Via Mosaic Magazine - Elliot Abrahams writes @ Pressure Points:
Syria is coming apart and there are millions of Syrian refugees in
Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey. ISIS threatens Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and
Iraq– which is also coming apart. The new Iran nuclear deal would
deliver $150 billion in cash to the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the
removal of sanctions will bring even more money to the Revolutionary
Guards. ISIS and other jihadis are increasingly active in Sinai. Hamas
has a firm grip on Gaza.
What is the European Union’s reaction to all these threats? To focus
on the single aspect of Middle Eastern affairs that is right now calm,
and to intervene in ways likely to reduce the calm and create more
turbulence. You’ve probably guessed it: fresh from the great and
historic victory in the Iran nuclear deal, they now turn once again to
the Israeli-Palestinian situation.
The EU’s foreign-policy chief, Federica Mogherini, said “We need to
build a framework—regional and international—that can lead to a more
positive environment for the process to start.” Apparently it has not
occurred to her that emboldening and enriching Iran is a not a great way
to create a “more positive environment.” Nor is attacking Israel yet
again for construction in settlements, which the EU did again on Monday,
stating that it is “ready to take further action…to protect the
viability of the two-state solution.” That’s a veiled threat of
sanctions against Israel. [...]
Some things have changed in the last few years, of course,
but all of them will make an agreement even harder to reach. The growth
of terrorist groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda makes an Israeli military
withdrawal from the West Bank even more dangerous to Israel and Jordan-
and to the Palestinians. Abbas’s advanced age makes it ever less likely
that he will take a leap and sign any agreement, and as the years pass
since the last Palestinian elections (Abbas was elected to a four year
term in 2005) he has less and less legitimacy to make such decisions.
So the European decision to turn its efforts to insisting on a
comprehensive Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement are foolish and will
lead nowhere. With one exception, perhaps: it seems likely that they
will blame Israel for their failure, so perhaps the effort will lead to
more criticism of Israel from EU governments.
It should be obvious, looking at the Middle East today, that Arab
governments such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, and Jordan are not
clamoring for this EU effort and recognize that the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict is marginal to their own security needs and nightmares. Only
the EU continues blindly to insist on its centrality. To the Sunni Arab
governments, Israel looks like an ally against the jihadis and against
Iran. Perhaps this new European effort cannot be headed off, but it will
achieve nothing positive. Instead it will be another example of the
sort of wishful thinking about international security that EU diplomacy
must shake off if it is ever to be truly effective. More.
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