The Atlantic Monthly | June 2007
David Samuels, "Grand Illusions"

With Rumsfeld and Powell
gone, and Cheney's power diminished, this is Condoleezza Rice's moment. Can
she salvage America's standing in the Middle East-and defuse the threat of a
nuclear Iran? Behind the curtain in Washington and Jerusalem with the
secretary of state
by David
Samuels
I met Condoleezza Rice for the first time in August of
last year, at the height of the recent war in Lebanon. Having failed to get
the French to agree to a UN resolution that would send peacekeepers to disarm
Hezbollah, and having failed to get Israel to give up the disputed Shebaa
Farms area (she had hoped to hand the Sinoira government a consolation prize
for the destruction in Beirut), the secretary of state, who is usually vibrant
and gracious, looked tired and wan. Rice ushered me into her study, past
portraits of her Cold War heroes, Dean Acheson and George Marshall. Impeccably
dressed, in a lemon-meringue-colored wool suit, she settled into a corner of a
creamy white settee and pointed me toward a chair. Then I asked our country's
second-ranking sports nut why Americans play baseball and football, while the
rest of the world prefers soccer.
"I'm not going there!" Rice said, with
a laugh that betrayed a bit of discomfort at having been asked such a weird
question. Her curiosity got the better of her, and she began to muse. "I think
the explanation for why we play sports that are not played in other places,
and why perhaps we don't take to the sports that are played in other places,
is this is a big continental-sized country," she said, curling up against the
arm of the sofa. "If you look at Australia, they play Australian-rules
football, which nobody else in the world plays."
Rice's obsession with sports makes it
easier for her to function in a world of men who may not be immediately
comfortable taking direction from a younger black woman, but who will respect
anyone who can name the winning quarterback for every Super Bowl off the top
of her head. Rice works out regularly with a trainer, has dated NFL All-Pro
receivers Rick Upchurch and Gene Washington, is a talented classical pianist,
and wears sophisticated clothes that show off her long, athletic legs, facts
that may seem trivial, but actually provide valuable clues to an underlying
truth about the secretary of state: She is an extreme personality, who dresses
with a degree of flamboyance that hasn't been seen in the State Department
since the high-collar days of John Hay.
Which is not to say that she doesn't
have a bureaucratic, boring side. Ten years before she became the president's
chief foreign-policy adviser, she was a junior Sovietologist on his father's
National Security Council, and she retains the ability to master briefing
books and speak in bullet points that makes a good staff person invaluable.
When she talks about big ideas and important moments in history, her
expression becomes solemn and fixed, and she leans forward, holding her
shoulders back a little as she speaks.
"I think we are just at the beginning
of great historical flux, and I think it's even much more dramatic and much
more profound than I thought in 2000," Rice says, when I mention an article
she published that year in Foreign Affairs, laying out her vision of a global
democratic future guaranteed by the United States. Most articles about foreign
policy are op-ed pieces masquerading as political philosophy, and Rice's is no
exception. But it does describe a coherent view of the world that places a
great deal of emphasis on the determined exercise of military and diplomatic
power and has little in common with the humble, neo-isolationist platform on
which George W. Bush ran for president. The world as Rice understands it is
both a welcoming and a dangerous place, in which America plays a special role.
The sunny and scary parts of her worldview are woven tightly together.
"There has been a triumph of the broad
institutional consensus about what it takes to be effective and prosperous or
successful," Rice says, pointing to the interest that all states share in
obtaining access to markets and ensuring domestic stability. Unlike Donald
Rumsfeld's finger-wagging, Rat Pack-era version of realpolitik, or Dick
Cheney's paranoia about mushroom clouds and sleeper cells, Rice's views are
the kind of optimistic stuff that mothers might wish their children were being
taught in school. Threats to the emerging global order of liberal states come
from what Rice calls "transnational forces," "violent extremists," or
sometimes "terrorists," locutions that share in common a studied avoidance of
the word "Islam."
"When we liberated Mazar-i-Sharif in
Afghanistan, we found Nigerians and Chinese and Malay and American people who
essentially deny nationality in favor of a philosophy--a violent extremist
philosophy to which they are committed," she says. "It reminds me in some ways
of the way that 'Workers of the world, unite!'--Karl Marx," she adds helpfully
"--was a slogan that meant that an American worker had more in common with a
German worker than an American worker would have with the American
leadership." When she is thinking hard about something, she furrows her wide
brow and scrunches up her mouth in an unselfconscious way that suggests a
schoolgirl determined to ace a test.
Questions about Rice from policy types
usually begin with the all-important matter of whether she is an "idealist" or
a "realist," a distinction that she herself regards ms academic and
meaningless. As she wrote in her Foreign Affairs article. "There are those who
would draw a sharp line between power politics and a principled foreign policy
based on values. This polarized view--you are either a realist or devoted to
norms and values--maybe just fine in academic debate, but it is a disaster for
American foreign policy. American values are universal."
A related question is whether Rice is
a "neocon," a term originally coined to describe a tight-knit group of mostly
Jewish intellectuals in New York City who split from the doctrinaire left in
the 1960s on a series of issues, beginning with whether or not the Soviet
Union was a totalitarian state. The current usage of the term, while popular,
is quite misleading, because it flattens the distinction between those who
believe in the aggressive use of American military force and those who believe
that the United States should champion democracy: In doing so, it imposes a
retroactive coherence on administration policies that evolved on the fly, as
the outcome of battles between opposing bureaucrats, none of whom got exactly
what they wanted. In Iraq, some, like Vice President Cheney, appear to have
been eager to depose Saddam Hussein without caring much about what system of
government might replace him. Others, like former Deputy. Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz, cared passionately about bringing democracy to the Middle
East. A third group, which includes Condoleezza Rice and George W. Bush,
supported the invasion of Iraq on the grounds that Saddam Hussein was a
menace, and then, only after that decision was made, supported the idea of
building a democracy instead of installing a new dictator and going home.
Rice's role as national-security
adviser during Bush's first term was ostensibly to referee the clash of
opinions among what some White House staff called the "bull elephants"--Rumsfeld,
Cheney, and Colin Powell. "I didn't know that she had any strong views," says
Richard Armitage, Powell's deputy, who did not think highly of her
performance. "I mean, she was an expert in one country that no longer exists."
And yet, when the dust settled late
last year, those who had dismissed Rice as a glorified appointments secretary
were in for a surprise. With Powell and Rumsfeld gone, and Cheney's influence
constrained by aggressive legal proceedings against his chief of staff, I.
Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the secretary of state has emerged as the
foreign-policy linchpin of an administration that is largely staffed and run
by colleagues from her days in Brent Scowcroft's NSC during the administration
of George H. W. Bush. Stephen Hadley, who worked with Rice on German
unification between 1989 and 1991, has succeeded her as national-security
adviser. Rumsfeld, Rice's leading bureaucratic rival (a colleague described
their relationship as that of "an older uncle and a headstrong niece"), has
been replaced by Robert Gates, Scowcroft's deputy at the NSC.
With Rice, Gates, and Hadley in place
at State, Defense, and the NSC, it seems clear that President Bush has
embraced at least one part of his father's legacy--not the more cautious,
deal-making side exemplified by Scowcroft and Secretary of State James Baker,
but the side embodied by the younger staffers who urged the first President
Bush to take clear, decisive action to end the Cold War, a course that many of
their elders believed was unwise, if not impossible.
One of Rice's closest colleagues at
the State Department, Nicholas Burns, a handsome, soft-spoken Boston Red Sox
fan, was her assistant at the NSC. "She was allowed to hire one person. That
was me," Burns remembers. "She was 34, and I was 33. We were in these
positions of great responsibility. It was a very exciting and historically
significant time."
Burns believes that Rice's distinct
management style was born of her experience with fast-moving events at the end
of the Cold War. She holds daily strategy meetings in the morning and evening,
and keeps in constant phone contact with the "issues managers" she has
appointed to make and implement her big-picture decisions. For Iran and India,
the issue manager is Burns. For Iraq, it is Rice's new deputy, John
Negroponte. For Korea, it is Christopher Hill, who recently concluded a
disarmament deal with North Korea that was roundly criticized by hard-liners,
including Deputy National Security Advisor Elliott Abrams, the tight-lipped
poster boy for neoconservative-haters inside and outside the administration.
Rice's success in getting the president to sign on to the North Korea deal
without giving Abrams and other opponents time to object, and without allowing
other Cabinet departments and agencies the opportunity to review the terms, is
a sign of how far the bureaucratic balance has shifted in her favor.
