Track Two: After the End of the Gaza Ceasefire, Are Negotiations Possible?

TRANSCEND MEMBERS, 24 Mar 2025

René Wadlow – TRANSCEND Media Service

On 18 March 2025, Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip killed over 400 Palestinians, including women and children, and wounding more than 500, ending a ceasefire that had begun on 19 Jan.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu resumed the fighting pointing to Hamas’ unwillingness to release the remaining hostages.  He has long insisted that attacks on the Gaza Strip would continue until Hamas is destroyed.  He has indicated that the March attack was only the beginning. Some analysts see new combats as imminent with the conditions of life in the Gaza Strip, already bad, getting worse.  Violence among Palestinians and Israeli Jewish settlers on the West Bank also seems to be growing.  In such a negative atmosphere are negotiations possible?  With no progress in government-led talks, are Track Two discussions a way to advance?

The phrase “Track Two” was coined in 1982 by Joseph Montville of the U.S. Foreign Service Institute to describe methods of diplomacy that are outside the formal diplomatic system but with people in middle-level leadership positions who have skills of negotiation and compromise.  Track Two provides a flexibility not available in formal governmental settings. Track Two are discussions held by non-officials of conflicting parties in an effort to clarify outstanding disputes and to explore the options for resolving them in settings that are less sensitive, less structured, and with less media attention than those associated with official negotiations.  The non-officials involved usually include scholars, senior journalists, former government officials, retired military officers, and business people. Depending on the aims and the styles of these meetings, the profile and expertise of Track Two participants will differ.

With governmental negotiations at a standstill, the Association of World Citizens (AWC) has suggested the possibility of Track Two efforts to see on what issues negotiations might be possible.  As an earlier AWC proposal stated ” When the very terrain of history is shifting beneath our feet, we must transform old diplomatic methods to serve new diplomatic purposes.  Building peace in today’s conflicts call for long-term commitment to establishing an infrastructure calling upon all levels of society to draw on the resources of compromise and reconciliation from within the society and maximizing the contributions from outside.  There is no facile optimism as to what can be done when the United Nations and governments fail to act positively.  However, we can strive to keep channels of communication open.”

The role of Track Two dialogues can be modest.  The goal is not to change the basic views or philosophies of the participants.  The goal is that the decisions of participants on crucial issues will be made with finer perceptions of the views and intentions of others.

National political  leaders often have a short attention span for issues unless there are strong domestic reasons for remaining involved.  Therefore, world citizens and peacebuilders need a longer-range vision and must be willing to take measures which do not give immediate results. However, each effort helps to build an infrastructure of people used to discussion and clear communication. For world citizens, Track Two approaches are infused with a vision of the good society with an emphasis on human development,  and a broadly-based civil society.

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René Wadlow is a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace Development Environment. He is President of the Association of World Citizens, an international peace organization with consultative status with ECOSOC, the United Nations organ facilitating international cooperation and problem-solving in economic and social issues, and editor of Transnational Perspectives.


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This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 24 Mar 2025.

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