The Obama administration, which seems to consider itself too talented to bother with anything but “comprehensive” solutions to problems, may yet make matters worse by presenting its own plan for a final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian problem. Barack Obama insists that it is “costing us significantly in terms of both blood and treasure,” although he does not say how. Gen. David Petraeus says Israeli-Palestinian tensions “have an enormous effect on the strategic context.” As though, were the tensions to subside, the hard men managing Iran’s decades-long drive for nuclear weapons would then say, “Oh, well, in that case, let’s call the whole thing off.”
The biggest threat to peace might be the peace process — or, more precisely, the illusion that there is one. The mirage becomes the reason for maintaining its imaginary “momentum” by extorting concessions from Israel, the only party susceptible to U.S. pressure. Israel is, however, decreasingly susceptible. In one month, history will recycle when the partial 10-month moratorium on Israeli construction on the West Bank expires. Resumption of construction — even here, in the capital, which was not included in the moratorium — will be denounced by a fiction, “the international community,” as a threat to another fiction, “the peace process.”
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