Rice's ideas matter more today than
they have at any point since she began her tenure as the chief foreign-policy
adviser to a president whose vision of America's role in the world underwent a
dramatic change after the al-Qaeda attacks of September 11, 2001. Her
influence is strengthened by the fact that she and President Bush are
personally close. Rice frequently eats dinner with the Bushes on Sunday nights
and sometimes watches movies with the first couple before they go to bed, an
arrangement that, if set in New York or L.A., might be a worthwhile premise
for a sitcom. Rice is also close to Laura Bush, who believes the secretary,
shares her protective attitude toward her husband, rather than pushing a
separate agenda at the president's expense.
"He's had as much effect upon my
foreign-policy views as I've had on his," Rice told me. "It is in part, in
large part, his unshakable belief in freedom. And his unshakable belief that
human beings have not just a right to it, but they're at their best when they
have it." Like the president, Rice is a regular churchgoer who embraced
religious practice later in life--in Rice's case, after returning from
Washington, D.C., to her teaching job at Stanford University, where she served
as provost from 1993 to '99.
Rice's detractors, and even some of
her close friends, see her worldview, which is both intellectually coherent
and heartfelt, as deterministic and lacking any real appreciation for the
influence of local factors on big historical events. A common term for the
core of her thought among her colleagues, past and present, is "the theology,"
a reference to her bedrock faith in the likelihood, or inevitability, of
progressive historical change. Her views have evolved since she witnessed
firsthand the end of the Cold War.
"Back then, Condi Rice was much more
of a realist," one former senior Bush administration official told me. "Some
of those traits are still there, but she's gotten some religion. I don't mean
religion in the evangelical sense. I mean that view of life and optimism and
larger forces, and the contest of good and evil, and the idea that time is on
our side. It fits with a notion of historical inevitability, and a notion of
American progress or a special mission in the world."
Philip Zelikow, another friend and
colleague from the Eastern European section at the NSC, is often described as
the secretary's "intellectual soul mate." They have written a book together,
Germany Unified and Europe Transformed, as well as academic papers about
European history and the lessons of the Cold War. "She would put a heavier
emphasis on circumstance than many would, because she is less prey to the
conceit that 'My choice can change history,'" Zelikow told me.
Rice's writing and speeches share many
of the optimistic assumptions of Francis Fukuyama's 1989 essay "The End of
History." Where Rice sharply differs from Fukuyama is in her vision of a
strong tension between a beneficent order of liberal states and the
"transnational forces" that seek to tear down the global system. Her worldview
is therefore trickier and more idiosyncratic than it first appears.
"Democracy, for Secretary Rice, I think, and for them," Zelikow says, speaking
more generally of the administration, "is a universal safety valve for social
conflict. And as they confront parts of the world in profound social and
political crisis, they prescribe democracy."
Toward the end of our first interview,
I asked Rice whether the hopeful narrative of Arab countries holding free
elections and moving forward toward democracy risks ignoring 500 years of
tragic history in the Middle East.
"It's not hopefulness," she said
crisply, interrupting me. "It's a sense of what is possible, and optimism
about the strength of democratic institutions.
"Let me ask you this," she continued,
wagging her head back and forth, taking pleasure in the clash of ideas. "Not
that long ago--you said 500 years, but not that long ago, say, 1944, or maybe
even 1946--would anybody have said that France and Germany would never go to
war again? Anyone?"
THE ALLIANCE AGAINST IRAN
In November, the Democratic Party
swept both houses of Congress. The ensuing talk of a quick withdrawal from
Iraq emboldened Iran and panicked Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, and other Arab
states. Suddenly, a strategic landscape whose most prominent feature was the
horrifying failure of the American effort to stabilize Iraq, and the
reluctance of America's Arab allies to embrace our military presence in the
region, was turned on its head. Arab leaders found themselves supporting the
administration, instead of trying to sabotage what they had seen as an attempt
to challenge their control over their own restive populations and to destroy
the regional status quo. Meanwhile, two camps emerged in Washington: One
believed in the hope of a stable, democratic Iraq and insisted that the
administration get tough with Iran; the other, led by James Baker, wanted to
negotiate with Iran and Syria as a prelude to an American withdrawal from
Iraq.
Those who believed in the continuing
wisdom of a muscular presence in Iraq also tended to agree with Rice that the
United States was involved in a "generational struggle" against radical
Islamists that in length and intensity might be akin to the Cold War. The
Baker types tended to believe this was nonsense.
"Look, 9/11 was a huge traumatic shock
to us," Colin Powell told me when I visited him in Arlington, Virginia, last
year. "But the Cold War is gone. All the theologies and ideologies that were
going to supplant ours are gone. The communists, the fascists--get serious!
The few authoritarian regimes that are left around are peanuts!" And here he
ticked off a short list that included Venezuela, Cuba, and Belarus. Leaning
forward, he added, "We can't let terrorism suddenly become the substitute for
Red China and the Soviet Union as our all-encompassing enemy, this great
Muslim-extremist, monolithic thing from somewhere in Mauritania all the way
through Muslim India. They're all different. It's not going to come together
that way."
As the debate between the two camps
heated up last fall, Rice and her colleagues in the administration decided to
embark on a daring and risky, third course: a coordinated campaign, directed
with the help of the intelligence services of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan,
Israel, and the United Arab Emirates. While the "get tough" crew favored
direct military action against Iran, the administration chose a more subtle
mix of diplomatic and economic pressure, large-scale military exercises,
psychological warfare, and covert operations. The bill for the covert part of
this activity, which has involved funding sectarian political movements and
paramilitary groups in Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, and the Palestinian territories,
is said to amount to more than $30.0 million. It is being paid by Saudi Arabia
and other concerned Gulf states, for whom the combination of a hasty American
withdrawal from Iraq and a nuclear-armed Iran means trouble.
The Saudis agreed to cooperate with
the United States not because they were enamored of American policy in the
region but because they felt they had no choice. "Our major concern," a source
inside the Saudi security establishment told me recently, "is to make sure
that the Iranians don't start acting on their delusional rhetoric." The Saudis
have traditionally dealt with potential foes in the region by buying them off.
Faced with the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran, they decided to play a more
active role. "The king realized that the Arab world is a disaster," my source
explained, speaking of the Saudi leader, King Abdullah. "Egypt is completely
consumed by its domestic problems, and has turned inward. Jordan is a very
small, weak country. Syria is a basket case. Iraq is a disaster, and the
central government there has no credibility."
Nicholas Burns, who as undersecretary
of state for political affairs is in charge of the American side of the
European-led effort to persuade Iran to stop processing uranium, confirmed the
existence of a broad political and military strategy to counter Iran that
began just after the recent war in Lebanon.
"We felt at the end of this past
autumn and the beginning of January of this year that the Iranians were
proceeding on a lot of different fronts without any opposition," he said. "So
we pushed them back in Iraq by detaining their paramilitary operatives. We
stationed the two carrier battle groups in the Middle East, to show them this
was not a Persian lake but an international waterway." Then he ticked off
other actions recently taken, including imposing sanctions on two major
Iranian banks and putting pressure on Western financial institutions not to
lend money to Iran.
Sources in the United States and the
Middle East familiar with the covert side of the American-led effort to "push
back" Iran explained that these efforts have been accompanied by other, more
active measures. They pointed to an upsurge in antigovernment guerrilla
activity inside Iran, including a bomb in Zahedan, the economic center of the
province of Baluehistan, that killed 11 soldiers in the elite Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps on February 14; the mysterious death of the Iranian
scientist Ardashir Hosseinpour, who worked on uranium enrichment at the
Isfahan nuclear facility; and the defection of a high-ranking Iranian general
named Ali Asgari, a former deputy minister of defense who was also the
Revolutionary Guard officer responsible for training and supplying Hezbollah
during its war against the Israelis in southern Lebanon in the 1980s. Iran's
oil infrastructure may be another likely target. "People focus altogether on
the nuclear facilities and how difficult they would be to take out," former
Secretary of State George Shultz told me in his office at Stanford
University's Hoover Institution. "But it's not difficult for somebody to
sabotage those refineries."
There was no Iran desk at the State
Department when Rice got there, and she has been working hard to build the
department's expertise. "I get a little worried when I find out that we don't
have that many people around who have that kind of deep knowledge," she told
me. "I don't understand the system very well, and I don't think anybody really
does," she said, speaking of the leadership in Tehran. "You can sit five
people down, and you'll get different readings on what that system is like."
