Share

Obama Camp "Prepared to Talk to Hamas"

by: Suzanne Goldenberg  |  The Guardian UK

photo
President-elect Barack Obama. (Photo: Jim Young / Reuters)

    Incoming administration will abandon Bush's isolation of Islamist group to initiate low-level diplomacy, say transition sources.

    Washington - The incoming Obama administration is prepared to abandon President Bush's doctrine of isolating Hamas by establishing a channel to the Islamist organisation, sources close to the transition team say.

    The move to open contacts with Hamas - which could be initiated through the US intelligence services - would represent a definitive break with the Bush presidency's ostracising of the group.

    The Guardian has spoken to three people with knowledge of the discussions in the Obama camp.

    There is no talk of Obama approving direct diplomatic negotiations with Hamas early on in his administration, but he is being urged by advisers to initiate low-level or clandestine approaches, and there is growing recognition in Washington that the policy of ostracising Hamas is counter-productive.

    A tested course would be to start contacts through Hamas and the US intelligence services - similar to the secret process through which the US engaged with the PLO in the 1970s. Israel did not become aware of the contacts until much later.

    Richard Haass, a diplomat under both presidents Bush who was named by a number of news organisations this week as Obama's choice for Middle East envoy, supports low level contacts with Hamas provided there is a ceasefire in place and a Hamas-Fatah reconciliation emerges.

    Another potential contender for a foreign policy role in the Obama administration suggested the president-elect would not be bound by the Bush doctrine of isolating Hamas. "This is going to be an administration that is committed to negotiating with critical parties on critical issues," they said.

    There are a number of options that would avoid a politically toxic scenario for Obama of seeming to give legitimacy to Hamas.

    "Secret envoys, multilateral six-party talk-like approaches. The total isolation of Hamas that we promulgated under Bush is going to end," said Steve Clemons, the director of the American Strategy Programme at the New America Foundation.

    "You could do something through the Europeans. You could invent a structure that is multilateral. It is going to be hard for the Neocons to swallow," he said. "I think it is going to happen.

    However, one Middle East expert close to the transition team warned: "It is highly unlikely that they will be public about it."

    The two weeks since Israel launched its military campaign against Gaza have heightened anticipation about how Obama intends to deal with the Middle East. He adopted a strongly pro-Israel position during the election campaign, as did his erstwhile opponent and choice for secretary of state, Hillary Clinton. However, it is widely thought Obama will adopt a more even-handed approach once he is president.

    Obama's main priority now, in the remaining days before his inauguration, is to ensure the crisis does not rob him of the chance to set his own foreign policy agenda, rather than merely react to events.

    "We will be perceived to be weak and feckless if we are perceived to be on the margins, unable to persuade the Israelis, unable to work with the international community to end this," said Aaron David Miller, a former state department adviser on the Middle East.

    "Unless he is prepared to adopt a policy that is tougher, fairer and smarter than both of his predecessors you might as well hang a closed-for-the-season sign on any chance of America playing an effective role in defusing the current crisis or the broader crisis," he said.

    Obama has defined himself in part by his willingness to talk to America's enemies. But the president-elect would be wary of being seen to give legitimacy to Hamas as a consequence of the war in Gaza.

    Bruce Hoffman, a counterterrorism expert at the Georgetown school of foreign service, said it was unlikely Obama would move to initiate contacts with Hamas unless the radical faction in Damascus was crippled by the conflict in Gaza. "This would really be dependent on Hamas's military wing having suffered a real, almost decisive, drubbing."

    Even with such caveats, there is growing agreement, among Republicans as well as Democrats, on the need to engage Hamas to achieve a sustainable peace in the Middle East - even among Obama's close advisers.

    In an article published on Wednesday on the website of Foreign Affairs, but apparently written before the fighting in Gaza, Haass, who is president of the Council on Foreign Relations writes: "If the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas continues to hold and a Hamas-PA reconciliation emerges, the Obama administration should deal with the joint Palestinian leadership and authorise low-level contact between US officials and Hamas in Gaza."

