By Ted Belman, Israpundit
Of late I have taken the position that there is no half way house; either Israelis accept the Saudi Plan or reject Oslo. The Arab League have given an ultimatum, “take it or leave it.” Bush endorsed their position by acknowledging that the end result of negotiations have already been decided,
“They must guarantee that a Palestinian state is viable and contiguous. And they
must lead to a territorial settlement, with mutually agreed borders reflecting
previous lines and current realities, and mutually agreed adjustments.”
He also imposed demands on what the Palestinians must do.
They must match their words denouncing terror with action to combat terror. The
Palestinian government must arrest terrorists, dismantle their infrastructure,
and confiscate illegal weapons — as the road map requires. They must work to
stop attacks on Israel, and to free the Israeli soldier held hostage by
extremists. And they must enforce the law without corruption, so they can earn
the trust of their people, and of the world.
Even then he is not too confident,
“And ultimately, it could lead to a final peace in the Middle East — a permanent
end to the conflict, and an agreement on all the issues, including refugees and
Jerusalem.”
Remember the Arab League is only offering “normalization” but will not discuss it or do it until after Israel has capitulated and satisfied their demands.
“Normalization” is not a peace agreement and is not recognition of borders. It is more like a hudna. Only the Palestinians, will accept the borders.
Bush set out what everyone “should” do.
So unauthorized outposts should be removed and settlement expansion ended. Arab states have a pivotal role to play, as well. They should show strong support for President Abbas’s government and reject the violent extremism of Hamas. They should use their resources to provide much-needed assistance to the Palestinian people. Nations like Jordan and Egypt, which are natural gateways for Palestinian exports, should open up trade to create opportunities on both sides of the border.
Arab nations should also take an active part in promoting peace negotiations. Re-launching the Arab League initiative was a welcome first step. Now Arab nations should build on this initiative — by ending the fiction that Israel does not exist, stopping the incitement of hatred in their official media, and sending cabinet-level visitors to Israel. With all these steps, today’s Arab leaders can show themselves to be the equals of peacemakers like Anwar Sadat and King Hussein of Jordan.
Thus this new initiative is expected to proceed regardless of whether everyone does what they should do. Saudi Arabia and Egypt have already said they won’t attend and they want Hamas included. I have no doubt that they will not do what Bush says they should do. Nor do I believe that the Palestinians will do what Bush says they must do.
The “extremists” will be doing all they can to prevent it and right now they have the upper hand and are on a roll.
Given this backdrop, why are Israeli elites, government included, prepared to accept this deal? For them, the “occupation” is the problem. As President Peres says, [Israel] must “get rid of the territories”. Their goal is to end with internationally recognized borders even if such borders are “Auschwitz borders”. For them, Judea and Samaria are not a birthright but an albatross. Also they recognize that giving up these lands will deliver a mortal blow to religious Zionism.
It is not that they don’t know that there are existential threats but they believe that Israel can better confront them with internationally recognized borders, rather than with control over Judea and Samaria.
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Pertinent Links:
1) Bush distinguishes between “must” and “should”
2) IsraPundit
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