When I asked Rice to name a book that
influenced her thinking about the Middle East, she hesitated. "I probably read
dozens of books on the Middle East, but several of them I'd read before," she
said. "I'm actually, believe it or not, for an academic, an aural learner. So
I tend to have people in and talk about places. And to engage people who know
those regions very, very well." She finally mentioned the UN Human Development
Report, which she said had opened her eyes to the dearth of patents issued in
Muslim countries.
The key to Rice's new Middle Eastern
strategy; which some administration officials hope will end in a "grand
bargain" that will stabilize Iraq, keep the Syrians out of Lebanon, and force
Iran to give up its ambitions to build a nuclear bomb, lies in a renewed drive
to create a Palestinian state. This is the price that Saudi Arabia and other
Arab states are demanding if they are to support the administration's stance
on Iraq and Iran. For this diplomatic gambit to succeed, Rice will need to
make swift progress toward solving a conflict where the prospects for peace
look dimmer than they have at any point in the last 20 years, and where
administration policy has lurched from failure to failure since she began her
tenure as secretary of state.
"The Iranians are either going to be
out in a year or so, or they'll be in forever," Henry Kissinger told me, when
I asked him what he thought about the prospect of Iran's membership in the
circle of nations with nuclear weapons. "And if they're in forever, that means
Turkey, Egypt, everybody will be in. And then we live in a world that is
uncontrollable." What that means, Kissinger suggested, is that Rice has
perhaps one year to strengthen the U.S. position in the Middle East and to
reach a deal with Iran. "I'm of the view that the president, vilified as he
is, ridiculed as he is by many people, is basically right about the nature of
the danger. Not necessarily about all the steps that he has taken. But there
is a global danger. It is implacable. It needs to be defeated."
In the fall of 2005, as part of a new
push for democracy in the Middle East, Rice insisted that legislative
elections be held in the Palestinian territories, against the strong advice of
the Israelis, the ruling Fatah party, and the neighboring Arab states. Rice
believed that elections would help precipitate a "changing of the guard"
inside Fatah, the party, founded by Yasir Arafat, whose older generation of
leaders was flagrantly corrupt. A Fatah win would give added legitimacy to
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a colorless moderate who seemed willing
to reach some kind of peaceful accommodation with Israel but lacked support
among his own people.
To Rice's surprise, the elections in
January 2006 were won by Hamas, the Islamist party that has been responsible
for the majority of suicide bombings against Israeli civilians. "Did we
adequately assess the probability of the outcomes here?" said David Welch, the
assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs, a career
foreign-service officer and former ambassador to Egypt whose sharp, birdlike
appearance is at odds with his exceedingly calm demeanor. "Probably not, in
retrospect."
The United States, the European Union,
and Israel met the news of Hamas's victory, with a declaration that they would
not transfer funds to the new government until it agreed to fight terrorism,
recognize the state of Israel, and abide by other commitments under the Oslo
Accords and the "road map," the diplomatic plan whose choreographed sequence
of moves is supposed to lead to the creation of a peaceful Palestinian state.
While the United States and the EU continued to meet with Abbas and actually
increased aid to Palestinians, the money went to NGOs and other social-welfare
agencies. The Hamas government was left diplomatically isolated and broke.
Eager to reverse the results of the
election, Rice decided on a new plan of action that resulted in fighting in
the streets of Gaza between Hamas and Fatah gunmen. The plan, which she
developed after speaking to President Bush, was to put pressure on the Hamas
government by providing the Palestinian security forces loyal to Abbas with
training, intelligence, and large shipments of supplies and new weapons, paid
for by the United States and by Saudi Arabia. The hope was that Hamas, faced
with a well-armed, well-trained force of Fatah fighters, might be cowed into
moderating its positions or relinquishing the power it had won through
elections. Alternatively, Hamas might be pressured into an escalating series
of gun battles, in which case Abbas, as head of the Palestinian security
forces, would have an excuse to crush Hamas by force. This approach cast some
doubt on the administration's faith in democracy, and it, too, was a failure.
Hamas won the clashes, which left more than 140 Palestinians dead, and the
Hamas government remained in power.
This past February, King Abdullah,
tired of seeing Palestinians fighting Palestinians (and concerned that Hamas
was drifting toward Iran, which had been providing Hamas with money, weapons,
and military training), invited Hamas and Fatah to Saudi Arabia, where he
brokered a power-sharing deal known as the Mecca agreement. Saudi Arabia also
promised to deliver $1 billion to keep the new Palestinian government afloat.
The Saudi deal is widely seen as a defeat for Rice, because it created a
Palestinian unity government that does not recognize past agreements with
Israel and whose prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, a member of Hamas, proclaims
the Palestinian "right" to "resistance in all its forms, including popular
resistance to occupation," which extends to suicide attacks against Israeli
civilians.
Rice was caught on the horns of a
fateful dilemma. The United States could choose to do business with the
Palestinian unity government, pleasing the Saudis and gaining Arab support for
future diplomatic and military moves in Iran and Iraq, at the cost of
legitimizing terrorism. Or the United States could refuse to deal with Hamas,
angering the Saudis and risking the collapse of its strategy. The road that
Rice chooses to take is likely to determine the course of our relationships in
the Middle East for years to come.
When I was invited to accompany her on
a 72-hour visit to Jerusalem, Ramallah, and Amman beginning on February 17,
her 10th trip devoted to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since becoming
secretary of state, I was more than eager to tag along.
OPENING NIGHT IN JERUSALEM
The David Citadel Hotel in Jerusalem,
where Condoleezza Rice is scheduled to spend three nights, is part of a series
of new developments in what, until 1967, was a no-man's land separating
Israeli West Jerusalem and Jordanian East Jerusalem. Built of Jerusalem stone,
in a style that might be called "Crusader modern," the hotel was designed by
the Israeli architect Moshe Safdie, who is also responsible for the
Mamilla-Alrov residential complex going up across the street, which promises "Soho-style
lofts in Jerusalem stone with views of the Old City and New York-style
interiors." Together, the two developments form a stone umbilical cord
connecting West Jerusalem to the disputed heart of the Old City.
In the basement of the hotel, yellow
"cable path" tape on the floor marks the windowless room that has been wired
for the traveling press. On the tables are little white signs done up with
custom fonts for The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Washington
Times, the Associated Press, Agence France-Presse, Reuters, Bloomberg News,
and CBS. CNN gets two places. Each seat has a new phone with a paper wrapper
to hold the receiver in place, like the band on a freshly sanitized toilet. At
the front of the room is a briefing podium. A worker from the U.S. Embassy in
Tel Aviv arrives to survey the scene.
"It looks like crap," he says, with
satisfaction.
I find a copy of Friday's State
Department Rapid Response sheet lying on the ground. "Message: Americans do
not want to see Palestinians killing Palestinians. Palestinians should be
living in peace among themselves and with Israel," the document instructs,
quoting Rice. "We will wait until the government is formed and then we'll make
a decision about how to deal with that government."
I wander back upstairs and park myself
outside the entrance to the hotel garage, where I am stopped by a young
Russian-born man in a gray suit with a black-and-red pin on his lapel that
identifies him as a member of Shabak, the Israeli internal-security service.
"Why don't you wait with all the other
reporters in front of the hotel?" he asks. When I tell him I want to see the
security preparations, he has me escorted to my room. From the window, I watch
the scene below. A man walks by carrying two sniper rifles in long black
soft-sided cases. Plainclothes security teams move up and down the other side
of the street. Three men stop in front of the Mamilla-Alrov construction site,
open the gate, and spend the next half hour examining each floor of the new
building. A plainclothes security agent with a flashlight beats the tall grass
between the sidewalk and the street with a thin collapsible rod, looking for
wires or a glint of metal.
At 7:55 p.m. a police motorcycle pulls
up, followed by a police car, and then by Secretary Rice's motorcade, a series
of perfectly spaced SUVs that click into the garage one by one, like beads on
a string--black, black, silver, black, black, silver, black, black, silver,
white. For the next three days, the secretary of state will not venture out of
the hotel except when her motorcade takes her to meet with President Abbas in
Ramallah, or Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, in Jerusalem.

HAMAS SUPPORTERS celebrating their victory in, Palestinian legislative
elections in January 2006
I join the reporters clustered
downstairs and wait for the secretary to emerge with Tzipi Livni, the Israeli
foreign minister. After a brief appearance in front of the cameras, the two
women will enjoy a private dinner in Rice's suite. Mindy Sofen, the diminutive
State Department tack, lays down the rules: "Guys, we may or may not get a
question."