    The article was written with Martin Indyk, a former US ambassador to Israel and an adviser to the incoming secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.

    "The change of perceptions is underway," said Alistair Crooke, director of the Conflicts Forum who was a former security adviser to the EU's Middle East envoy. "However, it hasn't translated yet into something substantive."

    Last month, General Anthony Zinni, who was Bush's envoy to the Middle East, called on Obama to enage Hamas and move quickly to reach a peace deal.

    The willingness for conditional engagement with Hamas marks a sharp break with the world view of the Bush administration.

    Obama has said repeatedly that restoring America's image in the world would rank among the top priorities of his administration, and there has been widespread praise for his choice of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state and Jim Jones, the former Marine Corps commandant, as his national security adviser.

    He is expected to demonstrate that commitment to charting a new foreign policy within days when the president-elect is expected to name a roster of envoys who will take charge of key foreign policy areas: Iran, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, India-Pakistan, and North Korea.

    Both Obama and Clinton adopted solidly pro-Israel positions during the election campaign. Last May, Obama sacked an adviser, Rob Malley, after it emerged he had met Hamas officials while working for the International Crisis Group.

    In June, Obama told the Israeli lobbying group Aipac he supported Jerusalem as the undivided capital of Israel. That runs contrary to longstanding policy that the future of Jerusalem be decided through negotiation between Israel and the Palestinians.

    In a visit to Israel one month later, Obama said he identified with efforts to protect Israeli cities from Hamas rockets.

    Obama has further frustrated and confused those who had been looking to the incoming administration for a more even-handed approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by his refusal to make any substantive comment on Israel's military campaign on Gaza, nearly two weeks on.

    He told a press conference on Wednesday: "We cannot be sending a message to the world that there are two different administrations conducting foreign policy. Until I take office, it would be imprudent of me to start sending out signals that somehow we are running foreign policy when I am not legally authorised to do so."

    He added: "This silence is not as a consequence of a lack of concern."

  

»


Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

finally! This "Israel--

finally! This "Israel-- right or wrong" attitude of the Bush administration (influenced by the evangelicals and AIPAC) has been bad for the US, bad for the world and most of all horrible for peace prospects in the Middle East. However, Obama has yet to show that he will be even-handed despite having Emanuel and Clinton on his team.

This article is completely

This article is completely skewed towards the continual propaganda of Israel being somehow a legitimate power and government while Hamas, a legally elected body is said to be illegitimate, as if this is just common knowledge. This whole premise just goes to act as the transmitter of the 'Psychic Virus', as Carl Jung would call it, that serves the purpose of inducing hysterical perceptions in the public. This is a psychological warfare attack! You may think I'm nuts for suggesting this, however, I am a Jungian psychologist and there have been over two hundred books published on psychological warfare and we are under constant attack with subtle and not so subtle weapons of psychological war. You can always tell if you look for the 'spin' in the story or the news item. It always amounts to the distortion or reversal of the truth! The truth is that Israel has illegally occupied Gaza and has implemented a blockade causing a humanitarian crisis for the Palestinians and now the illegal occupying power, Israel, are going in there and murdering innocent women and children. The US, if it is to restore it's heavily tarnished image worldwide, must stop giving financial, military and political support to the terrorist Israeli nation and help the Palestinians to regain their ancestral lands and to be able to live as the Israeli's live...in relative freedom and sovereingty.

At last! If we are indeed

At last! If we are indeed to be a country of laws, that expectation should extend to countries to whom we give more money than we allocate to many of the neediest at home. Israel has all the money it needs - if it will stop its war of aggression against everyone else in the Middle East. Let is top spending money on genocide. Let it stop money on building new "settlements" which are really land grabs into what should be the Palestinian Homelands. Let it learn, as we at home must do, to live within our means, and within our boundaries.

