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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Posts Tagged ‘peace talks’

Israel-Palestine Talks Dead…for Now

Friday, October 1st, 2010

As I predicted, Haaretz is reporting that by Saturday, Fatah will meet and decide to abandon U.S. brokered Israel-Palestine peace talks due to Bibi Netnayahu’s refusal to extend a settlement freeze.  It’s the only way this could’ve gone.

Now, what I’m wondering about is whether a clamor from the world community on the death of the talks may rouse Bibi from his torpor to graciously offer the Palestinians a two month moratorium.  I note that the Arab League plans to bring the issue to the Security Council hoping to exert even greater pressure on Israel.  The urgency of such an action was exacerbated by the breathtakingly obtuse UN speech delivered by Lieberman in which he essentially offered the world community a warmed over Kahanist solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict: move the borders so that most of Israel’s current Palestinian citizens will be forcibly expelled to Palestine, thus allowing Israel to absorb all of the current settlers squatting on privately owned Palestinian lands, of course including his own settlement “hometown,” Nokdim.  The idea that an Israeli prime minister would send his foreign minister to such a world forum to spit in the face of every Arab or Muslim nation in the body is simply…astounding.

While this far-right government is almost deaf to international criticism, it does retain some residual sense of hearing when the din grows especially loud (cf. Goldstone Report).  So perhaps Bibi will acquiesce after a suitable interval.  If he does, he will, of course, do so with an exaggerated bow in Obama’s direction as if doing it only for the sake of memsahib.  And this will be revolting.

All Smiles at Sharm

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010
sharm peace talks

Hillary, Bibi and Mahmoud yuk it up at Sharm peace talks (Khaled El Fiqi/EPA)

Hillary Clinton and Bibi Netanyahu are shown all smiles today at the Sharm el Sheikh dog and pony show, in which Israel and the PA are attempting, with the intercession of various powers and allies like the U.S. Egypt, and Jordan, not to completely torpedo the chances of peace for the next five or ten years.  Yes, you can tell from my tone that I’m extremely skeptical.

First, you have the settlement freeze issue.  Bibi’s not going to extend it and Abbas claims he’ll walk out if he doesn’t.  But even if they overcome this biggie looming in the next two weeks (the deadline is September 26th), they’ve got to get down to tachliss sometime.  And man, that won’t be easy.

But the really egregious passage in today’s N.Y. Times report on the talks revealed just how clueless the American negotiators are:

Mrs. Clinton said she believed the two sides could find a creative solution to the impasse – steps that would allow the Palestinians to accept less than a full extension of the moratorium or could enable Mr. Netanyahu to sell an extension to his domestic constituency.

Among the options, American officials said, would be Palestinian recognition of Israel as the Jewish homeland..

Why, sure…the Palestinians will agree to this in a heartbeat.  Something not even all Jews agree with by the way.  And while we’re at it why don’t we demand that Israel recognize Palestine as a Muslim nation as well?

Yes, they’ll fudge things by using the term “Jewish homeland” rather than “Jewish nation,” assuming the Palestinians can agree to the vaguer term homeland.  But really, I have a much more fair formulation: let the Palestinians and Israeli agree together that Israel is a homeland for its Jewish AND Arab citizens.  First, it clearly IS.  Second, you simply cannot demand of the PA that it recognize Israel as a Jewish homeland while asking that it ignore the fact that there are 1-million Israeli Arab citizens for whom this state is their homeland.  The families of many of them predate the settlement of most Israeli Jews in this land.  So what does that make them?  Chopped-liver?

There is an air of delusion in these talks.  Granted that George Mitchell and perhaps even Hillary have the best of intentions and perhaps even the skill to pull this off.  But when you begin with premises like the one outlined above, it does make you wonder what they could be thinking.  Further, when they can be seen grasping at straws like this one, it makes you realize just how far apart both sides are and how impossible it will likely be to bridge those differences.

As far as I’m concerned, the ethnic definition of Israel or Palestine is something that is besides the point.  Why should recognizing Israel as Jewish even be part of the negotiations?  Yes, perhaps you reassure Israeli Jews to an extent if you get Palestinians to concede on this point.  But are the Americans even thinking about the unease with which this will be greeted by Israeli Palestinians AND those in the PA negotiating this deal?  The fact that they are grasping at irrelevancies is not a good sign.

