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Shmuel Rosner Chief U.S. Correspondent www.haaretz.com/rosner Biography | Email me
Posted: October 17, 2007

Announcing Annapolis was a mistake

We can start from the end: It was a mistake. Not necessarily the decision to convene an Israeli-Palestinian peace summit in Annapolis or a "meeting," as the Americans insist on calling the event, but the early announcement of the planned timetable.

Whoever promised to hold the meeting in the fall will be forced to accept one of three possibilities, or perhaps a combination thereof: a postponement or cancellation, which will be interpreted as a failure; convening a meeting that is not ready, which means failure; and giving in to external pressures, which will lead to failure. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made a mistake, and also tripped up President George W. Bush, when she dragged him into accepting this timetable.

On her way to Tel Aviv, Rice told the journalists accompanying her: "I tend to be, myself, rather suspicious of timetables in almost anything in diplomacy." Advertisement

On Tuesday she said: "I understand as well as anybody that there are risks to announcing a meeting and then doing the hard work."

These are lessons that she should have taken to heart, but like many before her, Rice failed by demonstrating the arrogance of the mediator - the absurd assumption that all that is lacking in order to solve the Arab-Israeli conflict is the charismatic presence of an experienced diplomat.

From the moment the expectation was put into words, the rules of the game were established: Rice wanted to force the sides to accelerate their meetings and to advance their understandings, but ended up a victim of her strong-arm tactics. Each of the potential invitees now has the power to cause the failure of the summit - in other words, Rice's failure. Thus, they can pressure her more than she can pressure them. This is true of Israel and the Palestinians, as well as the Saudis, the Egyptians, the Arab League, the European partners, and UN officials. Nothing in Rice's career has prepared her for this Middle Eastern bazaar. It is hard to see how she will emerge from it with a valid achievement in hand.

The U.S. secretary of state in recent years has moved between too much interference in petty matters: on the one hand, as in her decision to make the effort to achieve the "crossings agreement" in Gaza, which was never implemented; a lack of concentration regarding important core issues on the other, as in her unrealistic agreement to enable Hamas to participate in the Palestinian elections.

In both cases she twisted Israel's arm, and in both she was mistaken. Even in the current administration, there are already some who are counting Annapolis as a mistake of the second, serious type. Their main fear is that failure will strengthen Hamas among the Palestinian public, and will open a window for its entry from Gaza to the West Bank.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is not particularly interested in quarrelling with Rice, but nor does he have a vital need to maintain excellent relations with her. This is true as long as he is convinced that Bush does not intend to change his policy. Bush already made it clear in the speech announcing the conference that this is Rice's playing field. He does not share the messianic enthusiasm she brings to the Palestinian arena. He is sufficiently clear-eyed to see that chief among those who are calling on him to intervene, to apply pressure, are his opponents and those who wish him ill. Bush's friends, aside from Rice, are telling him that this is not the appropriate time or place for action. And nevertheless, Rice insists that Bush strongly supports her moves. Maybe she knows something that others don't see yet.

It is no coincidence that Olmert sent Shas leader Eli Yishai and Defense Minister Ehud Barak to the meetings with Rice. These two, who represent the left and right wings of his coalition, differ on many issues, but are united in their suspicion of Rice's initiative. Both came to Washington this week in order to strengthen the opinion that was already prevalent here: The Annapolis meeting has a very slight chance of fulfilling Rice's ambitions.

Pessimistic observers already believe that it would be better to postpone it to a more propitious time, while the more optimistic are trying to propose means of saving it from collapse. Therefore, as the tired joke goes, the principle has already been laid down. Now all that remains is to argue about the price that all the parties will pay for this mistake.

Today on Rosner's Domain:

Updated The Israel Factor:
How McCain's position on Iran fared better than Giuliani's

Rosner's Guest:
The greatest threat to the future of Israel is the status quo

Previous blog:
McCain, Clinton committed to work for peace between Israel and the Palestinians

