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  • Beyond Cairo: Translating 'Important' Obama Message into

    Beyond Cairo: Translating 'Important' Obama Message into Policies

    Interview with former U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Israel, Edward
    P. Djerejian

    CFR.org / Council on Foreign Relations (New York, NY)
    June 4, 2009

    Interviewee:Edward P. Djerejian, Director, James A. Baker III
    Institute for Public Policy, Rice University
    Interviewer:Bernard Gwertzman, Consulting Editor, CFR.org

    Former U.S. ambassador to Syria and to Israel Edward P. Djerejian sees
    the speech in Cairo by President Obama to the Muslim world as "a very
    powerful public diplomacy statement." But taking into account the
    years of frustration by previous administrations, he says Obama made
    some fundamental framework points that "will have to be translated
    into actual and effective policies." Djerejian says two chief arenas
    for U.S. action are the Arab-Israeli conflict, where Washington can
    play a stepped-up brokering role, and the troubled relationship with
    Iran, which requires a broad, strategic dialogue encompassing all
    major bilateral issues.

    Gwertzman: President Obama has given a much-anticipated speech about
    U.S. relations with the Muslim world but it also included
    U.S. relations with Israel and a great deal about life in the United
    States. How would you sum up the speech?

    Djerejian:The speech was a very important statement by an American
    president to the Muslim world. By just being the first
    African-American president ,whose family had Muslim background ---
    although he is a Christian as he stated in his speech --- speaks
    volumes in itself. His just standing there in Cairo University
    demonstrated what America is at its best: truly a country of
    opportunity for everyone who strives to achieve and to reach the
    heights, and that equality of opportunity message, came across just by
    his being there. That in itself was a very powerful public diplomacy
    statement. A second point, as he underscored in his speech, is that
    America is a country that enjoys religious freedom. In other words,
    America welcomes people of all faiths to practice their re s freely,
    although we are a secular state and we obviously have the very
    important constitutional division of state from religion. He affirmed
    that the United States is a very practicing religious country and it
    was very important for him to talk about the need for the people of
    the Book -Christians, Muslims, and Jews - to be living in peace and
    harmony.

    Gwertzman: How does that relate to the big issues out there?

    Djerejian: He segued that very well into the need for resolution of
    the long-standing Arab-Israeli conflict. He made it clear he would
    take a major role in conflict resolution to bring, in the first
    instance, the Israelis and Palestinians together. But he is very
    intent on a wider peace - to bring in Syria and Lebanon if things go
    well enough. But the audience reacted by applause certainly when he
    mentioned the Palestinian issue and that's a very important part of
    the message since the Arab-Israeli conflict remains the single most
    important political issue in the region as a whole. It has resonance
    not only amongst Arabs but Muslims also. It's the issue that brings
    people into the streets, and this was one of the major flaws in the
    thinking of the neo-cons [of the Bush administration] was that they
    felt that the Arab-Israeli conflict was not really the primary issue,
    the real issue was in overthrowing authoritarian regimes and promoting
    democracy so that Israel would be able to negotiate peace with
    democratic neighbors.

    I remember when I was ambassador to Israel during the Clinton
    administration Yitzhak Rabin, the then prime minister, told me, "if
    Israel had to wait for its Arab neighbors to become democratic to make
    peace, we would be waiting a thousand years." Obama blended, very
    skillfully, a larger outreach to the Muslim world by stressing that
    there is no innate hostility between the United States and the Arab
    and the Muslim world, that we have actually much in common --and it is
    in our mutual interest, both as Americans and as Arabs and Muslims, to
    marginalize the extremists and the terrorists in our midst who preach
    a doctrine of violence and terrorism, and who have to be marginalized
    for our societies to move forward and to reduce the threat that we
    face.

    Gwertzman: In the first chapter of your new book, Danger and
    Opportunity, you have a letter to the new president in which you say
    on the Arab-Israeli front everything goes through Jerusalem, meaning
    the Palestinian-Israeli relations are foremost. And he stressed again
    the need for a two-state solution and he picked up on the Road Map
    which the Bush administration had drafted. How do you think the
    president will proceed? Is he heading for a global conference like the
    Madrid Conference of 1991 after the Persian Gulf War. Or is Obama
    going to work bilaterally?