One thing that is a good sign is that Mitchell flies afterward to Syria in an effort to sound out the parties about advancing Israel-Syria peace talks.  Given the saber-rattling on the northern border in the past few weeks, any such meetings can only be for the good.  The key is whether Israel is serious about peace with Syria.  Assad has already signalled his willingness to sue for peace as long as Israel returns the Golan.  It is Israel that has dithered, commenced a few wars in the interim, etc.  It’s up to Bibi and his far-right coalition.  As I wrote above, I’m dubious that he either can or wants to pull this off.  But who knows, if Obama pushes hard enough (unlikely I realize), a miracle might happen.

Bibi Likes Washington Mood Music, Says ‘They’re Playing My Song’

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

It’s hard to know precisely what, if anything, of substance transpired during the two days of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks which ended today.  Some reporters have noted a change in attitude on the part of Mahmoud Abbas, who began the summit with a dour demeanor which, some claim, brightened after his tete a tete with Bibi Netanyahu.  According to Al Hayyat (Arabic):

“Well-informed sources said that the atmosphere in the Palestinian delegation, especially around Abbas, changed 180 degrees from the initial tension. The reasons for this are: American assuring the Palestinians that the administration is serious about reaching a solution; and the success of the bilateral meeting between Abu Mazen & Netanyahu, which lasted 90 minutes, in breaking the ice between them and beginning a serious discussion about many of the issues.”

The BBC correspondent covering the talks wrote this tidbit about parsing Bibi’s attitude during the talks:

It offered a good opportunity to ponder on the significance of the last few days, in which we trailed Mr Netanyahu. Did he change? His speeches, his statements, gestures, all suggested a change of heart.

Voice of Israel Radio has a rather tantalizing report that Bibi is convening a cabinet meeting tomorrow at which he will apprise ministers of the “agreements” formulated in D.C.  It further reported that the “echoes from Washington are very positive.”  I find it interesting that these leaders can meet for two days and already be speaking of “agreements.”  I have no idea what this can mean, though it could, I’m told, merely refer to arrangements for the next round of negotiations.

As for Israel finding the developments to be very positive, this can mean one of two things: either Israel is trying to spin the summit and make it appear productive; or Israel has indications that Abbas will not desert the talks when Bibi and Dennis Ross announce their face-saving version of what they will call a settlement freeze extension come September 26th.  From Bibi’s vantage, it would be wonderful to know Abbas won’t exit the talks and that Israel can resume building in the major settlement blocs.  But how Ross, Obama, et al. will spin this abrogation of the freeze into something positive is a mystery.

Ethan Bronner, after the fact and after much previously published happy talk about how well the summit would go and how much would be accomplished, is finally conceding slightly to the detractors in a piece published today.  He let Sam Bahour have his say:

Bahour, a businessman in…Ramallah, said…that the Palestinian business community was mostly divided between those predicting failed talks and those expecting an agreement so lopsided in Israel’s favor as to make a sham of peace.

“We are in for a long, long crisis,” he said.

He also quotes some sharp, but cynical analysis by Alon Pinkas, Israel’s former consul general in N.Y.:

Israel, he wrote, wants only to give the impression of seeking compromise as “a tax being paid to the United States,” but has no plans to give up anything important. He said the only hope would be a solution presented by President Obama.

Bronner inserts one of his characteristic flourishes into this piece in which he quotes an amazingly self-serving statement by an Israeli source without expressing any comment or analysis at all, as if it deserves to be treated as entirely plausible, when it isn’t:

Aides to Mr. Netanyahu have indicated that he proposes placing all the difficult topics on the table at once — settlements, borders, Jerusalem, security, and Palestinian refugees and their descendants — with the two leaders meeting every two weeks. By setting up a framework whereby no single issue exists on its own and all are negotiated at the highest level and in secrecy, he hopes to promote a process in which both sides will yield.

That way, he hopes, when Sept. 26 arrives and limited building resumes, Mr. Abbas will not walk out because settlement building will be only one issue of several he is in the middle of negotiating.

