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Israeli-Palestinian Peace remains
elusive 60 years into the conflict
Author reflects on U.S. policies
and failures
By Arooj
Ashraf, La Prensa Cleveland Correspondent
April 11, 2008:
Aaron David Miller discussed his book “The Much Too
Promised Land: America’s Elusive Search for Arab-Israeli Peace,”
at The City Club of Cleveland, as part of its Friday
series. |
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Miller spent
25 years at the Department of State as an adviser to six
Secretaries of State, where he helped formulate
U.S. policy on
the
Middle East
and the Arab-Israel peace process. “The book is meant for a
reading public, normal people who may not have enormous expertise
in the region but enjoy a good story,” Miller said.
He claims the
book as his story, complete with antidotes, “bad” baseball
metaphors and interviews with former presidents, secretary of
states, key Israeli and Arab negotiators—basically anyone who
played a role in the Middle East Peace Process.
As
Israel
prepares to celebrate its 60th birthday on
May 14, 2008
Miller’s book is a timely overview of why the United States, the
world’s super power, has been unable to broker peace between the
Arabs and Israelis. He said the book is an effort to honestly and
candidly analyze the complex conflict and identify key reasons why
peace has been so elusive in the Middle East and how the turmoil
shapes current affairs of the world and threatens U.S. national
security.
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“The
Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a conflict between an occupied
nation and a threatened nation,” he said and reconciliation, while
possible, will require elimination of personal, political,
religious, and cultural prejudices and the willingness of the
Arabs and Israelis. “I don’t care how much
America wants
this—unless the political will and urgency exists on the part of
Arabs and Israelis, it’s not going to happen,” he said.
For the
U.S.
government, he suggests a little self reflection and a revision
course in thousands of years of
Middle East
history. Miller said the United States ignored the history of the
region, misread the present circumstances and by invading Iraq has
made itself and its key ally, Israel, unsafe. “If you want to
blame the (George W. Bush) administration for anything,
blame them for putting the nation in a position where it can not
possibly succeed,” he said. Miller said the Iraq and Afghan wars
leveled the plain for Iran which has the most potential for
developing weapons of mass destruction.
The book is
meticulously divided into subjective chapters and begins with full
disclosure of who he is and the transition in thought of a young
Jewish man growing up in
Cleveland to a
Senior Adviser for Arab-Israeli Negotiations. |
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“Support for
Israel was part of my political and ethnic
DNA and it
remains there but it shows the evolution of my views and how they
expand to understand the Arab-Israeli conflict is more than
meeting the needs and requirement of one side,” he said.
He concluded
that there is no objectivity in the conflict and every person
brings with them their preconceived biases, cling to them as the
singular truth and hinder the possibility of a lasting peaceful
solution.
“All you can
do is put aside your prejudices…and try to understand the needs
and views of the other side,” he said. Which is exactly the
mission of Seeds for Peace which brings together Israeli
and Palestinian youth to share their views for three weeks. “At
the end they may not love each other but they do a better job of
understanding the narrative of the other side,” Miller said, who
served as president of Seeds of Peace for three years after
leaving the State Department.
“America will
remain committed to Israel and our special relationship,” he said,
but stressed it can not be exclusive and allow Israel to act as it
pleases and jeopardize U.S.-American interests in the region.
Miller remains cautiously optimistic that peace is an achievable
goal. “Never, ever give up on the possibility the world can be
changed and made into a better place,” he said.
Peace will
require understanding of history, laying aside personal, ethnic,
cultural, religious, and political bias, an effort to understand
the other’s side needs. “For that, we need leaders who are masters
of their politics, not prisoners, and we do not have that today,”
Miller concluded.
Miller
received his Ph.D. in American Diplomatic and Middle East History
from the University of Michigan in 1977. During 1982 and 1983, he
was a Council on Foreign Relations fellow and a resident scholar
at the Georgetown Center for Strategic and International Studies.
In 1984 he served a temporary tour at the American Embassy in
Amman, Jordan. He also served on the United States Holocaust
Memorial Council between 1998 and 2000. |
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