This is a baby-step in the

This is a baby-step in the right direction and a stroke of common sense. May this project for actually talking with a key actor in the conflict actually materialize, and may it result in Israel's no longer being given carte blanche to commit serial war crimes and continue colonizing and terrorizing its neighbors. Enough is enough. (I am a person of Jewish origin, if that means anything, though I'd prefer to think that this is first of all a human problem and that we're talking above all about humanity vs. inhumanity.)

While I want to be hopeful

While I want to be hopeful that Obama will bring change, his Middle East "line-up" is nothing short of a disaster---NOT even-handed. Hillary: voted for sending more cluster bombs to Israel when it was raining down same (if memory serves, most were dropped in the 48 hours before the cease-fire and in civilian areas) on Lebanon. She has always towed the line 100% for AIPACs position. Martin Indyk and Dennis Ross: both represented AIPAC as lobbyists and have routinely supported Israel's position in prior so-called peace negotiations. Indeed, as Afif Safieh, PLO's representative told me, the Palestinians felt that there were 2 Israeli "teams" in the negotiations, 1 led from Tel Aviv, the other from the U.S. negotiators. As Meersheimer and Walt point out in their book, The Israeli Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy, the American delegation (led by Ross) took most of their cues from Israeli P.M. Barak and coordinated their positions with the Israelis. So I'm having a little bit of difficulty feeling hopeful about change with Obama!

Many seem to be agreeing

Many seem to be agreeing with the first poster. In "indirect diplomatic negotiations," "low-level" or "clandestine" approaches, the Israelis need to be told that the U.S. will be discontinuing their monthly stipend until the Israelis agree to a cease fire and both they and Hamas are in continued peace talks. Hamas needs to stop their stupid rocket fire with is hurting no one, but irritating the c**p out of all of us and causing the Israelis to make even more stupid decisions. Keep it simple, stupid.

Why is it so difficult to

Why is it so difficult to understand why Obama cannot and should not speak his own opinion as to what should be done about the on0going ( especially the last 60+ years) Zionist -contrived situation between the 'State' of Israel and the 'State' of Palestine, both contrived and U.N. mandated by the USA and European powers at the closing of WW2. He is not yet the President of the United States of America. This is essentially an ongoing Family Squabble between Cousins which is being used by the Zionist Ashkenazis, who are the real culprits. They are using ongoing 'Sibling Rivalry' to distract from their ulterior intent to gain worldwide power and control of the world in every way..militarily and financially.. by using the power and might of the USA to their advantage, by Proxy. This is a Stealth maneuver by the Zionist Jews, while the average American is still believing the propaganda that is being dished out by our MSM day and night, who are bought and paid for by AIPAC and can only use what Talking Points that they are told to use. To do otherwise means the end of their careers, and thusly, their livelihoods. People, you better wake up and see that you are being Had-- and start finding out the facts before it is too late. We are fastly losing even the remnants of the Democracy that we Thought we had. It is up to We, The People, to be aware of these tyrants that are determined to own us, lock, stock and barrel. President-Elect Obama is only One Man and we must make sure that he does exactly what We, the People want and demand of him...not what the Zionist want. Remember...We, the People Are the Government ! AIPAC, with the deceived and misguided assistance of the evangelicals, must be stopped before they can do even more damage than they already have. Truth is always the best Antiseptic to battle lies and deception.

We can only hope that Obama

We can only hope that Obama will listen and learn. He needs to spend significant time in Gaza, talking to real people, real families who have lost babies and children...this is absolute terror on the part of our crony Israel. Obama must seek the truth so long ignored; please let it be that he actually gives up hope for peace, and stops the ethnic cleansing by Israel.

Could Obama be the man? He

Could Obama be the man? He has his baggage: His chief of staff is a dual Israeli citizen , his foreign policy team in pro-AIPAC, so is he. And the US has long tilted against the Palestinians. In fact, it has teamed up with Israel in preaching for a two-state solution but practicing the slow erasure of the Palestinian people. But here's the job that needs doing; Open the gates surrounding the outdoor prison that is now Gaza. A UN force needs to be placed between the warring parties that will monitor the peace. Israel needs to tell the Palestinians flat-out that they guarantee a Palestinian state and proceed to negotiate with them on that basis. It seems that there are many versions of a two-state solution that are fair to both sides—the Clinton Parameters, The Arab League’s peace proposals, etc. Surely something could be cobbled together that brings peace and stability to the region and thereby avoids the unfolding disaster.