"Glenn's got it," says David Millikin,
the high-strung virtuoso of the Agence France-Presse.
"Glenn's been trying to ask this
question for three days," adds Janine Zacharia of Bloomberg News.
Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post,
a youthful-looking reporter in an open-necked blue-striped shirt, is Rice's
favorite. Week after week, Kessler asks the best questions, and the most
questions, at the secretary's press conferences. He is also completely
ignorant of popular culture and baffled by sports metaphors, which the
secretary uses often.
At the beginning of each trip, he
tells me, the reporters generally decide on two questions that they will try
to get Rice to answer. "On this trip, it has to do with what is she trying to
do with this process," he explains. "Is this really the beginning of a new
U.S. initiative in the Middle East? Is it for show? How can she surmount the
problems created by the Palestinian unity government?"
Earlier in the day, Rice made a
surprise visit to Baghdad. Standing behind the rope line, the three
wire-service reporters who made it onto her plane are talking about how
depressing the Green Zone is.
"It looks terrible," one says.
"There's garbage piled up everywhere,"
another says.
"Once, they came out at a press
conference in Baghdad and sprayed us with air freshener," Zacharia says,
looking around the room. "We deserved it, too."
A beeper goes off, signaling that the
secretary is on her way. The room falls silent for a beat and a half, and then
the whispering starts again. Rice appears, followed by a tall middle-aged
woman, her blond hair in a shoulder-length bob. Now that Ariel Sharon is gone,
Tzipi Livni, the foreign minister, is the most popular politician in Israel. A
former Mossad agent, she is bashful in public and has the bad posture of a
tall girl who had to pretend to be shorter than she was in order to get dates.
The close relationship between the two women was mocked in a skit last year on
the Israeli television show Eretz Nehederet (A Wonderful Country), the Israeli
equivalent of Saturday Night Live, which showed Livni trailing Rice around
like a lost puppy and saying "yes" to whatever the secretary proposed.
Taking her place in front of the
microphone, Rice stands up straight, with her shoulders even and her back
slightly arched. She is dressed in a striped jacket and pants, and is wearing
flats. She looks tired from her afternoon in Baghdad.
"It only seems right that you have to
recognize the right of your partner to exist," she says somewhat plaintively,
explaining her demand that the Hamas-led government recognize Israel before
negotiations can proceed. Her purpose here will be "exploring, probing the
political horizon." She speaks for less than two minutes, then turns away and
starts walking toward the door, with Livni by her side.
The sound of clattering plastic laptop
keys fills the pressroom like rain on a Hefty bag. The seals on the telephones
have been broken, and the reporters are previewing their stories by phone with
the desk back home.
"She arrived in Israel and had dinner
with the foreign minister, Tzipi Livni," Millikin says.
"They're holding page one for this,"
Helene Cooper of The New York Times tells Kessler.
Kessler turns his head to the side.
"Really?" he asks. His other blind spot is his inability to tell when he is
being teased.
"No. They said 200 words," Cooper says
sadly.
THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY
The next morning, the daily summary,
of the Palestinian press compiled by the American Consulate General in
Jerusalem does not make for cheery reading:
Leading with reports that President
Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Olmert have decided to boycott the Palestinian
unity government if it does not meet the Quartet's requirements, the
Palestinian papers quoted Palestinian President Abbas telling assistant
secretary David Welch the world must learn to coexist with the national unity
government even if its program does not include recognition of Israel.
The Quartet, the diplomatic grouping
of the United States, the UN, the EU, and Russia, is responsible for
implementing the road map. Missing from this account is any mention of Rice's
visit, which has been overshadowed by a phone call from Bush to Olmert, who in
the wake of the failed war in Lebanon is now the least-popular prime minister
in Israel's history. Olmert's single-digit favorable ratings, combined with a
raft of recent corruption charges against leading members of his government,
make him an unlikely partner for any peace deal. According to Olmert, Bush
promised that the diplomatic freeze would continue until Hamas recognized
Israel.
After a meeting with Amir Peretz, the
Israeli defense minister, who is widely blamed for the failure of the war in
Lebanon. Rice is bundled off with her retinue and a string of reporters to
Ramallah, where she has an appointment with Abbas. In a convoy of 15
four-by-fours with tinted windows and two vans full of reporters, we pass the
Israeli settlement of Pisgat Zeev--a city of 40,000 people with concrete
houses, large apartment blocks, and shopping malls--and cross the new
"separation barrier" at a special checkpoint that allows cars with diplomatic
plates to avoid the inconvenience of waiting in line for hours like the
Palestinians. Soon we approach the Palestinian checkpoint, where the guns
switch from M-16s to AK-47s. "All right, flip it," the young security guard in
the front seat tells the driver, who flips the sign on his dashboard from
Hebrew to Arabic.
It is a wet, rainy day in Ramallah.
Professional-looking soldiers in crisp uniforms with new weapons and black
paratroop boots stand in pairs on every corner as the motorcade makes its way
to the Muqata, the former British police station that became Yasir Arafat's
headquarters and is now the seat of the Palestinian Authority. The streets are
empty. Surrounded by a large wall topped with barbed wire, the Muqata looks
even worse than it did when I was last here two years ago, in the months after
Arafat's death. The simple glass pavilion that housed his body has been
demolished, and his mausoleum stands unfinished.
Upstairs in Arafat's old meeting room,
Abbas and Rice sit side by side in off-white armchairs, a crappy coffee table
and a Palestinian flag between them. Above Rice's head are twinned portraits
of Arafat and Abbas, who is also known as Abu Mazen. The dreary floor-length
drapes are closed to keep out the light and discourage snipers. The coffee
table has been dressed with a little American flag, and the requisite box of
tissues.
The beige sofa to Abbas's left hosts
his top advisers: Yasir Abd Rabbo, who dresses like a British Marxist
academic: Saeb Erekat, one of the lead Palestinian negotiators at Oslo and
Camp David and a frequent guest on CNN; Mohammed Dahlan, the leader of the
security forces in Gaza that are still loyal to Fatah; and Nabil Abu Rudeinah,
Abbas's spokesman, each of whom occupied the exact same position when Arafat
was alive. So much for the American-led program of political reform. At the
suggestion of the Americans, I am told, all of the Palestinians had their cell
phones taken away before the meeting and were issued legal pads on which to
take notes.
The secretary of state has been given
two sofas for her advisers, one beige, and one an orange Creamsicle color.
Perched on the arm of the beige sofa, which is closest to Rice, is Gamal Helal,
the State Department's Arabic-language senior diplomatic interpreter. On the
couches are Karen Hughes, the underseretary of state in charge of America's
public-relations effort in the Arab world: Sean McCormack, Rice's press
secretary; Jacob Walles, the American consul in Jerusalem; David Welch; and
Elliott Abrams, who looks a bit out of his element.
Abrams wears the Wall Street lawyer's
uniform of a dark gray pin-striped suit, a blue-and-white striped shirt, and a
blue tie. He sits with one foot propped on his knee, macho-style, and fiddles
with his BlackBerry as Rice speaks to reporters. His e-mails have recently
been the subject of a front-page story by Glenn Kessler in The Washington
Post, headlined "Conservatives Assail North Korea Accord." According to the
story, Abrams "fired off e-mails expressing bewilderment over the agreement
and demanding to know why North Korea would not have to first prove it had
stopped sponsoring terrorism."
The attention paid to Abrams's e-mails
is also a measure of the appetite for speculation as to whether Rice, or
Cheney, is actually in charge of U.S. foreign policy. While the guessing game
is fun, it illustrates that the Bush administration has been successful at
keeping its secrets. No one thinks Cheney is as close to Bush as he was at the
height of his power, during the first term. But it is also true that we are
definitely in a Cheney moment. Then again, Rice is the president's chief
foreign-policy adviser; she represents the president directly and is much more
influential than Colin Powell ever was. Of course, for all we know, Cheney and
Rice play good cop/bad cop for reporters, and even for foreign leaders, and
then laugh about it afterward on a secure phone. It is also possible that the
president is firmly in charge of his own foreign policy. Stranger things have
been revealed once government archives have finally been opened 25, or 35, or
50 years hence.
Wearing a mauve pantsuit and a pearl
choker, Rice delivers her usual lines about probing the diplomatic horizon.
