Two Weeks at Camp David
There was no love lost between Egypt's Anwar Sadat and Israel's Menachem Begin. But at the very brink of failure, they found a way to reach agreement
- By Bob Cullen
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2003, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 6)
Begin emerged from Camp David perceived as the winner, having given up nothing of vital importance. "He was the strongest negotiator," in Quandt's estimation, "because he was prepared to walk away and say, 'No deal.' " But Begin found that triumph could turn to ashes. In 1982, he authorized the invasion of Lebanon, chiefly to eliminate the P.L.O. Opprobrium was heaped on Israel for permitting the massacre of Palestinians by Lebanese Christians in a camp outside Beirut. Begin's wife, Aliza, died later that year, and Begin resigned the prime ministership. He spent the rest of his life in seclusion, dying in 1992 at age 78.
Camp David earned Carter wide praise at home but did not save him from electoral defeat two years later. Looking back, Powell says, it's clear that trying to achieve peace in the Middle East does an American president no good in the domestic political sense. "We got a smaller percentage of the Jewish vote in 1980 than we had in 1976," he recalls. "The reason is that if you're going to get an agreement, you're going to have to push the Israelis some too. If you do that, you're going to get a backlash in this country."
Carter was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002, partly for the Camp David accords but also for promoting peace and human rights after his presidency. He said CampDavidmight have led to a comprehensive settlement if his successor in the White House had picked up where he left off. "But President Reagan took very little interest," Carter said. "Then Israel began to expand its settlements. You can't perpetuate an agreement unless it has the support of the incumbent leaders."
Richard V. Allen, national security adviser in the first year of the Reagan administration, agrees that Reagan's priorities in the Middle East differed from those of Carter. "President Reagan thought Camp David was a significant achievement," Allen says. "But he wanted to conclude an agreement on a strategic alliance with Israel, partly to resist Soviet incursions into the Middle East and partly to make a clear statement that Israel would be defended and would not be as heavily pressured as it would have been if Carter had been reelected."
In any case, the autonomy talks for the West Bank and Gaza produced little progress, whether because Washington stopped exerting diplomatic pressure, as Carter believes, or because the agreement had failed to resolve crucial issues. The United States tried to enlist the participation of Palestinians living on the West Bank, but they held out largely because the P.L.O. refused to support a process that did not recognize the group's claim to represent the Palestinians. For its part, Israel refused to accept any proposals that might compromise its settlement program or its ability to claim sovereignty over the territories.
Over the years, some of the Americans who participated in the Camp David talks have changed their opinion that it was Begin who got the best of the bargaining. Instead, they say Israel missed an opportunity to settle disputes that would only grow far more complicated. As Carter sees it, Camp David gave Israel a chance to settle the West Bank issue when there were only 5,000 or 10,000 Israeli settlers there, compared with some 200,000 today; when there was no intifada, suicide bombings or Hamas. If Begin had been more flexible and accepted ideas that Israel accepts today, such as the inevitability of a Palestinian state, reaching a comprehensive peace agreement "no doubt would have been easier in the late 1970s," Carter told me.
Still, many experts agree that the accords represent a high point in U.S. diplomacy. They "stand with the reconstruction of postwar Europe and Japan as an American diplomatic success," says Martin Indyk, the ambassador to Israel in the Clinton administration. "They were the big breakthrough in the resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict. From that point on, it has only been a matter of time before the other parts of that conflict are settled."
James A. Baker III, secretary of state under President George H. W. Bush, says the accords "established the principles of land for peace and recognition of United Nations resolutions, which were very helpful to us in the first Bush administration." Camp David also set a precedent for other Middle East peace agreements, including that between Israel and Jordan, Baker says, adding, "I, for one, remain optimistic that in my lifetime we will see a comprehensive peace" built on Camp David and subsequent agreements.
One fact is certain. As Carter points out, "In the years before Camp David, there were four major wars between Israel and its neighbors, generally led by Egypt." In the 25 years since Camp David, there has been none.
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