Posts Tagged ‘Palestinian Authority’

Israel-PA Direct Talks Begin This Week

August 30th, 2010 by Nathan Curby

Secretary Clinton briefs reporters on the Middle East Peace Process. She is joined by Special Envoy for Middle East Peace Talks Senator George Mitchell. (Photo: State Department/Michael Gross)

President Barack Obama will welcome Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to the White House Wednesday night for individual talks and a joint dinner before the start of direct talks between the two leaders on Thursday. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will host the negotiations, which she says the U.S. believes can lead to a peace agreement within a year.

The talks rest on a shaky basis. Israel’s partial settlement freeze in the West Bank is set to expire on September 26, and Abbas insists that he will abandon the negotiations if the freeze is not extended. Netanyahu, meanwhile, will not make any commitment to extending the freeze.

Abbas faces intense political pressure not to make concessions to Israel, and he is in a vulnerable position. His term as president is expired, and any agreements he makes will not be binding on Gaza, which is ruled by Hamas.

Hamas is reported to be planning “large-scale terrorist attacks” to disrupt the peace talks, according to Israeli and Palestinian Authority intelligence sources cited by DEBKAfile. Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal delivered a harsh speech last week condemning the talks and threatening not only Israel, but also Abbas, as well as Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Jordanian King Abdullah if they refused to boycott the negotiations.

Everyone involved, except for the Obama administration, has very low expectations for the talks, writes Shmuel Rosner in Slate:

The Americans say the time is right. The time may be right for the Obama administration, though it’s not clear why, but it is hardly right for the parties involved. Israel and its prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, think Iran is a more urgent priority. They believe the Palestinian problem can wait a little longer, and they see no Palestinian leaders they can make deals with. The Palestinian Authority and its president, Mahmoud Abbas, were dragged to these talks kicking and screaming, and they don’t seem to intend to give an inch. They think Netanyahu doesn’t really mean business, and they have a hard time dealing with criticism from Hamas, Syria, and other regional belligerents. “There’s clearly a trust deficit that we’re going to have to find a way to overcome,” presidential adviser and longtime special envoy Dennis Ross explained. The two leaders mistrust each other, but they also find it difficult to trust the American mediator, and the proposed pathway to peace, and the timing, and the achievability of the goals. They are the true masters of low expectations.

Nevertheless, the Obama administration remains hopeful for the outcome of the talks. The U.S. will present an outline at the talks aiming at an agreement within a year and implementation within ten years.

Netanyahu, Abdullah Discuss Israel-Jordan Ties

July 28th, 2010 by Nathan Curby

Pray for Jordan and other nations to earnestly seek peace with Israel. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem.

Israeli PM Benyamin Netanyahu with Jordan’s King Abdullah Tuesday in Amman. (Photo: GPO/Haaretz)

Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu met with Jordan’s King Abdullah on Tuesday, ending more than a year of near-silence between the two countries, Haaretz reports. U.S. President Barack Obama reportedly urged Abdullah to agree to the meeting in order to smooth over tensions between the nations.

Abdullah is skeptical about Netanyahu’s commitment to peace, but Netanyahu believes Abdullah is more convinced following their meeting. Netanyahu sees Jordan as the key to convincing the Palestinian Authority to enter direct talks with Israel. Netnayahu told Abdullah he is willing to “go far” to reach agreement with the Palestinians on core issues, provided that security arrangements are suitable.

The simple path to Middle East peace

June 7th, 2010 by Star Parker

A culture of blame, entitlement, and hate is a path to nowhere — this is as true in the Middle East as it is in America’s inner cities, put on the government plantation years ago.

Television personality Art Linkletter, who recently passed away at age 97, had the secret for achieving peace in the Middle East.

Linkletter, who experienced many setbacks and tragedies in his life, observed, “Things turn out best for the people who make the best out of the way things turn out.”

Adherence to this simple bit of wisdom sums up why Israel has been a story of success and miracles and why the Palestinian Arabs languish.

Take the case of Gaza, that is getting so much attention now.

The Israelis decided to unilaterally pull their presence out of Gaza in 2005 and turned control for its administration over to the Palestinians.  It presented an opportunity for the Palestinians to show the Israelis and the world that they could govern themselves and pave a path for prosperity and peace for their people.

Were circumstances ideal?

Certainly not.  But that’s the point.  Circumstances are never ideal.  Our only choice is always, as Art Linkletter said, to “make the best of the way things turn out.”

But in a culture of blame and entitlement, your problems never get solved because they are always someone else’s fault.  You can never move forward because circumstances are never ideal.

As the Israelis readied to withdraw, the Palestinian Authority Prime Minister announced “We are telling the entire world, today Gaza and tomorrow Jerusalem.”

Instead of focusing on starting to build on what they had, the focus was the ongoing political agenda against the Israelis.

Soon the Palestinians were embroiled in a civil war, killing each other, until the terrorist group Hamas gained the upper hand in Gaza.  Next on the agenda was smuggling in arms and shooting missiles into Israel.

Meanwhile, as result of the Israeli political decision to withdraw from Gaza, 8500 Israelis that were living there were evicted from their homes and forced to move and build new lives elsewhere.

A group of these families picked up and moved several miles inland into a barren patch of arid desert along the Gaza/Egyptian border.   They used the funds the Israeli government paid them as compensation for their property to invest and build a new agricultural community in the middle of nowhere.

There are now 180 families living in Halutza (Hebrew for “pioneer”).  They pipe in desalinated water from the Mediterranean coast, fertilize the sand, and grow produce.  Today, five years after being evacuated from Gaza, they are exporting $50 million dollars a year of organic potatoes, carrots, and peppers from their new community.

Art Linkletter would call this, “making the best of the way things turn out.”

Halutza is the history of Israel in microcosm.  Taking difficult and unfortunate circumstances and building anew.

Only 62 years after its founding in the ashes of the Holocaust, Israel has a per capita GDP almost on par with industrialized European nations, has the highest per capita venture capital investment in the world, and has more companies listed on the NASDAQ than any non-US country.

Intel Corporation’s facility in Israel is its only microchip design facility outside the US and is responsible for the design of most Intel chips powering our personal computers today.

All this was accomplished under constant siege and war because the Palestinians have rejected every proposal to live side by side since they first rejected the state they were offered by the United Nations in 1947, which gave them more territory than they claim would satisfy them today.

A culture of blame, entitlement, and hate is a path to nowhere.  This is as true in the Middle East as it is in America’s inner cities, put on the government plantation years ago.

In 1957, Golda Meir, a future prime minister of Israel, spoke at the National Press Club in Washington.  She said, unfortunately prophetically, “Peace will come when the Arabs will love their children more than they hate us.”

The world is still waiting.