All is not going according to plan for the US and Israel in their efforts to
isolate Iran and its allies in the Mideast by forging a bloc of conservative
Arab regimes against the "Persians". As the report below notes, the US is
now facing a dilemma about whether to recognize and prop up the fragile new
Palestinian "unity government" brokered by the Saudis and backed by the
Europeans. How the US responds will be further indication of whether,
beneath the welter of conflicting signals, it is ultimately driving towards
an overarching political or military solution in the region.
====================================
Rice's Mideast Paradox
Palestinian Pact Bumps
Into Three-Way Talks
By NEIL KING JR. in Washington and CAM SIMPSON in Jerusalem
Wall Street Journal
February 16, 2007; Page A8

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will confront a paradoxical question
when she arrives this weekend in the Middle East: Is peace among
Palestinians bad for potential peace with Israel?

Ms. Rice's trip to Israel comes as the two main Palestinian factions -- the
Islamist militant group Hamas and the Fatah party of Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas -- are trying to cement a Saudi-brokered unity government.
Their aim is to stanch the recent bloodshed between them and to win the
financial backing of the outside world.

The budding political alliance between Hamas -- which refuses to recognize
Israel's existence or to renounce the use of violence -- and Fatah has
thrown a wrench into Ms. Rice's plans to start peace talks between Mr. Abbas
and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. Until a week ago, when Saudi Arabia
jumped in to broker a settlement between the two factions, the Bush
administration was arguing that the time was ripe to start talking about a
future Palestinian state.

Ms. Rice is sticking to her plans to hold three-way talks Monday with
Israeli and Palestinian officials. "You can't wait for the perfect
circumstances," she told reporters yesterday on the eve of her trip, adding
that it would be a mistake not to keep ties strong with Mr. Abbas and "take
advantage of his commitment" to eventual peace with Israel.

Skeptics, including some Israeli officials, are wondering if Ms. Rice is
wise to proceed on this trip, especially when the Palestinian political
scene is in such turmoil. "We could use some time to sit back and reassess
where we are right now," said one Israeli official.

The U.S. itself is sending mixed signals over whether it may be willing to
interact with a unity government led by Hamas. Ms. Rice said the U.S.
wouldn't take a position on this question until the new government is
formed, but U.S. officials in Israel have told the Palestinians that the
U.S. would shun the government if it doesn't embrace Israel, renounce
violence and agree to abide by previous international peace accords.

Ms. Rice's strategy in the past year has been to embolden Mr. Abbas and his
secular Fatah movement, politically and militarily, believing that would
force Hamas to yield to better terms for a unity government. Street battles
raged between Fatah and Hamas, claiming scores of lives from within the
leadership ranks of the warring factions and among Palestinian civilians.

That strategy has apparently failed, as the deal brokered by Saudi Arabia at
Mecca last week would seem to require Mr. Abbas and the other U.S.-backed
moderates to move closer to the Islamists -- not vice versa.

The Saudi deal, if it holds, also has thrown into question a core premise
underlying the U.S.'s regional strategy over recent months. Ms. Rice has
portrayed the moment as ripe for progress on the Israeli-Palestinian peace
front largely because Sunni Arab states like Saudi Arabia appeared eager to
help broker a deal. The U.S. logic was that Iran, and its aid to militant
groups like Hamas, had become a greater threat to many Arab states than
Israel.

The Saudis, by summoning both Hamas and Fatah to Mecca last week and then
offering them $1 billion in aid, have made clear that their main desire is
to preserve intra-Palestinian comity while weaning Hamas away from Iran.

Ms. Rice yesterday said she approved of the Saudi effort to stop the
fighting. "We want calm between the Palestinians as well," she said.

The U.S. finds itself in a delicate place, facing the possibility it soon
could be leading the opposition against a unity government that the Saudis
helped put together. Arab states are eager to see the Palestinians end their
internecine fighting. If Ms. Rice comes out strongly against the new
government, she could create an even-greater backlash against the U.S.
across the region and beyond. The U.S. and Israel would largely be alone if
they tried hard to scuttle it.

After her talks with Israeli and Palestinian officials, Ms. Rice is
scheduled to meet with an assortment of Arab ministers in Jordan before
flying Tuesday to Berlin. Talks there, with representatives from the
European Union, Russia and the United Nations, will be just as crucial,
because the U.S. may have to push hard to keep in place the current
international freeze on aid to the Palestinians if a new unity government is
formed.

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