What To Read:
The future of neoconservatism

  1.   Israel pays 04:50  |  Johnny Weintraub 17/10/07
  2.   Give her enough rope and..... 05:32  |  Jean La Feet 17/10/07
  3.   Condi is only a messenger, nothing more. 09:44  |  Natallie Durson 17/10/07
  4.   Eli Yishai and Ehud Barak? 09:57  |  Yaakov Sullivan 17/10/07
  5.   no chance for peace 10:01  |  Sam (UK) 17/10/07
  6.   1 ISRAEL vs 1/2 PALESTINIAN: NO DEAL 10:09  |  indrajaya 17/10/07
  7.   al ignore the first principle for peace in the mid east 10:19  |  victor hardman 17/10/07
  8.   THIS Peace summit IS a;ready DOOMED, 10:31  |  Hamza 17/10/07
  9.   Americans & Timetables 10:33  |  ArabAmerican 17/10/07
  10.   Victor #7 10:42  |  Guido 17/10/07
  11.   Announcing Annapolis is the first step 11:05  |  NPOV 17/10/07
  12.   Sorry, Mr. Rosner, but Rice is not the problem here..... 11:08  |  Swiss (Dino) 17/10/07
  13.   #10 guido relies on piecrust promises 11:09  |  victor hardman 17/10/07
  14.   Amazing: I agree with Rosner`s analysis! 11:13  |  Hannah 17/10/07
  15.   A clueless "US Correspondant" 11:15  |  Samuel Foster 17/10/07
  16.   Anything less than the Partition Line of UN Resolution 181,plus J 11:18  |  lakshmi 17/10/07
  17.   To Samuel Foster 11:41  |  Roger Bannister 17/10/07
  18.   #16, Lakshmi 11:47  |  Hannah 17/10/07
  19.   beyond understanding.... 11:53  |  ravi 17/10/07
  20.   18Hannah, greetings,as many posters(including yourself)on this 12:53  |  lakshmi 17/10/07
  21.   What is going on and also what is going on? 13:04  |  Ronnie Wolman 17/10/07
  22.   Other reasons for failure 13:45  |  Scrolls 17/10/07
  23.   There is only one point which matters and which time will clarify 13:46  |  David Hoffman 17/10/07
  24.   Who Cares - it belongs to Israel!! 14:40  |  WWACD 17/10/07
  25.   Ronnie # 21 14:42  |  Guido 17/10/07
  26.   I hope someone is planning for the aftermath of this phtotop.. 14:55  |  Maimon 17/10/07
  27.   DURSON`S RIGHT:CONDI IS NOBODY. AND SO IS ELI YISHAY AND TZIPPI L 15:38  |  VOICE of MOSHIACH))) 17/10/07
  28.   Guido - Arab Peace Initiative 15:41  |  Boris S. 17/10/07
  29.   Ausser Spesen, nichts gewesen 15:48  |  The Northern Wind 17/10/07
  30.   Hannah 15:50  |  Boris S. 17/10/07
  31.   #30, Boris 16:25  |  Hannah 17/10/07
  32.   Rosner is the neocon mouthpiece here and it shows 16:38  |  SD 17/10/07
  33.   Hannah 16:42  |  Boris S. 17/10/07
  34.   Rice Downgrading the conference in order to save it 16:52  |  Tosefta 17/10/07
  35.   The Rice/Bush fundamental mistake 17:24  |  Tosefta 17/10/07
  36.   non-welcome back INDRARAT from the holes of the Hindu-Kush Mtns. 17:38  |  Genuine Tosefta 17/10/07
  37.   In perspective it was not a mistake 17:39  |  Mark Lincoln 17/10/07
  38.   The fundamental problem - Tosefta 17:43  |  Mark Lincoln 17/10/07
  39.   Has any leader actually come to believe Israel has no partner for 18:23  |  Yaakov K. 17/10/07
  40.   Hannah 18:50  |  Boris S. 17/10/07
  41.   The result of keeping Hamas out 18:53  |  Tosefta 17/10/07
  42.   damn right 19:17  |  khairi janbek 17/10/07
  43.   Further downgrading of the conference 19:25  |  Tosefta 17/10/07
  44.   The fundamentals (Mark Lincoln #36) 20:07  |  Tosefta 17/10/07
  45.   Tosefta - the funding goes all the way back to Reagan 20:50  |  Mark Lincoln 17/10/07
  46.   The announcement was not a mistake 20:52  |  Mark Lincoln 17/10/07
  47.   US support for terrorism 20:58  |  Mark Lincoln 17/10/07
  48.   World gone crazy 21:13  |  tadchase 17/10/07
  49.   More bla bla bla from Rosner 21:47  |  Harris 17/10/07
  50.   Three Mistakes, Not One? 22:04  |  Yoram 17/10/07
  51.   Summit 23:23  |  Brod 17/10/07
  52.   YES! ANNAPOLIS WAS A MISTAKE.. 23:49  |  Dolly 17/10/07
  53.   Terrorism (Mark Lincoln #45) 00:05  |  Tosefta 18/10/07
  54.   Well, if nothing else Shmuel.... 01:38  |  Virginia 18/10/07
  55.   Terrorism (Mark Lincoln #45) 02:35  |  Tosefta 18/10/07
  56.   No Tosefta, that is not true 04:16  |  Mark Lincoln 18/10/07
  57.   Reality Check Folks 04:22  |  Mark Lincoln 18/10/07
  58.   Israel not moving 04:40  |  Shaun 18/10/07
  59.   Annapolis 13:52  |  Hilda 19/10/07
  60.   I wonder who pays Natalie Durson 20:43  |  Yonatan 22/10/07
  61.   Real glad Israel`s FM smart enough to look ahead to the follow up 04:33  |  Virginia 23/10/07


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Top Washington lawyer and former official David Rivkin will discuss Israel-related strategic and legal issues. Readers can send questions.
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