Abbas expresses his admiration for the secretary of state. They sit facing a
photo of the Old City of Jerusalem at night. The room next door is set up for
lunch, with little French rolls and folded white napkins.
The hallways are lined with depressing
abstract art, long Oriental runners, and men with guns. I sit in the cold
briefing room downstairs with the other reporters, one of whom is phoning in
his story. "She thanked him for his personal commitment," he says. "That's
it." Then he hangs up.
The room we are in, with a
camera-ready blue backdrop, professional briefing podium, and powerful
overhead television lights, looks nothing like the room I remember from my
previous visits. "Look behind the curtain there," says Charlie Wolfson of CBS,
pointing to a 15-foot-high blue fabric screen. "That's the old backdrop," he
adds, as I walk around the screen to see the familiar portrait of Ararat and
the wall-size mural of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. "It wouldn't do to
have Rice standing there with Abu Mazen," Wolfson cackles.
Two other reporters are arguing over
whether the Muqata has WiFi. "I get decent WiFi sitting over here," Glenn
Kessler says, looking up from his laptop.
The man responsible for bringing WiFi
to the Muqata is Jim Wilkinson, Rice's old press aide, a conservative
Christian activist from a small town in East Texas. Once named one of the 50
hottest bachelors in America by People magazine, Wilkinson is now the chief of
staff for Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson. One of the big problems with the
march toward Palestinian democracy, Wilkinson told me, was that the visuals
were lousy. "Secretary Rice would show up at the Muqata, and you had broken
glass, bars on the windows, people with AK-47s running everywhere."
His solution was to spend a million
dollars to remove the scary, chaotic scenes from the evening news, and from
the eyesight of the secretary of state. By airbrushing the reality of a
corrupt and dysfunctional state, his million-dollar makeover may have done
more harm than good. "I brought over Scott Sforsa, who does visuals for the
president, who's obviously the best in the world, Wilkinson says proudly. "Abu
Mazen always looked disordered on TV," he explains. "That's because once you
get over 40 feet on the throw for a camera, the autofocus kicks in in a weird
way. We fixed that."
In the meantime, the small but
hard-won steps toward accountable government that were taken in the last two
years of Arafat's life have all been undone. "Please write this," the new
Palestinian finance minister, Salaam Fayyad, told a reporter recently. "Where
is the control? It's gone. Where is all the transparency? Its gone."
HISTORY LESSONS
In the evenings, Rice meets regularly
with the 10 to 15 reporters who accompany her on foreign trips. These
meetings, called "roundtables," are conducted on the record and give Rice an
opportunity to engage in an intimate, conversational setting with the
traveling press. At a quarter to six, the reporters gather by the elevators in
the basement of the David Citadel. We are then whisked up to the 10th floor,
where a conference table decorated with an American flag and bowls of red,
white, and blue flowers is waiting, along with Stuart from the embassy in Tel
Aviv.
While the transcripts of Rice's
roundtables, which can be found on the State Department Web site, are mostly
filled with slightly less-formal versions of the administration's public
positions, occasional dues as to the secretary's thinking do slip through. One
of Rice's most revealing recent answers came at a roundtable held on January
16 in Kuwait City. Thanks to the generosity of the al-Sabah family, which
rules Kuwait and remains grateful to the United States for saving its throne
from Saddam Hussein, reporters accompanying the secretary of state stay free
of charge in the royal guesthouse complex. The men are accommodated in rooms
covered in tan-and-green marble from floor to ceiling and enjoy a steady
service of classical French cooking. (Female reporters are housed in the
servants' quarters, which are much less luxurious.) Rice's answer came in
response to a "ponderous, rainy-day" question from Neil King of The Wall
Street Journal.
"You mentioned several times on this
trip being a student of history, and you often recite 1948 and Dean Acheson
and the Cold War and 1989," King began, before asking if there were any
moments in Arab history that had informed Rice's thinking about the region. In
response, Rice mentioned the British colonial practice of drawing national
borders in a way that created the maximum amount of tribal and religious
friction. She name-checked Rabin and Sadat, and then returned to one of her
favorite themes: the lessons of the Cold War.
As late as 1987 or 1988, Rice said,
the American policy of democratic change in Europe would have looked like a
failure. What her answer suggested was that the Bush administration's policy
of encouraging democratic change in the Middle East might appear to fail for
50 years, and then might be judged to have been a farsighted success.
"You aren't going to be successful as
a diplomat if you don't understand the strategic context in which you are
actually negotiating. It is not deal making. It's not," she said, taking a
deliberate jab at the editorial writers who have been admonishing the
administration for refusing to "engage" Iran and Syria. "And again, not to
analogize, but my favorite case of this is if you had tried to negotiate
German unification for any period of time until 1990, you would have not been
able to do it, because the underlying circumstances were not there."
Rice enters the room for the night's
roundtable with her usual perfect posture, her walk somewhere between a march
and a glide, wearing shimmery violet eyeliner to hide her fatigue. The
reporters shift around in their chairs, a vestigial gesture of respect that
functions as a kind of unspoken apology for the bad manners enforced on them
by the ethos of the modern press corps. As she takes her place, we slide our
handheld recorders down the length of the table, where they come to rest in
front of the secretary of state.
Kessler, seated to her left, says that
plenty of American diplomats have been down the peacemaking road in the Middle
East before.
Rice nods. "Yes," she says, "they
certainly have. And let me remind you all of that."
If nothing she says is particularly
new or informative, it is hard not to be captivated by the secretary's mastery
of the improvised sign language that briefers use to add emphasis and keep
their audiences awake through lengthy stretches of officialese. Rice's hands
speak with a force and eloquence that her words often lack, and that can
amplify or contradict the literal meaning of her sentences.
"There is an awful lot in the road map
that can provide a guide," she says, turning her hand on its side and
effecting a quick series of knifelike gestures on the table in front of her,
promising swift and clear action--cutting a deal. To a follow-up question
about the conditions of the road map, she notes the old view that "you had to
fulfill everything in the road map before you could have discussions of the
destination," crossing her arms defensively in front of her chest to indicate
that the idea she has just expressed is now seen as a form of Israeli
intransigence. When she mentions the "unity government," she holds her index
fingers parallel to each other, to indicate that the government consists of
two separate entities, one led by Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, which we will
boycott, and the other led by President Abbas, whom we will continue to talk
to. At the same time, she says, the Palestinians do have "obligations, certain
responsibilities." Here she accompanies her words with the most elaborate
pantomime of the night, a three-part display in which she opens her eyes wide,
points with her index finger, and then jabs hard at the air three times.
With the clock winding down on the
night's roundtable, I ask Rice how her remarks in Kuwait City might apply to
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, to which there appears to be no immediate,
clear solution.
"I think the more favorable side is
that you have a broader base of support in the Israeli body politic for a
two-state solution than you've ever had before," she says. "And that is thanks
in large part to Prime Minister Sharon." The Israelis, she points out, have
left Gaza.
"Now, that raised other problems,"
Rice continues, "because it's not as if Gaza has been lawful and peaceful
since the Israelis withdrew, and so I understand that that raises questions
about capacity in the Palestinian Authority and Palestinian institutions to
actually govern." On the other hand, Rice adds, "you also have a more
democratic leadership in the Palestinian territories than you did when Yasir
Arafat was there." Here she turns her palms facedown and sweeps them across
the table, as if to smooth troubled waters.
"It's not like German unification,
where, frankly, it was all going in one direction," she says. She lowers her
eyes, and then looks wistfully off into the middle distance. "The Soviet Union
was collapsing. East Germany was collapsing. That was an extraordinary time."
A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP
After the roundtable, Rice goes back
to her suite, where she is joined, in an unreported meeting, by Danny Ayalon,
the Israeli ambassador to Washington under Ariel Sharon, and Dov Weissglas,
Sharon's fixer in chief.
In a weird way, it makes sense that
Rice is having dinner with Ayalon and Weissglas, who are as close as she can
get to having dinner with the former prime minister. Now in a coma, Sharon was
a perverse and anarchic man who would have made sense as a character in one of
the secretary's favorite Dostoyevsky novels. His mythic standing in Israel,
and his bold initiative to uproot Israeli settlers from Gaza, protected him
from a slew of indictments, as prosecutors sought to expose the ugly realities
of the government he ran with his sons and cronies from his beloved Sycamore
Ranch. Sharon was accused of accepting loans, bribes, and illegal money from a
motley cast of characters, including the South African millionaire Cyril Kern;
Martin Sehlaf, an Austrian casino magnate; and David Appel, a real-estate
developer and amateur Kabbalist who sought to buy a Greek island where he
planned to build a 100,000-room hotel.