Real or just a smoke

Real or just a smoke screen? "Richard Haass, a diplomat under both presidents Bush who was named by a number of news organisations this week as Obama's choice for Middle East envoy, supports low level contacts with Hamas provided there is a ceasefire in place and a Hamas-Fatah reconciliation emerges." Why condition it on Hamas-Fatah reconciliation. That's just a way to prevent the talks from starting. It's the same ploy Bush used to avoid talks. It makes it appear that they are willing to talk for political points, when they know the conditions will not be met and they don't have to talk.

I don't see the possibility

I don't see the possibility of Israel negotiating with the Palestinians as long as Hamas is their spokesperson. Hamas was formed as a freedom fighting organization long after the birth of Israel in 1948. It's only purpose for existence is to destroy Israel. If peace is negotiated, ironically, Hamas loses all of its power because its purpose would no longer exist. The Palestinians would have no need for them anymore. Hamas knows this. Their only purpose for a cease fire would be so they can reload with more smuggled ammunition and weapons. This would serve to keep the pot boiling once they feel strong enough again. Peace is not a current option for Hamas. Voting in Hamas as their government was a fatal error on the part of the Palestinians in Gaza. The West Bank is peaceful. They have a legitimate government. How come the West Bank is not joining the plight of Gaza? Until the Palestinian people reject this organization and allow their true government to rule them, there can be no peace. The Israeli government knows this. They would like to have peace like they negotiated with the governments of Egypt and Jordan. How come there have been no problems there? Those treaties have held. To place the entire blame on Israel is showing ignorance of the whole picture from an historic point of view and a lack of understanding Hamas.

Yes, yes! Communication is

Yes, yes! Communication is the end of separation and the willingness to begin to talk to all sides, under the specified conditions, bodes well for an Obama foreign policy approach. We do need an "out-of-the-box" solution to the ME land problem. Here is one: The Israeli/Palestinian situation is a microcosm in chronic form of conflicts throughout the world and for many past centuries. Essentially, these are fights to control land and resources. Each side battles back and forth with reasons why an area is THEIRS rather than the OTHERS - that their particular god has said it was theirs and that their particular god was on their side fighting to take it from the other. We humans have not yet learned to fairly share our world. Even under a two state solution, you can be certain that a few people in each state would come to own and control more land than others, as is true now in Israel, while the gap between rich and poor Israelis and Palestinians would thus continue to widen. Having studied and experienced these problems of wealth gap, poverty and war for more than 30 years now and I have come to the full realization that we need a democratic land ethic of equal rights to the planet as a birthright, and the implementation of policies - such as land value taxation, which is the social capturing of unearned value accruing to land and natural resources - for the benefit of EVERYONE. UN HABITAT Action Agenda includes this policy recommendation as endorsed by consensus of all UN member states. Applied to Israel/Palestine, there should be a Resource Rent Authority established to collect all the land rent of the entire land area; then these funds should pay for public goods and services - education, health care, infrastructure improvements, etc. - to benefit all on an equitable basis. With this policy there is no need to partition the land based on tribal identities and history stories, just share the land rent based on the human identity of equal rights to the earth. For more on this principle and policy approach you can enroll in this online course and program on Land Rights and Land Value Capture here: http://www.course.earthrights.net From Alanna Hartzok, Co-Director, Earth Rights Institute and UN NGO ECOSOC Representative

Finally, some meaningful

Finally, some meaningful consideration of the Palestinian plight may take place. We will have to see as Bush id shipping 3,000 tonnes of fresh ordinance to Israel from Cyprus at this moment. (Skull and Cross Bones) No wonder who's side Bush is on. Watch the Jewish lobby scream when Obama shifts gears. Otherwise this action would amount to Political suicide only if there had not been FDR to break the ground.