Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: www.d.etroitjewishnews.com When The Stars Align Dry Bones IN A POST ARAFAT WORLD, THE QUESTION S WILL THE PLO. ABANDON ITS CAMPAIGN OF ANTI-ISRAELI INCITEMENT? PLO OFFICIALS CLAIM THAT ISRAEL POISONED THE CHAIRMAN,/ AND WE JUST GOT THE ANSWER. ever underestimate the possibility that coinci- dence may create opportunity for some progress on reducing tension between Israelis and Palestinians. A lasting peace is not about to break out, but at least a pause in the violence is possible — and maybe a good deal more. The trigger for the Palestinians is the long-awaited change in leadership now that Yasser Arafat is out of the picture. For the moment, a caretaker government headed by Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei and former Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas seems likely, as the various factions negotiate for the future. It seems to be a recipe for inaction, but dramatic action by a single bold leader could be a catalyst for real movement. If the Palestinians can avoid internal vio- lence — a big if, of course — and maybe carry out their promised local elections, they could create a structure for making larger decisions. In Israel, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon appears to hold the winning hand in his play to get out of Gaza unilaterally next year. The Knesset has given him at least one vote of support for the plan, enough to coun- terbalance the opposition from the settler movement and from Likud hawks. It is hard to overestimate how important it will be not to have the IDF tied down protecting 7,000 settlers and inevitably angering the vast Palestinian majority of Gam. On the other side of the Jewish state, the security barrier seems to be working to cut the flow of suicide bombers from the West Bank. The need for vigilance remains, but the easiest avenues for terrorists are being shut down, and that will weaken their appeal to the Arab "street" that celebrates every innocent Israeli slain. Simultaneously, America's presidential election is set- tled, and George W. Bush, returning for a second term, no longer has to worry about pre-elec- tion political concerns of alienating Jewish vot- ers. If he wants America to get back into the search for a long-range peace plan, he is in a position to do that. He has reiterated his intention to support formation of a Palestinian state next year, an outcome that even a majori- ty of Israelis endorse, providing Israel security guarantees are both meaningful and recognized. Whether because they have been cowed by the American invasion of Iraq or because they are coming to realize that their failure to pre- pare for the 21st century is ultimately self- defeating, some of the Arab and Muslim states are talking more sensibly. Iran, for instance, may yet agree, as Libya did, not to work on nuclear weapons, while even Egypt is allow- ing occasional critical voices to surface above the muck of anti-Zionist and anti-Semitic rhetoric that fills its airwaves and newspapers. Even Europe could be thinking more intelli- gently about the need for a sustainable peace that recognizes Israel's right to exist as a secure Jewish state. That attitudinal shift — hastened as fundamentalist Muslim terrorism strikes home in instances such as the slaying of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh — could lead to a constructive engagement with the Mideast. In fact, Europe might now be able to play a leader- ship role in helping Israel and the Palestinians get back at least to where they were in 2000. The European Union's Javier Solana is usefully pressing a "street map," a set of modest changes aimed at restoring some modicum of normalcy and trust across the security barrier as a prelude to returning to the larger road map Stupid Is As Stupid Does Israel stand and seemed to worry more about Eisenhower (whose only accomplishment, after him being a man who takes his religion seri- all, was leading the Allied forces in Europe dur- ously. As if that in itself were a danger. ing World War II). About Gerald Ford and To wave off all conservatives as muddled Ronald Reagan and both Bushes. And about also ignores the fact that the most dynamic Barry Goldwater, too; but then he really was political movement of the last 30 years has out of touch. been neo-conservatism. This is a philosophy Winning the presidency is not an IQ test. that, by and large, was developed and nurtured There have been some very intelligent men — by Jews and has become a basic part of Herbert Hoover and Woodrow Wilson come GE ORGE Republican core beliefs. to mind — who were terrible presidents. CAN TOR For that, the neo-cons are castigated by They were unable to articulate and act upon Re ality Neanderthals such as Patrick Buchanan and the country's needs. They were clumsy at assem- Check Robert Novak on the right and by the left bling political alliances. They were serenely cer- wing of the Democratic Party. But their ideas, tain of their own intellectual superiority. as adapted by Al From and the Democratic Leadership FDR, for all his Harvard degree, was regarded by Council and transmitted to Bill Clinton, were a big contemporaries as a bit of a lazy thinker. All the man reason why his presidency was so widely admired. could do was govern and inspire. Sometimes I think it is a peculiarly Jewish trait to Maybe it is not such a great idea to dismiss more regard holding strong opinions as more important than half the voters in this country as being too dumb than knowing the facts. to get it. That's a Michael Moore tactic, and he could- But, I have found over the years that calling an n't find the mainstream with a map, an OnStar system opponent stupid is no substitute for argument, and it and a divining rod. is usually a sign of the speaker's discomfort at holding I heard a few pollsters say that the antipathy towards up his own ideas to honest scrutiny. ❑ Bush was strongest among Jews than any other group. They refused to give him any credit for his strong pro- EDIT ORM r or the ninth time in the last 14 presidential elections, Democrats have walked away with the taste of ashes in their mouths. May I sug- gest that a change in tactics may be in order? In almost every one of these campaigns, the Republican candidate has been described either as stu- pid or way out of the mainstream. Sometimes both. The only exception was Richard Nixon, who was described as the Devil. This smug condescension is not the best way to attract independent voters who just possibly may resent being dismissed as hopeless idiots for even thinking of voting Republican. Repeatedly, I heard George W. Bush called stupid in this last campaign. But they don't give degrees from Harvard Business School to morons. Bush has made a career out of playing the Texas hayseed, underestimat- ed by his opponents, who then express great shock at finding their faces being ground in the mud. But I heard the same thing said about Dwight D. George Cantor's e-mail is cantor@thejewishnews.com devised by America, Russia, the E.U. and the United Nations. British Prime Minister Tony Blair is talking about a summit meeting in London next year to kick a peace process into gear. With a majority of Palestinians now conceding that the four-year intifada has been a colossal mis- take and with the terrorist-in-chief Arafat out of the way, a door could be opening a crack. It's way too early to celebrate, but not too early to hope. ❑ 11/12 2004 37