Intelligence Squared: The best chance for peace between Israel and Palestine is for Uncle Sam to butt out

in
Monday, 27 Feb 2012 6:45pm to 8:30pm

Is it surprising that the Israelis and Palestinians are still unable to come to some sort of agreement? After all if the adjudicator in a mediation is firmly on your side why bother to concede anything to the enemy? Conversely, why accept anything proposed by the adjudicator if you know his affections are biased towards the other side? We know America’s neutrality is hopelessly compromised on this issue and it doesn’t pretend otherwise. Say something against Israel in the run-up to the US presidential elections and you won’t become president. And since that's not going to change, the best thing one can hope is for America to simply withdraw from the peace process.

Or is it? Some have faith that Washington can be persuaded to adopt a more flexible and even-handed stance – that it can free itself from the influence of the hard-liners and be responsive to more liberal voices: the voice of the Jewish American lobby group J-Street, for example, whose president, Jeremy Ben-Ami, is one of the participants in this debate. For if America were not involved – if the most important global playmaker were excluded or pulled out of the negotiating process – then negotiations would become a charade; the power to force through compromises and enforce them will have gone. Uncle Sam may be a troublesome relative, but you’ll get nowhere without him.

Speakers for the motion:

Mustafa Barghouti: Palestinian democracy activist and member of the Palestinian delegation to the Madrid Peace Conference in 1991. He was a presidential candidate in 2005.

William Sieghart: Founder and Chairman of Forward Thinking, an NGO which works with the leadership of all parties on both sides of the divide in the Israel/Palestine conflict

Chair: Jonathan Freedland, Guardian columnist, broadcaster and author.

Speakers against the motion:

Jeremy Ben-Ami: Founder and president of J Street, an organisation for mainstream American supporters of Israel.

Roger Cohen: Columnist for the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune.

Venue: Cadogan Hall, 5 Sloane Terrace, London SW1X 9DQ