Tel Aviv – Israel Insists It Will Not Deal With Hamas-Backed PA Government

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    FILE - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (C) meets with ministers of the unity government, in the West Bank city of Ramallah June 2, 2014. ReutersTel Aviv – The government stands by its decision not to conduct peace talks with a Palestinian government backed by Hamas, officials said on Tuesday amid renewed attempts at restarting some kind of Israeli-Palestinian dialogue in the wake of the fighting in Gaza.

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    PA President Mahmoud Abbas plans to present a new diplomatic initiative to Arab foreign ministers during their meeting in Cairo on September 7, Mahmoud al-Habbash, Abbas’s adviser on religious affairs and chief of the PA religious courts, told the Jordanian newspaper Al-Ghad. The plan envisages a full Israeli withdrawal to pre-1967 lines within a period that does not exceed three years, a senior PA official was quoted Tuesday as saying.

    The plan calls for the Israelis and Palestinians to resume the peace talks within nine months, the official said.

    “President Abbas is keen to obtain Arab support for his plan,” Habbash said.

    The first three months of the negotiations would be devoted to drawing the borders of the future Palestinian state, after which the two sides would proceed to discuss final-status issues pertaining to refugees, Jerusalem, settlements, water and security, he said.

    “The talks will begin with the borders, during which time there will be a freeze of settlement construction and the release of the fourth and final batch of prisoners incarcerated before the signing of the Oslo Accords, who were supposed to be freed last March,” Habbash added.

    If Israel does not accept Abbas’s initiative, the Palestinians will resort to “diplomatic and political measures to impose peace,” he warned.

    The PA’s options include joining international treaties and conventions, including signing the Rome Statute as first step toward membership in the International Criminal Court, Habbash said.

    Abbas has dispatched chief PLO negotiator Saeb Erekat and PA General Intelligence Service head Majed Faraj to Washington to brief US Secretary of State John Kerry on the initiative.

    Abbas said recently that he does not expect the Americans to like his plan.

    An Israeli government official said that the diplomatic focus should be on the Gaza Strip, and that “in many ways the ability to get things moving in the right direction in Gaza will be a test case for the Palestinian Authority. If they would succeed in reestablishing a security presence in Gaza, that would be an important example that could then create a new dynamic.”

    The PA’s inability up to this point to confront Hamas terrorism, and Fatah’s political alliance with Hamas, “remains a serious problem,” the Israeli official sad.

    Relating to calls to leverage the fighting in Gaza into a resumption of peace talks, the official said that Jerusalem wants a peace process, “but it has to be a process not based on illusions, but reality.”

    It is important, the official said, that the PA act in a way that is conducive to a diplomatic process.

    “If we go back to the same old game – exploiting automatic majority in the UN for one-sided resolutions condemning Israel – that is obviously not a mood that would be conducive to moving forward,” he said.

    Going this route would “condemn” the Palestinians to the status quo, he added.

    “If the PA shows it is serious about peace in word and deed, and as a first step would act seriously in Gaza, that could create a whole new dynamic,” the official said.

    Asked whether Israel’s declaration on Sunday of 400 hectares in Gush Etzion as state land, a move that has drawn criticism from around the world, is conducive to a peace process, the official said that despite the perception, “no one has made any decision to build anything yet.”

    Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon on Tuesday warned that a diplomatic process with the Palestinians that would lead to Israel pulling forces out of the West Bank would lead to rockets and mortar shells being fired at Ben-Gurion Airport.

    Speaking at the Calcalist National Conference in Tel Aviv, Ya’alon said that whenever the IDF pulled out its forces from Palestinian areas, whether areas of the West Bank under the Oslo agreements or the 2005 Gaza disengagement, terrorism brewed. Israel paid a heavy price to retake West Bank cities in 2003’s Operation Defensive Shield operation in order to restore calm during the second intifada. In Gaza, even when the PA was in charge, Hamas sprouted beneath it and eventually took over, he said.

    Instead of rushing to withdraw from the West Bank, Israel should pursue an “outside the box” diplomatic process including “moderate” Arab states that share Israel’s strategic goals, Ya’alon said. Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf states (except Qatar) could align against Islamist terrorism, the Muslim Brotherhood and Iran, he said.

    Meanwhile, Hamas called on Abbas to pull out of the peace process with Israel “immediately.”

    Abbas should instead seek to reunite the Palestinians and “achieve a comprehensive national strategy in response to the occupation’s decision to confiscate Palestinian lands,” Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said.

    Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


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    8 Comments
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    9 years ago

    Rediculous! Israel is the laughing stock of the world. The Hamas and its enthuasiasts gained unprecedented support in the world wide arena. Israel and its government consists of people with limited understanding. As long as the Palistianians remain a nation without a land, israel will have no rest. As the historical happenings are my best corroberation. Every race, people or ethnic group tend to use terror tactics to achieve their goal. Kindly remember the Stern gang at its helm Yair Stern who assasinated British officials to obtain his Zionist agenda. Once Israel was born they became legit and joined Menachem Begin’s party as “heros”. As long as Israel refuses to acknowledge the possibility of a two state solution they will suffer. Seizing terrortory in West Bank as they have done of late is an act that will only worsen the current situation and will only heightened the already uncontrolled anti-semitism.

    Applestein
    Applestein
    9 years ago

    I wish it were true. but who are we kidding we are already dealing with Hamas

    ayoyo
    ayoyo
    9 years ago

    The palestinians are not a nation they belong to the extinct land mass formerly known as transjordan that was part of the ottoman empire the capital was Ramala not Jerusalem .When Jordan had control of that place there was no move to create a state to be called Palestine. When the U.N. created two countries from that land the Arabs refused to be a part and all of the arabs went to war against israel.

    Adddd
    Adddd
    9 years ago

    Israel has to put the red line somewhere

    Adddd
    Adddd
    9 years ago

    Israel happenes to be the unluckiest country in the world

    9 years ago

    Big deal” so abbas will soon pull a fast one and swear that he’s acting alone without hamas, while winking to hamas and the rest of the pali’s, and then obama will pressure Netanyahu until he agrees to again start negotiating to return Isreali land to the pali’s.