Quantcast

Search our Archives!


Advertisement


The God Blog

November 15, 2007 | 8:23 pm

In Israel, peace not now

Posted by Brad A. Greenberg


U.S. diplomats are making a strong push for the American Jewish community to support the upcoming Israeli-Palestinian peace summit at Annapolis, which is silly because so few Israelis and Palestinians respectively support Ehud Olmert and Mahmoud Abbas.

Rick Richman at Jewish Current Issues says that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is still saying the same convoluted and unfounded thing:

Most Palestinians now believe that Israel will always be their neighbor and that no Palestinian state is going to be born through violence.

I’ll tell you what, I spent my Sunday at a StandWithUs conference at Bnai David-Judea focusing on the prospects of peace, and optimism was not in the air.

Khaled Abu Toameh, a Palestinian affairs reporter for the Jerusalem Post and NBC News, said it isn’t—Fatah is too weak, and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas too unpopular to sincerely negotiate a solution.

“Even if he gets 100 percent, he can’t implement it,” Abu Toameh said. “He doesn’t have the power.”

Mitchell Bard, executive director of the American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise, followed with a similarly downtrodden tone. Muslims, he said, have time on their side, with a birthrate much higher than Israeli Jews and the hope of future nuclear weaponry.

“So you wait,” Bard said. “Why would you want some crummy little state in Gaza and the West Bank, when all you have to do is wait?”

(skip)

“The gap between Fatah and Hamas is narrowing,” Marcus said, pointing to soccer tournaments named after suicide bombers, textbooks approved by the Palestinian Authority that say the presence of non-Muslims on Palestinian land is an affront to Allah and an image used on Fatah TV that shows the Palestinian flag covering Israel on a map, with an emblem in the middle that states, “Palestine—2007.”

For this reason, Abu Toameh said the time is not ripe for negotiations: “The Palestinian street is very radical, very bitter. I’m sorry to say it, but I don’t see where we go from here.”

“There are many Israelis who are prepared to give up large parts of Arab Jerusalem,” the Jerusalem resident later added. “I think it is a mistake. If we had a really good government on the Palestinian side, I would say bring them in. But with Fatah and Hamas, I would run away.”

Tracker Pixel for Entry
The Jewish Journal believes that great community depends on great conversation. So, jewishjournal.com provides a forum for insightful voices across the political and religious spectrum. Bloggers are not employees of The Jewish Journal, and their opinions are their own. Our entire blog policy is here. Please alert us to any violations of our policy by clicking here. (editor@jewishjournal.com). If you'd like to join our blogging community, email us. (webmaster@jewishjournal.com).

More from JewishJournal.com

COMMENTS

We welcome your feedback.

Privacy Policy

Your information will not be shared or sold without your consent. Get all the details.

Terms of Service

JewishJournal.com has rules for its commenting community.Get all the details.

Publication

JewishJournal.com reserves the right to use your comment in our weekly print publication.



About this Blog

Blog Home
About the Blogger(s)
Contact

RSS


Blog Archive






Newspaper

Serving a community of 600,000, The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles is the largest Jewish weekly outside New York City. Our award-winning paper reaches over 150,000 educated, involved and affluent readers each week. Subscribe here.

© Copyright 2013 Tribe Media Corp.
All rights reserved. JewishJournal.com is hosted by Nexcess.net. Homepage design by Koret Communications.
Widgets by Mijits. Site construction by Hop Studios.

counter fake hit page