Last week I offered qualified praise to the editors of the Washington Post for their observations about President Obama’s meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu. The one part of the editorial that I didn’t like was towards the end:
Now Mr. Abbas has a choice: Begin direct negotiations in exchange for prisoner releases and other “confidence-building measures” that Mr. Netanyahu has been offering — or show himself to be not so ready for peace, after all.
If talks begin, Mr. Netanyahu, too, will be challenged. Mr. Obama’s counterproductive focus on issues such as Jewish housing in Jerusalem has allowed the Israeli leader to rally domestic support and delay spelling out where he stands on truly central questions, such as the borders of a Palestinian state and whether Jerusalem will be its capital.
Nachum Barnea has made a similar point here:
The ball is now shifting to Abbas’ court. In the coming weeks, various supporters ranging from President Mubarak through George Mitchell and several European leaders will explain to him that he must enter direct negotiations. This is the only way to expose Netanyahu to massive American and European pressure and to domestic criticism, they will say.
This is the only way for Abbas to guarantee immediate Israeli concessions on the ground and expansion of Palestinian Authority sovereignty in the West Bank. Should he refuse, the Americans would have to condemn him as a peace refusenik.
Given Abbas’s record of saying, “no,” I hardly thought that it was Netanyahu who needed to be challenged.
Now the Washington Post carries an AP report:
The Palestinian Authority president, who is under U.S. pressure to resume direct talks with Israel, said that doing so under the current circumstances would be pointless.
Have the Post’s editors noticed that Abbas threw “…pie in Obama’s face” as Barry Rubin put it?
JoshuaPundit elaborates:
Abbas’ latest pre-conditions to even sit at the table are designed to make sure that it never happens. He demands that Netanyahu agree to an internationally mandated ‘settlement freeze’, which means the Israelis are essentially going to be unable to build anything in the areas the Palestinians claim for themselves while the Palestinians get free reign to build whatever they want.And he insists that negotiations start by writing in stone as a starting point an offer disgraced Israeli ex-PM Olmert supposedly made to him that was neither accepted by the Palestinians at the time or even cleared with the Israeli Knesset or cabinet – let alone the Israeli electorate!
The Israeli term chutzpah doesn’t even begin to cover this nonsense.To twist the old Mafia phrase around, it’s an offer designed to be refused.
However hopeful President Obama is that he can bring peace (or impose it) on the Middle East, this refusal should serve as a data point. More generally, Yaacov Lozowick writes:
Since 1993 Israel has performed a series of concrete actions on the ground, changes in the reality, which have weakened its control over the Palestinians. Not one of them resulted in any advantage durable enough to survive two days of violence in September 2000, when the Palestinians launched the 2nd Intifada. Since 2000 the pendulum has swung both ways, with Israel reconquering the West Bank in 2002, and slowly lifting its hand since 2004; with Israel fully evacuating Gaza in 2005, then reconquering less than a third of it in 2009 and again relinquishing direct control and now, slowly, also indirect control. The wary recognition of having an independent Palestine next door, which was the expression of Rabin’s position, has been replaced by a Likud prime minister publicly accepting the goal of a sovereign Palestine.
And in all that time, I dare you to find one single concrete step taken by the Palestinians to assure us they, too, are ready for partition. Not words, which can be uttered in English today and denied in Arabic today. Actions. Find me one. Because I could easily write a 10,000-word article about all the things they’ve done which prove the opposite; actually, I expect I could limit myself to the first half of 2010.
The President has called for direct negotiations, and Mahmoud Abbas, not Binyamin Netanyahu, has rebuffed him. Will the President be outraged? Will the Washington Post’s editors notice?
Crossposted on Soccer Dad.
“The President has called for direct negotiations, and Mahmoud Abbas, not Binyamin Netanyahu, has rebuffed him. Will the President be outraged? Will the Washington Post’s editors notice?”
No and no. In a week Israel will once again be pressured to come across with concessions. Israel will never get any recognition for its attempts at compromise and the Palis will never be held to account for their stubborn refusals to compromise or even negotiate in anything except ultra bad faith.
You know what might work (I say might, it is far from certain). That would be to cut off the Palis from all sources of outside money. They now live on the dole provided by other countries and the UN; cut them off the international welfare teat. Let them live on only what they can bring in by their own efforts of working and exporting (and slap them down hard if they increase their criminal activities). No dole money from the US, none from Israel, none from the UN. Most of it gets stolen by the big shots anyway. If they must work or starve they will have no time to practice terrorism.
Of course their “Arab Brothers” and Iran might step into the breach and pour in money to replace what we international patsies will no longer provide. But their “Arab Brothers” are notoriously skinflints and despise the Palis in any case, and Iran is having economic troubles of its own, which we should be exacerbating to the fullest extent. So those sources of welfare checks might not provide as much as the Palis would like. Not enough to let the “leaders” embezzle as much as they do from the current situation, at any rate.
In such a case the Palis can work or starve. Frankly, the way they have acted over the last few decades, with their murderous terrorism and genocidal ambitions, I don’t much care which they do.