Egyptian President Speaks Out for Peace

pf button both Egyptian President Speaks Out for Peace
Hosni Mubarak Egyptian President Speaks Out for Peace

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak

I never thought I would live to see the day.

In a phenomenal op-ed in The New York Times, titled “A Peace Plan Within Our Grasp,” Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak spoke out for peace.

So often we see the Arab-Israeli conflict as a huge, interminable, monolithic fight. With 2 sides, neither of which ever hears the other. But this was different.

Here is an Arab leader – president of one of the greatest and most powerful of the Arab states – who gets it.

Lord knows Mubarak has enough to contend with at home. He can play the populist card to his people, and bash ”the Zionists” and “the Jews” ’till the cows come home.

But he did not. Like his predecessor Anwar Sadat before him, here is a leader who is great enough (for all his flaws) to stand up, and speak the truth. And does this man ever get the truth.

Mubarak speaks of the “dream of a permanent peace in the Middle East” and of his “hopes for peace.”

He lays the challenges out on the line, acknowledging that

The biggest obstacle that now stands in the way of success is psychological: the cumulative effect of years of violence and the expansion of Israeli settlements have led to a collapse of trust on both sides. For the talks to succeed, we must rebuild trust and a sense of security.

He isn’t apportioning blame (though there is certainly blame a-plenty to go around). He isn’t playing games. He just goes out there and calls out the lack of trust, which is so central to the challenge of resolving this conflict.

And then he speaks of the steps that must be taken, calling out that

First, we must safeguard the peace process from further outbreaks of violence.

And also raising the crucial point that

For an Israeli-Palestinian peace to succeed, it must also be embedded in a broader regional peace between Israel and the Arab world. …

Arab nations should continue to demonstrate the seriousness of their peace initiative with steps that address the hopes and concerns of ordinary Israelis.

Finally, President Mubarak addressed the question of security, saying

For both sides trust can be built only on tangible security. …

I recognize that Israel has legitimate security needs…

It is truly a very important moment when an Arab leader publicly acknowledges so many of Israel’s most basic concerns, and truly demonstrates his understanding of the Israelis’ needs and worries. I can only hope that his leadership will allow him to bring this understanding to the rest of the Arab world, in the cause of peace and security for all in the region.

President Mubarak closes by saying

We live in a world that is suffering from the bitter lash of extremism. A permanent peace between Israel and the Palestinians would bring the light of hope to the Middle East and to people everywhere. As someone who has witnessed both the ravages of war and the hope for peace, I appeal to all sides to make this new round of negotiations the one that succeeds.

I, for one, am certain that we all can join him wholeheartedly in this sentiment.

(Photo: US Department of Defense)

Filed Under: What's Nu?

Tags: , , , ,

About the Author

Jenna is a transplant to Minnesota from sunny California, where she graduated from UC Berkeley. She lives and works in Minneapolis, but secretly loves St. Paul. She is a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Plymouth and a regular speaker on the Arab-Israeli conflict with the JCRC Speakers' Bureau. She is also a big fan of Minnesota lakes and forests, and can regularly be found kayaking and snowshoeing up north, when she isn't rock climbing out west.

Comments (2)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

  1. Jenna Zark says:

    Question: if Palestinian refugees return to Israel’s pre-1967 borders, won’t they soon outnumber the Jewish Israelis living there? If there is supposed to be a two-state solution, why couldn’t the refugees return to the Palestinian state?

  2. [...] TC Jewfolk Columnist: “Egyptian president speaks out for peace” [...]

Leave a Reply




If you want a picture to show with your comment, go get a Gravatar.