King Abdullah II of Jordan
World
A Monarch's Dire Warning About the Middle
East
Exclusive:
the world is "doomed," Jordan's King Abdullah II tells
TIME, if the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not solved by 2007
By
SCOTT MACLEOD/AMMAN
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AUTHOR
Posted Thursday, Sep.
07, 2006
Striding past ceremonial Circassian guards into a
sitting room at Basman Palace,
King Abdullah II is looking fresh and energetic, as if he has just come from
another spin around town on his treasured Harley-Davidson.
But his natural ebullience masked an uncharacteristic inner gloom that deepened
this summer when the Middle East was plunged into yet another conflict with the
Israeli-Hizballah war in Lebanon.
As the 44-year-old
monarch settled into a stuffed sofa for a 1-hour TIME interview for a story to
appear in the coming week's magazine, he drew a dark picture of a region
consumed by conflicts old and new, threatened by emerging Sunni-Shiite tensions
and at risk of being completely destabilized if the U.S. attacks Iran. "I
believe the Lebanese war dramatically opened all our eyes to the fact that if
we don't solve the Palestinian issue, the future looks pretty bleak for the Middle East," he said. "I'm one of the most
optimistic people you'll come across. For the first time, I started becoming
pessimistic towards the region."
Without urgent
diplomatic efforts that yield tangible results to achieve peace between
Israelis and Palestinians, "I don't think there will ever be a Palestinian
state," he said. "By 2007, if we don't see something that reassures
all of us — the international community, the Israelis, the Arabs and the
Palestinians — then I think we are doomed to another decade or decades of
violence between Israelis and Arabs, which affects everybody."
Abdullah seemed careful
not to criticize Washington
directly, but he declared his disappointment that "people around the world
in a way just don't care anymore. There is a feeling I get in the international
community, 'You know what, let the Israelis and Arabs have a go at each other.'
Are we going to resign our region for another decade of violence, or are we
going to put this to rest once and for all?" In Jordan's view, he said, "There
needs to be some sort of Palestinian integral, geographic state, today and not
tomorrow."
But moderates pushing
for a peaceful settlement, the King complained, have been
"neutralized" because of the stagnation in Arab-Israeli negotiations.
"I don't think people are taking us seriously," he said. "A lot
of the moderate countries are feeling isolated. Today the street is saying,
'You know, we tried the peace process. We keep hoping that the Americans and
the international community will step forward, we keep hoping that Israel will
make a difference and reach out to the Arabs. They are only beginning to see
that the only way you can get America's
attention or Israel's
attention is through confrontation."
The King expressed concern
that the region's troubles could multiply with the crises over Iraq and Iran. He expressed fears of civil
war in Iraq "if it
continues to spiral," and while voicing concern about Iran's influence, he cautioned against the
thought of American military action to thwart Iran's nuclear ambitions. "I
don't think the Middle East could afford
another war," he said. "A war with Iran
would sort of open a Pandora's Box and one that I don't think the Middle East would recover from."