"The great contribution of Sharon was
he united the people in favor of dividing the land with the Palestinians and
against the idea of Greater Israel, whose standard-bearer he was for so many
years," Shimon Peres told me of his bitter rival and, more recently, his
partner in government. To further his plan to unilaterally withdraw from parts
of the Palestinian territories, Sharon replaced police and army officers who
disagreed with his strategic assessments with more-pliable officers. He also
opened a diplomatic back channel between Weissglas and Rice that would rewrite
the rules of the Israeli-American relationship.
At the height of this exchange, in
2003 and 2004, the two advisers talked as often as three or four times a day.
In 2003, Rice used the back channel to encourage and help shape Sharon's plan
to withdraw from Gaza, known as the "disengagement plan." The relationship
culminated in an exchange of letters between Bush and Sharon in which Israel
agreed to obey the terms of the road map, and the United States promised that
the road map would not move forward until the Palestinian Authority renounced
terrorism and actively worked to dismantle terrorist organizations. If the two
parties did make progress on the road map, the United States committed itself
to backing Israel's desire to retain major settlement blocs in the West Bank
and agreed that Palestinian refugees would be resettled in the future state of
Palestine, and not in Israel.
In a bizarre and boastful interview
published on October 8, 2004, in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, Weissglas
revealed that he and Rice had met more than 20 times since May 2002, and that
the shortest of these meetings lasted an hour and a half. She called him Dubi,
and he called her Condi. "When my conversation with Rice ends," he explained,
"she knows that I walk six steps to Sharon's desk, and I know that she walks
12 steps to Bush's desk."
In the interview, Weissglas came off
as an alternately comic and unsettling character, drunk on his own importance
and desperate for approval. But the most famous and controversial part came
when he described the intent of the letters that he and Rice had drafted for
their bosses' approval. It was Sharon's view, he explained, that Palestinian
terrorism was not the result of specific political grievances but of a
deep-seated and eternal Arab hatred of Jews, and that no arrangements for Arab
sovereignty over a slice of Palestine would end terror.
From Israel's perspective, the real
purpose of the exchange of letters, and by extension of the entire
disengagement plan, could be found in the diplomatic sequence they
established: Since Palestinian terrorism would never end, Israel would never
be obliged to withdraw from the West Bank. "The disengagement is actually
formaldehyde," Weissglas told Haaretz. "It legitimizes our contention that
there is no negotiating with the Palestinians."
"There will be no timetable to
implement the settlers' nightmare," Weissglas boasted, "and the rest will not
be dealt with until the Palestinians turn into Finns. That is the significance
of what we did. The significance is the freezing of the political process. And
when you freeze that process you prevent the establishment of a Palestinian
state and you prevent a discussion about the refugees, the borders and
Jerusalem."
For Rice, who believes in the primacy
of undergoing historical circumstances, the exchange of letters was hardly so
important. It was simply a ratification of an existing understanding. By
putting that understanding in writing, however, she had made it much more
difficult to act if and when circumstances changed. With the Saudi king
pressing the United States to pressure Israel, Rice found herself bound by
handcuffs that she herself had fashioned.
Unlike Weissglas, Ayalon is a calm man
not generally given to superlatives. "I believe these letters are no less
important than the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which recognized for the first
time the birthright of the Jews to their homeland," he told me. "The Balfour
Declaration was the basis for Israel's future existence as a country. This
letter from Bush fixes the borders of the state. Condi's role was absolutely
critical."
On Monday morning, American protocol
officers supervise the setup in the ballroom of the David Citadel for a
three-way meeting between Rice, Olmert, and Abbas. Two American flags are
flanked by two Israeli flags to the left and three Palestinian flags to the
right. Someone finds another American flag and subtracts a Palestinian flag.
Outside the ballroom, a young Shabak
man is opening the display eases to check for bombs. Soon it will be time for
the most important photo shoot of the week. The photographers are standing
around with their gear, dressed in the kind of cast-off clothes you see on
mustered-out child soldiers. "First, we will have the video, then the stills,"
a tail blond woman from the American consulate instructs. "So don't rush the
doors."
The lens men separate into two groups,
and the photographers turn their cameras on the video guys and start snapping
pictures. The video guys swing their heavy equipment onto their shoulders and
follow suit. After a minute or two, everyone gets bored. "There is no future
here," an Israeli cameraman informs a Swede. "If you could tell me it will all
be over by October 23, 2007, I would stay. But it won't ever be over."
A few minutes later, something shifts
in the air--it is hard to say what.
"OK, chevra," one of the Israeli
cameramen calls out, addressing his colleagues. Without a moment of hesitation
or warning, the pack stampedes toward the door.
"Stop! Stop now!" a 6-foot-3 crew-cut
guard commands, assuming a door-blocking posture and imposing himself on the
crowd as he was taught. But this is the Middle East, and the photographers
simply ignore him. They charge down the corridor toward the meeting room, well
over a hundred strong, Israelis and Palestinians together, carrying their
heavy equipment and the American diplomatic security personnel with them.
"Pop the doors! Pop the doors!" one of
the security guards shouts. Once inside the room, the photographers
immediately assume their positions and shoot. Click click click click click.
This is the money shot, the three-way handshake, Carter and Begin and Sadat on
the White House lawn. No other sound is audible inside the room. Click click
click. It's Clinton, Rabin, and Arafat when the Oslo agreement was signed.
Click click click click click. It's the same shot being reenacted for the
umpteenth time. Rice, Olmert, and Abbas hold the three-way handclasp posture
far longer than seems comfortable, to make sure everyone gets the picture.
"And the flowers are still standing,"
one of the security guards mutters in relief, as the photographers file out of
the room. I follow them upstairs and outside, past the rows of satellite
trucks that will broadcast the meaningless proceedings to the rest of the
world.
And yet, while the meetings themselves
may be empty of substance, the satellite trucks will play an important part in
what happens in the Middle East over the next year. Rice's visit can best be
understood as a command performance by the Bush administration's
foreign-policy prodigy for an audience of one: the 83-year-old king of Saudi
Arabia. For King Abdullah's peace of mind, and for the Iranian business to
continue, the ugly pictures from Palestine need to stop.
Tired of the circus and eager for some
air, I walk up the street until I reach the King David Hotel, where I meet
Efraim Halevy, the former head of Mossad. Born to an Orthodox Jewish family in
Great Britain, Halevy shares certain mannerisms with George Smiley, the
fictional intelligence chief played by Alee Guinness in the BBC miniseries
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. He wears a blue shirt and a gray jacket, speaks
in a cultivated English accent, and looks away when he talks, perhaps to
disguise a vehemence and a habit of fierce concentration that conflicts with
his natural shyness. Because he is shy, or because he is more accustomed to
shadows than to light, or because he is being polite, it takes him neatly 20
minutes to look me in the eye. We sit in the lobby on a purple-striped couch,
beneath a poster-sized 1931 photograph of the King David Hotel, which served
as the British military headquarters in Jerusalem until the Irgun, the
clandestine organization led by the future Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin, blew it up.
"I used to deal with Condi when I was
head of Mossad and she was national-security adviser, and I had a great
respect for her, and admiration," Halevy says. "I still do. But I think that
in her role of secretary of state, things are not going too well. The main
problem is that Condi Rice was never an expert on the Middle East. That's not
her area of expertise. And therefore, she has to rely on others. And the
others in this ease is a latter who is an ideologue"--meaning Elliott
Abrams--"who believes that you can promote a certain ideology anywhere and
everywhere around the world if you think it's the right ideology. And you
really don't have to know very much about the basic facts in the region that
you're dealing with, because you have to tailor the region to your ideology."
Halevy spent four decades in what was
regarded as the best intelligence service in the Middle East, and he has only
disdain for what he sees as the loony idea that American-style democracy can
be implanted here. As an intelligence professional, he believes that the only
path to understanding the Middle East, or anywhere else, for that matter, is
to look as deeply as one can into the specifics of individual personalities,
their hopes, dreams, and weaknesses, their bank accounts, the stories of their
families, their tribes, the histories of their friends and enemies--the kind
of material a novelist might use. By substituting ideology for local
knowledge, he says, the Bush administration chose fantasy over reality, a
choice that can only end in disaster.