    Djerejian: In the first instance, he's going to work bilaterally
    because he's chosen a very good presidential emissary in George
    J. Mitchell to do the groundwork in brokering the Israelis and the
    Palestinians on all the key issues. I think the Obama administration
    is adopting some of the obligations, as you stated, in the Road Map on
    both sides. The Palestinians have to be able to politically represent
    their people effectively. They have to build security infrastructure
    so that they control the guns in the street, [so] that there's only
    one weapon that's used and that's the weapon of the Palestinian
    Authority, the government, [so] that you don't have Hamas and
    Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and other groups taking security into their
    own hands and initiating acts of violence against the Israelis. Those
    are very important obligations on the part of the Palestinians. Now
    where the Palestinians have done well is that they have produced very
    good economic reforms, especially under Prime Minister Salam
    Fayyad. And so they cleaned up their act to a great extent in terms of
    being able to account for and use the funds that are flowing into the
    Palestinian Authority, especially from abroad.

    The Israelis on their side have very important obligations to stop the
    settlements, and the Obama administration has taken a very clear stand
    on stopping settlements --- not only eliminating the illegal outposts,
    but stopping all settlement activity including "natural growth," which
    has obviously been criticized by the Israelis, especially within Prime
    Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition. The Israelis also have an
    obligation to facilitate the access routes for Palestinians within the
    West Bank, and to lift checkpoints. So each side has its obligations
    and this is what the Obama administration is focusing on in the first
    instance. Now, where this leads to hopefully will be negotiations on
    the final status issues, and that again may take a leaf from the
    Annapolis initiative [of November 2007] of the last administration,
    which means while you're taking actions on the ground in terms of
    security and settlements, etc., you're also engaging the Israelis
    and the Palestinians to discuss borders, territorial components of
    peace, Jerusalem, and Palestinian refugees, to arrive at a final
    settlement. So I think that's how they are approaching it. Now whether
    they decide to bring in the international community in a formal way as
    you stated, perhaps another Madrid Conference type of thing, or just
    using the quartet has to be seen.

    Gwertzman: How do you get around the problem of there being a split
    Palestinian leadership?

    Djerejian: It's interesting, the president mentioned Hamas in his
    speech and reiterated the conditions that Hamas should accept in order
    to become, if it can, a responsible player in any Palestinian approach
    towards peace with Israel -- accepting past agreements, ending
    violence, and recognizing Israel's right to exist. But it was
    interesting that he mentioned Hamas specifically because that was a
    signal that this administration is willing to promote or see a
    political reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas, if Hamas agrees to
    be a responsible player. That was an important signal.

    Gwertzman: And on Iran, on the nuclear standoff, that's pretty much
    what he said before, right?

    Djerejian: The important thing there is he wants to open up a
    strategic dialogue, which I certainly support completely, between the
    United States and Iran. I do not think that we are going to be able in
    any way effectively to deal with Iran's nuclear ambitions--and I'm
    thinking now if indeed they are intent on building nuclear weapons
    capability--if the United States and Iran do not engage in a
    comprehensive dialogue where we put everything on the table.
    Everything should be on the table, all the issues from our bilateral
    relationship, to the nuclear issue, to Arab-Israeli peace, Hamas,
    Hezbollah, terrorism, Iraq, Afghanistan. It is also important that we
    state, and here the president made a very important reference in his
    speech, that regime change in Iran is not part of our agenda. There
    was always a suspicion among Iranians during the Bush administration
    that regime cha Bush administration.

    Gwertzman: In the Clinton administration there was an effort by
    Madeleine Albright when she was secretary of state, and even by the
    president himself, to try and get a dialogue going with Iran but it
    never got anywhere.

    Djerejian: That's right, Madeleine Albright did make that effort with
    President Clinton but it didn't get anywhere and I think again I would
    strongly recommend that in order to have that dialogue you really have
    to put everything on the table. Now, they may not be ready for that
    dialogue and that water will have to be tested.

    Gwertzman: Summing up, where do we go from here?

    Djerejian: President Obama has laid a very good public diplomacy
    framework for America's engagement with the Arab and the Muslim
    world. The basic message is we are not your enemy, that we have a lot
    of common tasks and challenges that we can work together to
    achieve. We the United States are willing to move forward with our
    Arab and Muslim partners. We're willing to work for this dialogue of
    civilizations, we're willing to work for economic social development
    and more exchanges, more communication between the two sides, we're
    willing to work for Arab-Israeli peace, and we're willing to try to
    put a cap on nuclear weapons development, which would destabilize the
    region and the world. And so he made some very fundamental framework
    points that will now have to be --and here's the trick -- will have to
    be translated into actual and effective policies. It's one thing to
    state the policy, it's another thing to carry it out effectively, and
    that's been a
    challenge of every administration in the Middle East.


    Weigh in on this issue by emailing [email protected].

    http://www.cfr.org/publication/1 9572/policy_hurdles_beyond_cairo.html?breadcrumb=% 2F
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