Two of the biggest names in global intelligence made an unprecedented public appearance together this month in an event that revealed the diplomatic failure to secure a peace agreement in Gaza.
William Burns, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency in the United States and Richard Moore, the chief of Britain’s MI6 secret intelligence service, appeared together at a Financial Times conference in London.
The event was noteworthy as it was the first time the leaders of these two highly secretive agencies shared a public stage. Their discussion centred around "intelligence diplomacy" and the delicate balance between war and diplomacy with Russia and China. And they also highlighted their agencies' collaboration with the private sector to advance investments in artificial intelligence.
Their appearance was primarily focused on discussing Gaza, the prisoner exchange deal, and the status of the ceasefire agreement. Burns emphasised what several US officials had already pointed out: 90% of the agreement had been settled, and the CIA was crafting a proposal to bridge the remaining issues between Israel and Hamas.
He added that his extensive experience in the Middle East suggested that the unresolved portion of the deal would likely be the most challenging, confirming widespread scepticism about the agreement’s near-term prospects for completion.
The doubts are the latest to be drawn from the Middle East’s deep reservoir of disappointment and missed opportunities. Once again, diplomacy looks to have come up short, falling into a familiar pattern of disappointment.
President Joe Biden is currently working to secure a Middle East agreement that could strengthen the Democrat’s position and benefit his successor as the party’s nominee for the White House, Kamala Harris. In 2000, President Bill Clinton devoted considerable effort to forging a historic accord, whether he was talking with Syrian President Hafez al-Assad or PLO chief Yasser Arafat.