"To believe that you can promote
democracy on the one hand," he says, stating down at the table and glumly
stirring his tea, "and on the other hand, having a parallel system of
providing guns and equipment to one warlord and to another warlord, and
combining these two different programs in some way and sort of monitoring them
in a way which is totally unrelated to the situation on the ground, because
the situation on the ground doesn't matter. Because what you need to do is
change the situation on the ground." Halevy stops stirring his tea and leans
back on the couch. "I think that this whole idea of democratization was a
flawed concept.," he says, finally making eye contact. "Democracy in Israel
evolved from within. It didn't come because somebody in Washington waved the
wand and said, 'Israel should be democratic.'"
The worst thing about the
administration's active fantasy life, Halevy believes, is that it has sucked
Israel into a realm of illusion, where it cannot afford to live. He has
nothing but scorn for the letters exchanged between Bush and Sharon, and
suggests that by the time Weissglas took control of relations with Washington,
Sharon was already old and sick and increasingly disconnected from reality.
According to Halevy, the letters were
a concrete artifact of a relationship that included other understandings, some
oral, that together prevented Israel from taking any independent diplomatic or
military action without fully informing the United States. Contrary to what
Americans often believe, the United States had very little to do with the
Israeli-Egyptian peace negotiations in 1977, the Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations that led to the Oslo Accords, or the peace treaty, that Halevy
helped negotiate between Israel and Jordan. In each case, the peace treaties
that were signed on the White House lawn marked the ceremonial end of years of
contacts and negotiations, of which the United States was unaware until months
or weeks before the final agreements were signed.
"Israel today will not do anything,
take no initiative whatsoever," Halevy says, "unless the United States
approves it. It was never that way before." The retired spymaster sips his
tea, and looks me in the eye as he searches for an appropriate way to define
how the relationship has changed.
"Insemination is an act of two, not of
three," he finally says. "As a result of what happened in 2003 and 2004, the
natural act of insemination between Israel and its neighbors is no longer
possible."

PALESTINIAN PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas, Rice, and Israel's Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert meet in Jerusalem on February 19.
BEHIND THE CURTAIN
When he came into office in January
2001, George W. Bush resolutely turned his back on the ostentatious shuttle
diplomacy in which his predecessor, Bill Clinton, had been so passionately
engaged. While it is possible to imagine that the Bush administration has now
decided to embrace the diplomatic strategies of the Clinton era, I saw no
indication of any such philosophical about-face.
What I witnessed in Jerusalem and
Ramallah was a show put on for the television cameras, starring Condoleezza
Rice. Thanks largely to circumstance, and to her talents on the public stage,
Rice has succeeded where Colin Powell and Dick Cheney, pulling in opposite
directions during Bush's first term, failed. She has assembled an alliance of
Arab states working to help the United States contain Iran, stabilize Iraq,
and keep Syria out of Lebanon. Her success becomes even more paradoxical when
one realizes that she is not a classic believer in process diplomacy--in fact,
she loathes it. Rice is the product of a structuralist academic background and
has a deep personal belief in the primacy of "underlying historical forces," a
conviction in direct conflict with the optics of her current role as the
public force of America's new coalition-building effort in the Middle East.
Practically, Rice is torn between her
strong belief in the necessity and the inevitability of democratic change in
the Middle East and the fact that America's coalition depends in large part on
the goodwill of Saudi Arabia, which insists that the United States downplay
its desire for change. Rice is torn between her long-term commitment to
democracy and the actual short-term results of democracy. She is trying to
have things both ways, a fact that she understands, because she is not stupid.
At the same time, she believes she can have things both ways, because she
believes that history is on her side.
While it is Rice who understandably
captivates reporters and cameramen, in her retinue, largely unobserved, is a
man who has witnessed every high-level attempt at negotiating a solution to
the Arab-Israeli problem for the past 16 years. In a blue shirt, yellow tie,
and slightly boxy gray suit, Gamal Helal does his best to look like an
ordinary bureaucrat, but there is something essentially bohemian in his nature
that even the State Department will never be able to erase. He has the soulful
eyes of a young poet, and he gazes in a calm, unhurried way through a pair of
expensive rimless eyeglasses.
Helal, a Coptic Christian who was born
in Egypt in 1954, moved to the United States in the mid-1970s and studied
cross-cultural communication at the School for International Training in
Brattieboro, Vermont. He joined the State Department in the mid-1980s and
became a senior diplomatic interpreter in 1993. Helal was so good at his job
that he was named a senior policy adviser to the special Middle East
coordinator, Dennis Ross. After Bush dismantled the Office of the Special
Middle East Coordinator, Helal continued his work as an interpreter and an
adviser.
When I ask him what it is like to
translate conversations between Rice and the Palestinian president, he says,
"President Abbas is somebody who did not go through formal education in
English. So he understands things, but you are dealing here with a different
level of English. He prefers to speak Arabic. He quietly will ask me if what
he understood in English was correct or not. Because every nuance makes a huge
difference."
What Arab leaders hear when presidents
and secretaries of state speak, and vice versa, is the core of Helal's
professional life. "I don't believe that logic is universal, he says
thoughtfully. "I happen to believe that logic is local. You believe in things
that make sense to you and are logical to you because of your education, your
background, your upbringing, what you believed in: English words may exist in
Arabic-language dictionaries, but the universe of concepts that determines
their meaning is different. "When we say we will look into an issue, OK, that
could mean many things," he says. "It could mean, 'Forget it, it's never going
to happen.' But there is a difference between 'We will look into it' or 'We
will reconsider it.'" Likewise, the Arabic inshallah--"God willing"--which in
general usage can be the equivalent of "We'll look into it," can also mean
that the speaker will rely on God's will to make something happen. "It depends
on so many variables, and you will not be able to get the right message unless
you are familiar with everything--the body language, with the way the phrase
is being said," he explains. "Because words without meanings are meaningless."
In Helal's telling, the Oslo
negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians fell short not because the
participants did not try hard enough, or because the timing was off. Rather,
the progress in the '90s toward a Palestinian state and an Israeli state
living side by side in peace was ultimately a dance of illusions in which each
party might have approached the other's positions forever without any real
likelihood of a deal. "I think Arafat, in his own mind, had a blueprint for an
Israeli-Palestinian agreement," Helal says. "And I don't think he believed for
a second that the Israelis were willing to pay that bill."
The Bush administration's answer to
the collapse of the Camp David negotiations was to let the two sides shoot it
out until one side won or both sides got tired. Yet even if one accepts the
unpleasant idea that the only thing to do with the conflict is to manage the
violence, it seems clear that the illusions of the Oslo years were less deadly
than the reality check that followed.
Helal enjoys working with Rice. He
appreciates her interest in hearing all points of view on a given subject and
her understanding of the details. When I ask him what he makes of the words he
often translates for her, like "freedom" and "democracy," he is polite, but
wary. "I cannot imagine that you can go anywhere in the world and ask people,
'Do you want to be free?' and they will say, 'No, we really love to be
prisoners;" he says. The problem is not with freedom but with democracy, a
concept that evolved in differing and idiosyncratic ways in the Western
historical experience. "In the Middle East, they look at things and ask, Is it
halal or haram," he explains. "Is it approved by the religion or not? If you
go to a Bedouin society and you tell them that the state will determine how
you're going to settle a conflict between you and your cousin, you must be out
of your mind, because the most important and powerful tool to them will be
tribal law, which is unwritten."
OFF THE RECORD IN AMMAN
There will be nothing to see at Rice's
next stop, in Amman. Flight schedules are tight, so, after another roundtable
and a private off-the-record dinner with the secretary of state, most of the
reporters fly ahead to cover her meeting with the Quartet in Berlin. In the
hope of getting closer to the content of American diplomacy in the Middle
East, I fly instead to Amman, where Rice is ushered into a meeting at the
headquarters of Jordanian intelligence, known as the GID.
Later, I am told that she was joined
by Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz, the Saudi intelligence chief and the youngest
surviving son of the founder of the Saudi state; Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the
Saudi national-security adviser; Omar Suleiman, the Egyptian intelligence
chief; Sheikh Hazza bin Zayed al Nahyan, national-security adviser for the
United Arab Emirates; and General Mohammed Dhahabi of Jordan's GID. The
operational part of the U.S.-Arab relationship--which includes active
operations in Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Yemen, and Gaza--is led on the American
side by General Michael Hayden, the head of the CIA, but Rice has control of
the larger architecture of the political-military effort. Her frequent trips
to the region, her history at the NSC, and her academic background in Soviet
military affairs make her quite comfortable with discussions of military
strategy.
