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Byline: Christopher Dickey
If the tragic axiom of Middle East peacemaking is that the Israelis and Arabs never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity, there is now a new corollary: French President Nicolas Sarkozy never misses an opportunity to present himself as the opportunity.
Last week, as Israeli tanks rolled through Gaza and the civilian death toll mounted into the hundreds, most Western leaders fell into paroxysms of procrastination. U.S. President George W. Bush, as usual, backed Israel's right to defend itself from Hamas rocket attacks, but offered no plausible plan to end the carnage. President-elect Barack Obama, meanwhile, temporized, keeping the world in suspense about his plans and even his opinions. A delegation representing the European Union, which is now under the rotating presidency of the Czechs, seemed to be wandering in the wilderness. But "Super Sarko" rushed in where other leaders feared to tread, and if he didn't exactly negotiate an end to the fighting, he managed at least to put a few brief lulls in place and give Egyptian truce plans a nudge forward. At week's end, with prodding from France and an abstention by the United States, the U.N. Security Council called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire--but the fighting continued.
Other peace envoys, speaking privately, are skeptical about Sarkozy's ability, and indeed his interest, in laying the groundwork for lasting results. "Sarkozy, he's a short-term man," said one of the senior European ...