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Dr. Aaron Lerner is co-founder of IMRA, Independent Media Review and Analysis, an Israel-based news organization which provides an extensive digest of media, polls and significant interviews and events relating to the Israeli-Arab conflict.
imra@netvision.net.il
Previous views
Don't loosen Road Map constraints
Not the time for an expanded coalition
Facing the Gaza challenge
Israel's need for quick regime change outweighs costs and risks
Turning Israel's "Weakness" into a Strength
Thinking beyond a cease-fire declaration
Olmert must choose between lives of human shields and Israelis
If Olmert's team fails to deliver, replace him
IDF Casualties In Context
The Timely War?
Asymmetry by design
Cease Fire Only Means Harder Future
Olmert keeps ignoring reality, but public opinion shift may clip his wings
Is it moral to die for human shields?
Insider reveals shallowness of Sharon-Olmert retreat thinking
Retreat proponents jeopardize future talks
Is "peace for a moment" moral?
Eulogy for a man of deeds
Regional instability: it's not about Israel

Views: Don't loosen Road Map constraints
Bush policy in tatters after Islamic terrorists win power via ballot box
Views: Will giving terrorists day-jobs as cops fulfill the Roadmap?
As terror groups end truce, Israel to rethink "roadmap" if Hamas wins
Views: Past time to drop "Palestine"
Sharon denies claim he'll cede 90% of Judea and Samaria, split Jerusalem
Views: The Rafah Agreement is against the law, common sense and prudent self-defense
Former President Clinton: Iraq invasion was a big mistake
Condi passed around laptop, passed on sleep, as Israel caved on crossings

 
Olmert team shouldn't ignore Quartet double cross
By Dr. Aaron Lerner   September 22, 2006


"The Quartet welcomed the efforts of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to form a government of national unity, in the hope that the platform of such a government would reflect Quartet principles and allow for early engagement."
Statement of the Quartet - 20 September 2006


Fiasco.

Without any advance warning, the United States, through the Quartet, radically changed its position on Palestinian compliance.

The Quartet no longer requires Palestinian compliance. It only "hopes" for it.

In the days leading up to this shocking development, foreign minister Tzipi Livni held meetings with literally every important American official -- including President Bush and Secretary of State Rice. But despite these meetings Livni apparently had no idea that this dramatic policy change was in the works.

This morning the domestic spin, as presented by Minister Ronnie Bar-On in an interview on Israel Radio, was to deny that anything happened.

And there certainly is a logic to this approach.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's principle advisors are advertising men. These folks are experts in marketing politicians and toothpaste - not international relations. And the advertising men rightly figure that if Israeli officials don't follow up on the Quartet Statement that the story won't have legs - thus limiting the current damage the story would have done to Olmert.

The problem is, of course, that while the story may have died, the consequences haven't. It is only a matter of time before the downgrading of Palestinian compliance from a requirement to a "hope" gains expression in the policies and actions of the Quartet members.

What could the Olmert team have done if their priority was the future of Israel rather than Olmert's standing in overnight polling?

Instead of trying to kill the story, the team should have developed it.

The prime minister knows how to phone leading American Jewish leaders, politicians and columnists when he wants to.

FM Livni, who was literally at the scene of the crime, had ample opportunities to let the media know about Israel's concerns before returning home.

It may be still not too late to pick up the ball.

What's to be gained by making an issue of it?

Let's not forget that this is an election year in the United States, and this policy shift is hardly something for the White House to be proud of.

Prompt action could very well lead to "clarifying remarks" to turn Palestinian compliance back into a requirement rather than just a "hope".

In the least, by identifying itself as the injured party, Israel could expect to gain some form of diplomatic compensation for the American breach of trust.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


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