According to American and Saudi
sources, Rice spoke to the gathered intelligence chiefs about diplomatic and
security, developments in the West Bank and Gaza. The group then discussed the
infiltration of Iranian weapons into Iraq and Lebanon and the movement of
al-Qaeda and Hezbollah trainers across the region. Part of Rice's job is to
help coordinate intelligence sharing between the Arab states and the
U.S.-backed Palestinian security forces, the one hard asset Abbas can offer
the United States and a useful check on the reported infiltration of Iranian
agents and al-Qaeda-affiliated terrorists into the Palestinian territories.
My one quotable meeting in Amman takes
place at the Jordanian foreign ministry, located in a field of rubble off the
highway on the way back to the airport. The building is oddly hot and humid,
and has a labyrinthine layout, with long hallways branching off empty
glassed-in courtyards. Someone explains to me that this was originally
supposed to be the headquarters for the department of agriculture. The
courtyards were intended to be hothouses for crops. My host is His Excellency
Abdelelah al-Khatib, the foreign minister, who attended a meeting earlier that
morning with Rice and King Abdullah of Jordan.
The foreign minister's office looks
like a suite at the Four Seasons, with bright abstract paintings on the walls
and clay pottery displayed on shelves. Khatib himself is a middle-aged man
with a reputation for speaking honestly. He wears a gray suit, blue shirt,
black shoes, and wire-rimmed glasses, and has the large head of an
intellectual in a newspaper cartoon.
"This region is really under severe
stress because of the lack of solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,"
he says, repeating for my benefit the message that was delivered this morning
to the American visitor. I ask him about a cartoon I saw in the paper, which
showed a baby in a cradle marked "United government" and Condoleezza Rice
standing beside the cradle, holding a hangman's noose. He shrugs
apologetically.
I ask him what he thinks of the failed
American strategy to overthrow the elected Palestinian government by force.
"Well, you are a journalist," he says, with a sigh accompanied by a friendly
smile. "I am a diplomat. I read very carefully the announcement. And the
announcement actually spoke of nonlethal material, if you remember," he adds,
speaking of the careful distinction the State Department made in describing
the help provided to Abbas.
I ask Khatib if there is a perception
that Rice speaks directly for the president in a way that Colin Powell did
not. "Yes," he answers. "The perception is that she fully represents the
political will of the president."
The foreign minister concedes that the
meeting of the intelligence chiefs is essential to the security and well-being
of the region. "First of all, I want to say that the sectarian rift is a very
dangerous issue," he says. "Nobody should think that they can ride this tiger.
And by the way, nobody in the region is immune from this kind of activity in
their own country."
Like Kissinger, Khatib fears that if
Iran were to get a nuclear bomb, other Arab states such as Egypt and Saudi
Arabia would be forced to follow suit, and the entire Middle East would go
nuclear. "We know from experience of the world community in other regions that
when a race for acquiring weapons of mass destruction is opened, it's very,
difficult to close. Different partners will feel the need to go in that
direction, and this is not for the interest of the region," he says. "Or the
world community. Or world peace and stability."
INTERMEZZO
I met Condoleezza Rice for the last
time in the middle of March, three weeks after her return from Berlin. The
snow had fallen all morning outside the tall windows of her study, blanketing
the city, and this had put her in a reflective mood. The trip was fairly
intense, she says, curling her legs underneath her on the sofa. "The national
unity government, the trilateral with Abbas and Olmert, and all that." I ask
her what she makes of the expectation that she will negotiate a grand bargain
that will solve the problems of the Middle East.
"I don't think there's any doubt that
the region as a whole is in the midst of a big transformation, and therefore
you have these problems that are in a sense linked," she says. "But I think it
would be a mistake to say, 'Oh, we have to have a huge omnibus solution to
this.' I don't think you'll get anywhere, because the histories of these
problems, the circumstances, the actors, are very different."
When I ask her to clarify this answer,
she says carefully that "as a practical matter of diplomacy," it would be hard
to cut a deal that would persuade Iran to renounce its nuclear ambitions, and
would stabilize Iraq, guarantee Israel's security, and create a functioning
Palestinian state.
While some of America's allies may not
be models of democratic practice, she still believes that democracy is the
solution to many of the problems of the Middle East. Elections aren't the only
answer, she concedes, but without them, "it's kind of hard to imagine how else
people get to exercise their preferences for who will govern them." When I ask
Rice to explain the administration's policy of putting money and guns on the
streets of Gaza to destabilize the elected Humus government, she demurs.
"No, it's not putting money and
equipment--it is the professionalization and the training and equipping of
Palestinian forces," she says.
"But it's both, isn't it?" I ask.
"No, because the state--well, they
happen to go together," she finally admits. "You don't train and equip a force
without ."
"Without putting guns on the street?"
I suggest.
"But the fact is, it's not just
putting guns on the street," she says. "There's a very careful plan that
General Dayton, but also Canadians, Brits, others who are working on this, for
the professionalization of those forces, so that they're actually able to
defend the Palestinian people, so that they're actually able to fight
terrorism. That's the goal."
A few days earlier, I had been to see
Henry Kissinger in his offices on Park Avenue, where, at 83 years old, he
still reports regularly for work and occasionally offers counsel to the
president and the vice president. Kissinger's career as an academic, and
journey from national-security adviser to secretary of state, suggests some
interesting parallels with Rice's own trajectory, including the ability to win
and keep the trust of an isolated president. America's most famous and reviled
diplomat doesn't believe that history, is a story of human progress. In part
this may be because he is a European Jew who lived through Hitler's rise to
power in Germany and fled with his parents to America as the world they had
grown up in destroyed itself and haft of Europe. Kissinger left me with the
strong impression that he considered Rice's insistence on holding elections in
Iraq and in the rest of the Middle East to be naive and impractical.
"Whom could they vote for after 40
years of Saddam?" he asked. "The people they were closest to, which were their
ethnic or religious group. That then confirmed the divisions, it did not
create a consensus: On my right, in silver picture frames, was a cozy
selection of world leaders like Nelson Mandela and Helmut Kohl, smiling at
Kissinger. Rather than look to the model of American democracy, he said,
developing nations might emulate the more gradual evolutions of countries like
Chile, South Korea, and Singapore. "We're applying the experiences of
parliamentary-type democracy, 19th-century bourgeois democracy, to areas that
have a much more complicated history, or a much different history," Kissinger
said.
I asked him why the answers we draw
from our own historical experience so often prove destructive to other
countries. He rested his famous jowls on the collar of his blue shirt and
began to rumble. "We've never had to deal with contingent issues in the sense
that our problems have had absolute answers, or at least answers we considered
absolute," he said. "So with very little preparation, most of our problems
have proved soluble. They have always yielded to the application of resources
and ingenuity, and to finite time scales. Much of this is not true in the rest
of the world."
When I describe my conversation with
Kissinger to Rice, she firmly rejects the idea that America might look to
"soft authoritarian" regimes as a model for peaceful development. "I still
believe that, however complex and sometimes chaotic democratic processes and
democracies are, they're still preferable," she says with a vigorous nod. "If
you start settling for the way stations along the way, that's a problem."
Chileans and South Koreans don't see the authoritarian periods in their recent
histories as part of a transition to democracy, she adds. "They see those as
periods of time that had to be overcome."
By historical standards, it is too
early to tell whether the big choices that Rice and the president have made
will turn out right or wrong, and whether the Middle East will embrace
democracy. What seems clear is that much of the damage we have done to
ourselves and to our friends was avoidable. The prospect of a grand bargain,
one that will rejigger a complicated region of the world to America's
satisfaction, seems like yet another illusion, whose price is likely to be
high.
We talk for a while about other
things, until Rice arrives at the story with which she wants to conclude our
last interview.
"When we arrived in Berlin, there was
a piano in my suite," she remembers. "And I thought, 'Oh, isn't that nice,
there's a piano.' And on the music stand, there was a book of Brahms's piano
music."
The sheet music was for the second
intermezzo of Brahms's Opus 118, which she played at the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations conference last July. It's a sad and lovely piece,
which Rice calls "reflective." The image of the secretary of state playing the
piano is useful in interviews because it suggests discipline. But it is also
true that she has a deep feeling for music, and plays well.
"I thought, 'Well, that's pretty
nice.' So I sat down. I played for probably an hour. And everything just melts
away."
David
Samuels's "In a Ruined Country," a profile of Yasir Ararat, appeared in
September 2005.