace than any sitting or retired president of the United States. He is courageous and has the integrity needed, which is apparently lacking in others. The prime reason for the US to ignore the horrible situation is quite frankly the bribing of all our politicians under the guise of "campaign contributions," which should be outlawed immediately for what they are – bribes. All contributions to politicians should be stopped including those from corporation lobbies, religious lobbies, etc. We pay the politicians well and their retirement and medical care is excellent. Most have outside jobs. Stop those bribes and we will see peace because the politicians other than hard-liners, will begin to vote their real beliefs in peace with justice instead of selling their souls to the highest bidder.

  3. Debbie Menon | September 7, 2009 at 6:52 am | Permalink

    For someone that familiar with the problem and the suffering, I would expect bit more action, or at lest emphasis. but, reluctance to use four-letter words and face difficult issues has pretty much been the hallmark of the entire Carter clan and its history, particularly in Politics.

    His WAPO piece sounds more like an apology than a declaration of war.

    I do not hold out much hope that Jimmy Carter, as well intentioned and nice a man as he is, is the man who will solve many problems.

    Here is a link to cutting a short story loong….

    Global Elders Trip to Middle East

    Debbie Menon

  4. Debbie Menon | September 7, 2009 at 6:54 am | Permalink

    Oops! Haitham, not sure how this works…

    Global Elders Trip to Middle East

    By: Debbie Menon

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  8. Cyrille Lala | October 13, 2009 at 2:28 pm | Permalink

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