On September 13, 1993, on the White House lawn, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat shook hands after signing the peace agreement known as the Oslo Accords. It was supposed to have led to a permanent peace. (In)sights is a historical record of the Oslo Accords, illustrated with personal stories.
Although the book was written months before Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, the coauthors address the tenuousness of the peacemaking process. In the book’s final section, “The Path Forward,” they acknowledge that peace may not be attainable in the near future. Nevertheless, they believe the day will come. They have written this book looking toward that time, to offer politicians and negotiators guidance on how best to design that future political process. They are optimistic, setting out the reasons why conditions for peace negotiations are better than they were in the 1990s. Yet they caution, “Whereas there is a lot that we can learn from history, outcomes cannot be predicted.”
Their decades of involvement in the thirty-year peace process, which have included both progress and setbacks frequently halted by violence, have shown them that the way forward is to create “a two-state reality,” with the parties gradually shaping their “Permanent Status.”
At the same time, they suggest, Israel should treat Gaza, ruled by Hamas since 2007, and the West Bank, run by the Palestinian Authority, as two separate entities. They note that (at the time of their book’s publication) this was already the reality, with Israel working individually with each party. For example, “thousands of Gazans were entering Israel each week for work, business, and medical treatment. In 2009, who would have believed that such a reality could emerge?”