So between now and Sept. 26th, Bibi proposes throwing every major issue on the table and believes so much progress will be made, and Abbas will be so impressed by Bibi’s flexibility that the former will feel so invested in the outcome that he couldn’t possibly walk out.  If you believe any of this I have a bridge I want to sell you and some Florida real estate as well.

I’m also amused by the pure gold PR Bibi has managed to spin with speculation by both Bronner and Donald Macintyre that only Bibi can actually make peace because only someone of his impeccable far-right credentials can bring along the rest of the Israeli right to the negotiation table and a peace agreement.  Once again, this is happy talk.

Macintyre does add one interesting piece of background information on what he says was a criticial conversation between Bibi and Barack last July:

…What did Benjamin Netanyahu tell Barack Obama in July that convinced the US President that it was worth, first applying fierce pressure on the Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to enter direct negotiations with Israel, with a view to achieving a peace deal within a year, and then launching the talks this week in Washington amid such fanfare. The White House has repeatedly made it clear to those who need to know that something was said – but not what it was.

For any of this to be true, Bibi would have to be a combination of Ariel Sharon (Gaza withdrawal), Menachem Begin (Camp David), and DeGaulle (Algeria).  Personally, I don’t think he holds a candle to any of ‘em.  But we’ll see…and may I be proven wrong.

Hamas Terror Attack Unmasks Fatal Weakness of Peace Talks

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
hebron terror attack

Israeli police examine car attacked by Hamas gunmen (Tomer Applebaum)

There have been so many miscalculations going into the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks one hardly knows where to begin in portraying them.  First, let’s start with Hamas’ military wing, to whom we owe thanks for their gruesome point-blank killings of four Hebron Hills settlers including two women, one of whom was pregnant.

Thanks to the foolhardy campaign of isolation against Hamas engineered by Israel and the U.S., Hamas believes the only way to make its voice heard is through the barrel of a gun.  But if the gangsters who planned this killing had bothered to think about anything more than drawing Israeli blood, they would’ve realized the peace talks are destined to fail.  They don’t need killings in order to ensure this.  In fact, that the Hamas military wing butchers headquartered in Damascus felt the need to kill indicates how insecure and desperate they are.  If they had been smart, as in any political campaign, when your opponent is about to fall flat on his face you don’t do anything to make him more attractive to voters.  This is precisely what Hamas did.

Further, in Israel an intense debate was underway provoked by theater artists about boycotting Israeli settlements.  Their refusal to perform in the new Ariel cultural center was drawing sympathy from many Israelis.  Now, any sympathy engendered has been drowned by preservation instincts that kick in whenever there’s a terror attack.

One might suspect that the Hamas extremists who executed this attack don’t want peace at any price.  And that’s just what they’ll get if they continue on this road.  Endless war and a struggle to the death ending perhaps in mutually assured destruction of both Israel and Palestine.  Do they want the region to be a smoking rubble?  Will that satisfy?

But let’s not leave the Israelis and Americans off as passengers on this ship of fools.  Bibi Netanyahu is about to embark on peace talks when he has nothing whatsoever to offer the Palestinians.  He’s refusing to renew the settlement freeze.  Along with his U.S. partner in grime, Dennis Ross, he’s preparing a proposal that would be a freeze in name only and allow Israel to continue building in settlements it is “likely” to control after a peace agreement.  Of course, such a proposal would undermine any negotiation since it would de facto assign Israel control of territory on whose behalf it is supposed to be negotiating.

If I were Abbas I would demand in return for approving this sham freeze a parallel set of building permits for building in Israeli Palestinian towns, which almost never can get Israeli approval for new construction.

What will Bibi offer the Palestinians?  A few less roadblocks and checkpoints, a few more towns under Palestinian control.  What will he not offer Abbas?  Dismantling of illegal settlements, Right of Return (in even a modified form), return to ’67 borders.  In short, he’s got nuttin’.  Another sham.

As for the U.S., what is Obama thinking?  How can he possibly want to invest political capital in such a shambles of a negotiation?  My impression of presidential power is that it should be wielded when there is a reasonable chance of success.  There isn’t in this case.  So Obama is wasting his time and energy.   Here is a perfect example of the Alice in Wonderland quality of the administration’s thinking going into the talks:

…The Obama administration, according to officials, is calculating that once the two leaders are in face-to-face negotiations, neither side will be willing to take actions that would capsize the talks in the first month. Mr. Netanyahu, this thinking goes, will offer a compromise that, while it may fall short of an extension of the moratorium, will satisfy the Palestinians that construction will be curbed.

