What Israelis and Palestinians can learn from Bosnia - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
战争

What Israelis and Palestinians can learn from Bosnia

The Dayton accords had many shortcomings but peace has largely held for 30 years in the wake of genocide

The writer is an Israeli pollster and journalist

In recent months, two decades-old conflicts — between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Azerbaijan and Armenia — have taken tentative but significant steps towards peace. The breakthroughs have restored hope that conflicts can end through diplomacy, not only by butchery. By contrast, and despite vastly greater global attention, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is further from peace than ever. Resolving it will require fresh ideas from outside.

There is a different example of time-tested diplomacy that has saved lives. Thirty years ago, the leaders of Bosnia, Yugoslavia and Croatia signed the accords negotiated under US auspices in Dayton, Ohio, and ended the war in Bosnia — one of the bloodiest ethnonationalist wars of the last century. For three decades, Bosnia has avoided a resurgence of ethnic violence, proving that despite cynicism, agreements can halt bloodshed. But the applicable lessons from the Dayton accords for Israelis and Palestinians go much further.

Bosnia might seem like a troubled comparison. The country is beset by difficulties related to the original conflict, and to the Dayton framework. The agreement split Bosnia into two constituent entities, one under the control of Bosnian Serbs, which some saw as a reward for violence, while the other entity is the “federation” of Croats in Bosnia and Bosniak Muslims. Dayton’s constitution requires representation of the three main groups, Bosniak Muslims, Croats and Bosnian Serbs, in the country’s complex shared governing institutions. This has led to venal governance and embittered citizens.

Many criticise the system for discriminating against other minorities, and for being prone to ethnic exploitation. The Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik continues to traffic in ultranationalist secessionist policies, and has recently been convicted for violating the terms of the agreement. Serbia and Croatia are a negative influence and Bosnia’s EU path has been beleaguered and slow. The aim is not to copy Bosnia’s fate, but to extract essential principles from the Dayton framework that can help Israelis and Palestinians find a path out of hell.

One such lesson is obvious. The architect of Dayton, the late US diplomat Richard Holbrooke called his book To End a War, not To Reach a Temporary, Partial Ceasefire. Critics later developed the idea that Dayton was intended to be temporary, but the first line of the accord reads: “Recognizing the need for a comprehensive settlement to bring an end to the tragic conflict in the region.”

Yet in the Israeli-Palestinian case, it has become normal for over a decade to invest almost all diplomatic efforts in temporary ceasefires, without ending the conflict. If the Gaza war ends with a ceasefire alone, the chance of resurgence is 100 per cent. The only way to end the war in Gaza is permanently, and the only way to do that is through comprehensive final status talks.

Second, outside intervention is critical. In Bosnia, it took Nato military strikes against Serbs before the Dayton negotiations could advance. That won’t happen in the Middle East but the two sides won’t settle matters themselves, and external powers must seek to impose an agreement. The intensive international role in implementing Dayton in Bosnia, and later Kosovo, was essential to making the deal work.

Third, Bosnia’s peace agreement is grounded in a constitutional arrangement between warring ethnonational groups. Israeli-Palestinian peace would not need to have the same arrangement — Bosnia and Herzegovina remains a single country, while Israel and Palestine will almost definitely be two. But like in Bosnia, the warring groups could define a measure of separation and co-operation on issues such as economic policy, security and freedom of movement. If these measures sound fantastical in the Middle East, they were implemented in Bosnia, where the physical crimes were no less barbaric.

One final lesson is to drop this presumption that “trust” is a condition for peace. My own polling leaves no doubt about the depth of mutual Israeli-Palestinian distrust. But how much did Bosnian Muslims or Croats trust Bosnian Serbs in 1995, after the siege of Sarajevo, systematic rape and genocidal killings? The ethnic groups in Bosnia are still lukewarm about one another. In 2023, a USAID-funded survey found that an average of just 43 per cent of all three ethnic groups trusted the other two groups. But they’re not killing each other. Seeking to build “trust” or “confidence” between Israelis and Palestinians without ending the war, occupation and conflict is a phantom goal and a waste of time. The only trust-building measure is to impose a full end to the conflict — now.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

反弹的通胀与不耐烦的特朗普:凯文•沃什面临双重压力

美国参议院本周有望批准这位56岁的金融家接替杰伊•鲍威尔出任美联储主席。

伊朗战争推高燃气价格,印度工人纷纷逃离城市生活

伊朗战争推高了烹饪燃料价格,迫使印度许多务工人员返乡回村。

能源、军火与粮食:特朗普对伊战争日益沉重的代价

这场冲突正波及整个美国经济,造成了数千亿美元的产出损失。

肺纤维化生物科技公司Avalyn Pharma申请首次公开募股(IPO)

一家生物技术公司正开发可吸入剂型的已获批肺纤维化口服药,计划赴公开市场融资以支持其后期研发。
2天前

凯勒拉治疗学公司在生物技术领域创纪录的IPO中融资6.25亿美元

最新的生物科技公司首次公开募股创下历史新高。
2天前

法国将迎来最拥挤的大选角逐场:谁将取代马克龙?

左翼和中间阵营的分裂,助长了极右翼问鼎爱丽舍宫的希望。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×