Sometimes, peace in the Middle East seems tantalisingly close, as if just a little more effort is needed to reach a set of propositions that different parties can all live with. At other times, it seems absurdly far away, as if the parties have so little in common that there is really nothing for them to talk about. This is one of those times.
Speaking earlier this week to the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu professed himself “prepared to resume peace negotiations without any delay and without any preconditions”. But he gave no hint of the shape of a political settlement he might be willing to accept and again refused to commit to the idea of a Palestinian state.
Previously, at the same conference, US vice-president Joe Biden had delivered an unusually blunt message to the Israelis: “Israel has to work for a two-state solution. You’re not going to like my saying this, but do not build more settlements, dismantle existing outposts and allow Palestinians freedom of movement.”
Biden has a reputation for loose talk, but this is a case where it looks as if he has been wheeled out to give voice to something the administration wants said, but that its more diplomatic members want to keep some distance from. It’s a further sign that America’s patience with Netanyahu is wearing thin.
Another sign is the increased murmuring, in both Europe and America, about negotiating with Hamas — something that will have to happen one day if peace is to have a chance. Hamas leader Khaled Meshal duly came to the party on Monday in a long interview with The New York Times, saying “We are with a state on the 1967 borders, based on a long-term truce.”
Almost mirroring Netanyahu’s position, Meshal refuses to directly recognise Israel’s legitimacy, describing that demand as “a pretext by the United States and Israel to escape dealing with the real issue”. No doubt true, but then why not call their bluff?
The problem is that even if negotiations do get going, there is no obvious willingness on either side to take the steps needed for an agreement. Writing in Haaretz, Daniel Levy says they are both seeking “a comfort zone, a place where the peace process can continue ad infinitum, and hard decisions can be avoided.” American pressure seems the only thing that might push Israel out of that comfort zone.
The good news is that if any Israeli leader can push through a comprehensive settlement, it is Netanyahu. If a centrist or centre-left leader were to make the concessions that will be necessary, it would split the country down the middle. Only Nixon could go to China and only Netanyahu has the credibility needed to face down the extremists on the right.
So far, however, there is not the slightest sign that he wants to.
Netanyahu is the extreme right and he does not want peace, period. The American government should stop giving financial and military aid to the Israeli government. I believe the majority of the Israeli people and Jews living outside Israel actually want peace.
Left Right left right left ………. yawn ……. oh yeh
and (be as knowledgeable please as I am with the word before you waste time criticizing my use of it here) psychopaths do have their uses.
You may well be right on here Charles.
Stephen Wong: Absolutely agree. BUT as long as they believe that what was written in the bible must be so today, all hope for peace is lost.
What was written in the bible?
Watching Ehud Barak’s apologia on abc tv news here selectively ignoring the profound 4 month lull where a ceasefire agreed by Hamas from July to October 2008 did work was sickening.
8 years of rockets was ‘the cause’ of the atrocities in Gaza in January 2009, says Ehud Barak. But according to UK’s The Guardian Israel breached a truce with multiple fatalities in a bombing raid on November 4th 2008 – the day Barak Obama was voted into office.
In short Ehud Barak appears to be a liar and apologist for the colonial ‘settler’ movement who will never never vote for or agree to any peace deal over Palestine. That’s why Naomi Klein is right to call for a boycott. Israel’s Right are mad with triumphalism and drunk on nuclear weapons it seems to most of the aghast international community.
This was out take out as the slaugher was underway back in January 09:
Thursday, 15 January 2009
Gaza coverage: Israel losing the propagandhi war with constructive breach during 4 months lull on rocket, mortar fire?
Topic: human rights
http://www.sydneyalternativemedia.com/blog/index.blog/1873522/gaza-coverage-israel-losing-the-propagandhi-war-with-constructive-breach-during-4-months-lull-on-rocket-mortar-fire/
With a good bar chart sourced to the Israel lobby itself which proves the lull worked, even as the Palestinians are being starved in Gaza. What a disgrace.