Of course Bibi will be willing to capsize the talks.  What does he stand to lose from doing so?  His job?  His coalition?  His power?  Of course not. And what can Obama do to threaten him politically or otherwise?  Nothing.  Will Obama dare to cut aid in an election year?  Will he dare to anything that has teeth in the face of Israeli recalcitrance?  Of course not.  So who are we kidding here? Nothing good will come of this.

If you should doubt that proposition, just read Ethan Bronner’s “good time Mahmoud” account in today’s Times, Outlines Emerge of Future State in West Bank, you’ll see why the talks are bound to fail.  Bronner’s eternal sunshine of the Zionist mind reels off his typical tedious list of Israel-Fatah West Bank “successes”: the requisite man in the street interview with a satisfied Palestinian customer praising the new found economic boom.  The tantalizing prospects of the removal of a few checkpoints and a few new areas in which Palestinian police will be permitted to patrol (until Israel needs to pursue a terrorist or criminal, in which case it forgets it no longer has control and does whatever the hell it wishes anyway).  All of this of course equals that “emerging Palestinian state.”  That is if you’re in a drug-induced stupor that prevents you from seeing what is in front of one’s nose.

What is missing from Bronner’s account (except in a single-paragraph dismissive aside)?  One word: Hamas.  And that one word was reintroduced to the political landscape by today’s terror attack.  What the terror attack showed to anyone with a brain and eyes in their head is that Hamas will shatter any arrangement unless it includes them in some meaningful form.  Negotiating a peace agreement or proclaiming an emerging state as Bronner and his buddies Obama, Abbas and Bibi are trying to do, will founder on the rocks if it attempts to do so without a significant proportion of the Palestinian population, those who support Hamas.

This is not a promotion of that group.  I don’t agree with Hamas’ agenda.  But I do understand democracy and governing with the permission of the governed.  Obama should too since that is the basis of American democracy.  Hamas may not be what I’d prefer to govern Palestine and they may not do so if there is a future election in Palestine.  But it is clear as day that they are a force that must be reckoned with in some form.  Otherwise, all will be lost.  That’s why the current formulation of peace talks is destined to fail.

And before any readers hop on the “beat up Palestinians” band wagon, note this telling passage from the N.Y. Times article linked above:

…The attack took place in an area of the West Bank that is under full Israeli security control, and where the Palestinian security forces have no responsibility and are not allowed to operate.

Dennis Ross Defines Israel’s ‘Center-Left’

Friday, August 27th, 2010

I’m always tickled by the little howlers that the N.Y. Times Israel correspondents introduce into their copy which reveal their cluelessness at the subtleties of Israeli politics.  Ethan Bronner is notorious for ‘em.  Isabel Kershner has her share.  In today’s Times, Kershner quotes Dennis Ross reeling off of those mini-whoppers.  Here he’s characterizing the politics of Bibi Netanyahu’s chief negotiator in the upcoming Palestinian peace talks:

Mr. Ross added that Mr. Molcho was not a member of Mr. Netanyahu’s right-leaning Likud Party and tended in his personal politics to the center-left…

Oh yeah.  Bibi definitely pals around with someone on the center-left of Israeli politics.  By center-left Ross probably means someone who generally supports Kadima’s views, if that.  He certainly doesn’t mean someone supporting Labor, and God forbid not Meretz.  But I’ve got news for Ross, there is no left in Israeli politics anymore unless you’re talking about Hadash.  And no mainstream Israeli Jewish political leader would be caught dead supporting Hadash.

So what Ross really means is that Bibi is the hard right and Molcho the soft right.  To even use terms like “center” or “left” to describe Molcho’s politics is a fraud.  Don’t fall for it.

I’m also tickled by Bibi’s insistence even before the doomed peace negotiations begin for regular bi-monthly meetings with Mahmoud Abbas.  Bibi wants to use such tetes a tete as a fig leaf so he can go to the Americans and moderate Israelis and show them what a good, peace-lovin’ guy he is.  Of course, the talks, if Abbas is foolish enough to agree to them, will produce nothing and waste everyone’s time just as similar talks between Olmert and Abbas produced nothing.

