Difference between revisions of "Dennis Ross"
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==Scuttling the Peace Process== | ==Scuttling the Peace Process== | ||
− | According to multiple sources Ross acted as a staunch advocate for Israel during the Oslo peace process, at times sabotaging the negotiations.<ref>Patrick Tyler, ''A World of Trouble'' (Protbello 2009), Ch.10-11</ref> Yet, in an interview with the New York Times Magazine at the end of his tenure with the Clinton Administration, he laid all the blame on Yasir Arafat. The interview also | + | According to multiple sources Ross acted as a staunch advocate for Israel during the Oslo peace process, at times sabotaging the negotiations.<ref>Patrick Tyler, ''A World of Trouble'' (Protbello 2009), Ch.10-11</ref> Yet, in an interview with the New York Times Magazine at the end of his tenure with the Clinton Administration, he laid all the blame on Yasir Arafat. The interview also occasioned this frank admission: |
:'My Jewishness has added to my sense of mission,' he says. And he is an ardent supporter of Israel, where he has vacationed with his family. 'I don't believe you'll ever produce peace in the Middle East,'' he says, ''if Israel isn't strong and if there isn't a strong relationship between the United States and Israel.'<ref>Clyde Haberman, [http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/25/magazine/dennis-ross-s-exit-interview.html?pagewanted=print Dennis Ross's Exit Interview], ''New York Times Magazine'', 25 March 2001</ref> | :'My Jewishness has added to my sense of mission,' he says. And he is an ardent supporter of Israel, where he has vacationed with his family. 'I don't believe you'll ever produce peace in the Middle East,'' he says, ''if Israel isn't strong and if there isn't a strong relationship between the United States and Israel.'<ref>Clyde Haberman, [http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/25/magazine/dennis-ross-s-exit-interview.html?pagewanted=print Dennis Ross's Exit Interview], ''New York Times Magazine'', 25 March 2001</ref> | ||
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Ross has himself admitted to the role that the Israelis expected him to play: | Ross has himself admitted to the role that the Israelis expected him to play: | ||
:[Benjamin Netanyahu] wanted to negotiate with us and then have us sell it to--or more likely impose it on--the Palestinians, letting us do the dirty work and keeping a safe distance for himself.' | :[Benjamin Netanyahu] wanted to negotiate with us and then have us sell it to--or more likely impose it on--the Palestinians, letting us do the dirty work and keeping a safe distance for himself.' | ||
− | Tyler notes that 'while Ross recognized the trap into which Netanyahu had | + | Tyler notes that 'while Ross recognized the trap into which Netanyahu had manoeuvered the American negotiating team, instead of rebelling, he accepted the role...'<ref>Tyler (2009): 480-481</ref> Later at Camp David, according to Tyler, delicate negotiations between Clinton and Arafat also unravelled once Ross got involved.<ref>Tyler (2009): 505</ref> |
==Affiliations== | ==Affiliations== |
Revision as of 11:09, 25 November 2010
Dennis Ross (born 16 November 1948) is a veteran Israel lobbyist who has served in the Obama Administration as a Special assistant to the president and senior director of the Central Region at the National Security Council since June 2009. He formerly served as a Sspecial Middle East Coordinator in the Clinton Administration, responsible for mediating the peace negotiations between the Israelis as Palestinians. According to Aaron David Miller, one of his subordinates, he and his team frequently served as 'Israel's lawyers.'[1] While serving at the Pentagon in the Carter administration, he also co-authored a study with Paul Wolfowitz which debuted the idea of Iraq as a military threat to the United States.[2]
Contents
Scuttling the Peace Process
According to multiple sources Ross acted as a staunch advocate for Israel during the Oslo peace process, at times sabotaging the negotiations.[3] Yet, in an interview with the New York Times Magazine at the end of his tenure with the Clinton Administration, he laid all the blame on Yasir Arafat. The interview also occasioned this frank admission:
- 'My Jewishness has added to my sense of mission,' he says. And he is an ardent supporter of Israel, where he has vacationed with his family. 'I don't believe you'll ever produce peace in the Middle East, he says, if Israel isn't strong and if there isn't a strong relationship between the United States and Israel.'[4]
Israel's Lawyer
On 10 November 1995, days after Yitzhak Rabin's assassination, Ross visited the Saudi Ambassador Bandar bin Sultan to discuss the Middle East. According to Patrick Tyler:
- he surprised Bandar by boldly stating that the Saudis should establish full diplomatic relations with Israel. The prince was taken aback. Here was the American Middle East envoy speaking as if he were [Israeli Prime Minister Shimon] Peres's campaign manager.[5]
Ross has himself admitted to the role that the Israelis expected him to play:
- [Benjamin Netanyahu] wanted to negotiate with us and then have us sell it to--or more likely impose it on--the Palestinians, letting us do the dirty work and keeping a safe distance for himself.'
Tyler notes that 'while Ross recognized the trap into which Netanyahu had manoeuvered the American negotiating team, instead of rebelling, he accepted the role...'[6] Later at Camp David, according to Tyler, delicate negotiations between Clinton and Arafat also unravelled once Ross got involved.[7]
Affiliations
- Washington Institute for Near East Policy - Ziegler fellow
- Project for the New American Century - Signatory
- Jewish People Policy Planning Institute - Board member
- Bipartisan Policy Center - author of study on Iran
Publications
- Myths, Illusions, and Peace—Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East - co-authored with David Makovsky, the former executive editor of Jerusalem Post, who took up Israeli citizenship before joining WINEP as a senior fellow. (Makovsky's brother Michael Makovsky served in Douglas Feith's notorious Office of Special Plans).
Resources
- Rightweb Dennis Ross
- Clyde Haberman, Dennis Ross's Exit Interview, New York Times Magazine, 25 March 2001
Notes
- ↑ Aaron David Miller, Israel's Lawyer, Washington Post, 23 May 2005
- ↑ James Mann, The Rise of the Vulcans (Penguin 2004), pp.77-82
- ↑ Patrick Tyler, A World of Trouble (Protbello 2009), Ch.10-11
- ↑ Clyde Haberman, Dennis Ross's Exit Interview, New York Times Magazine, 25 March 2001
- ↑ Tyler (2009): 436-437
- ↑ Tyler (2009): 480-481
- ↑ Tyler (2009): 505