Why U.S.-Brokered Israeli-Palestinian Peace Talks Will Fail

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

The ink isn’t even dry on the press release announcing Israeli-Palestinian peace talks beginning under U.S. auspices on September 2nd, before just about everyone except Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton is sighing with abject resignation and conviction that they will be a failure.  Why?  First, because the U.S. president has not publicly told the sides what the consequences of failure will be.  There must be a downside for the parties that will keep them in line when the going gets tough (as it assuredly will).  With no downside, Bibi will play Obama like a tin fiddle.  Second, Bibi doesn’t want the talks to succeed and will do absolutely nothing to make them work.  Why should he?  Where’s the benefit to him?  His coalition is filled with far-right yahoos who will scream bloody murder at the first sign of weakness from their leader.  Does he need such headaches?  Does he relish the idea of retiring to a plush office at the Shalem Center so he can gaze fondly at a portrait of his sugar daddy, Shelly Adelson, on the wall?  Not likely.

Frankly, I can’t see anything in this for Mahmoud Abbas either, and have no clue why he agreed to participate.  Did he enjoy having endless coffees with Ehud Olmert in Jerusalem and Ramallah so much that he wants to resume the pleasure, except his time in Washington?  What will he get from this?  Another upgrade of his D.C. digs from third world backwater semi-official would-be embassy to almost embassy of a soon to be nation in waiting?

If this is all the Obama administration has up its sleeve it has a losing hand.  But if it has a backup plan in the certain event of failure, then it might still wrest victory from the jaws of defeat.  If it is prepared and possibly even expects failure and has a Plan B which would call for an internationally imposed settlement on both sides, then he might be onto something.  In the end, the only thing that can save the parties from mutually assured destruction is external intervention.

The eventual solution is there for all to see and clear as day.  But getting there with these two parties is nigh unto impossible.  So in order to prevent them from doing even more mischief than they have already to regional stability and world order, there must be outside powers who tell them what they will do for peace.  Let them scream bloody murder, swear up and down it will not, indeed cannot happen.  Have no doubt, it will happen.

I more and more see Israel playing the role Serbia did in the Kosovo and Bosnian conflicts.  It too saw itself as victim of NATO and U.S. perfidy.  It swore on the graves of its forefathers that it would never capitulate.  Its national honor was on the line, etc.  And guess what happened?  It blinked when faced with indomitable international pressure.  The same may and could happen with Israel.

As usual, Ethan Bronner’s reporting linked above is full of his typical blithely partisan blather, though the basic reporting of facts is useful.

Bibi Demands Palestinian Confidence Building Measure, Approving Israeli Impunity

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

I was reading a rather mundane Haaretz diplomatic report about the results of the last Obama-Netanyahu meeting.  One of the foci of the article was the confidence building measures Obama expects of Israel in order to persuade Mahmoud Abbas to enter into direct negotiations.  Even these were rather prosaic and unimpressive.  But what caught my attention was this:

In talks with the Americans, Israel demanded that the PA must also carry out confidence-building measures ahead of direct talks. Obama accepted Israel’s argument partially, and would like to see an end of the anti-Israeli campaign on the diplomatic front that the PA is conducting at the UN and the International Court in the Hague.

So the price for the PA to enter into direct talks with Bibi is ending Israel’s accountability for its possible war crimes in Gaza; an end to support for the Goldstone Report; an end to support for a UN investigation into the Gaza flotilla episode, etc.  I haven’t even noticed that the PA is especially eager to enter into direct talks with the latest lying con-man (as far as Palestinians are concerned) to occupy the prime minister’s office.  So why would they have any motivation to let Israel off scot-free for its misdeeds against the Palestinian people in return for yet another smoke and mirrors diplomatic foray by the Obama administration?  The Palestinians have seen scores of these initiatives.  They come and go speaking of Michelangelo to quote Eliot.  But they end up amounting to nothing, just as this one probably will.

You gotta hand it to the Israelis though–they do have moxie.  It takes guts to make an absolute fool out of yourself by making such a demand.  It reminds me a bit of the extortion they attempted when the PA was supporting the campaign before the UN Human Rights Council on behalf of the Goldstone Report.  Then Bibi threatened to cancel a $700-million telecom deal if Abbas didn’t drop his support of the Report.  Abbas caved and faced a firestorm of controversy both from Palestinians and human rights groups world-wide.  The PA “president” then regained his lost mojo and resumed his support for the Report.  I never did hear what happened to the telecom deal.

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Palestinians Out of Peace Talks, NYT’s Bronner Gets It Wrong Once Again

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

No sooner does the NY Times Israel correspondent put finger to keyboard when he gets things wrong yet again.  Last night, I wrote that Sheera Frenkel reported in the Times of London that Mahmoud Abbas attended an emergency meeting of the Arab League which threatened the end of the U.S. brokered proximity peace talks because of Israel’s ham-handed announcement of the construction of 1,600 new housing units in Ramat Shlomo, beyond the Green Line.  Yet writing today, Bronner reports:

Both the housing construction and the talks will likely go ahead…

Saeb Erekat, said by telephone on Thursday that the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, had asked Mr. Biden for help in stopping the housing project but made no threat about pulling out.

Here is what Haaretz reports as the actual Palestinian position:

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said earlier Thursday that Palestinians would not begin indirect peace talks unless the Israeli government annuled the decision to build in East Jerusalem.

“We want to hear from [United States envoy George] Mitchell that Israel has canceled the decision to build housing units before we start the negotiations,” Erekat said.

His remarks follow comments by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who told Biden Wednesday that it was not enough for the Israeli decision to be condemned, it also had to be canceled.

So here you have Bronner claiming Saeb Erakat told him on Thursday that Abbas would not be pulling out and Haaretz reporting that Abbas told Biden on WEDNESDAY that he would pull out unless the decision was cancelled.  Something’s gotta give and it looks like Bronner either misinterpreted what he heard (given his predilection to hearing and seeing things from the Israeli point of view) or simply misreported.

As I noted yesterday, a cosmetic compromise would involve the Israelis temporarily rescinding approval until a suitable interval after the talks were underway.  This would allow the Palestinians to save face and the Israelis to do what they always intended to do.  But of course, this IS merely cosmetic and does nothing to alleviate the underlying problem which is that any settlement building in East Jerusalem is simply impermissible if there is to ever be real peace.

It’s rather laughable that Bibi has made a show of hauling his Interior Minister in for a verbal tongue-lashing, all the while insisting that he, the prime minister, knew nothing about the impeding announcement.  It’s like Capt. Renault in Casablanca telling Rick that he’ll bring in the “usual suspects” for questioning.  It’s all a big show.  Of course, Bibi knew of the units.  Why wouldn’t he?  Of course he did it to convey a message to Biden and Abbas that no Jew allows himself to get kicked around.  On the contrary, the Israelis will be setting the agenda in the talks as in everything else.  And you know what?  He’s right.  And he’ll continue to be right till someone has the guts to call him on it.  No one does.  Nothing changes.  Until the next war which is inevitable.

For anyone who wishes to understand how little can be gained from negotiations given the current Israeli attitude, read this passage in which Bronner conveys Israel’s understanding of what these peace talks should achieve:

…The Israelis want them to serve as a procedural corridor leading to direct negotiations…

I don’t know about you, but when I read those italicized words my heart just skipped a beat with excitement and I saw peace just around the corner.  What the hell does it mean anyway, “procedural corridor?”  I understand that Israel wants direct talks with the Palestinians rather than proximity talks.  That’s why they seek something called a procedural corridor.  But the entire point is that direct talks have failed in the past with a more moderate Israeli government than this one.  So the Palestinians see no reason to agree to direct talks when there is seemingly less to talk about than even there was before.

Bibi is prepared to put even less on the table than Olmert.  So the Palestinians say: why talk?  What is there to gain?  From Bibi’s vantage, he is willing to engage in direct talks that lead to Palestinians accepting his diktat of a settlement.  And if they refuse, he can always point to them as the reason and blame them.  For the Palestinians, it’s a trap.  And though Abbas is little more than a lackey, even he knows not to step into that one.

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