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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Obama unexpectedly joins Barak-Jones meeting
2009-06-03
With the public spat between Jerusalem and Washington over construction in the settlements intensifying daily, US President Barack Obama dropped in unannounced on Defense Minister Ehud Barak while he was meeting National Security Adviser James Jones in the White House on Tuesday.

No details of the 15-minute conversation were provided, but it came following Obama's call Monday for a halt to all settlement construction, including for "natural growth." That was the first time Obama himself, and not an adviser or Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, had included "natural growth" in the settlement freeze.

Obama joined Barak's meeting with Jones at the very end.

While former president George W. Bush would often drop by in White House meetings that top Israeli officials were conducting with figures such as the vice president or national security adviser, Obama's visit was seen as particularly meaningful, as it came just a few hours before he was to set off for Saudi Arabia and then Egypt, and following several statements criticizing Israel for its settlement policy.

It was seen as an effort to show a balanced approach and give Israel a boost amid the US administration's outreach to the Muslim world, which will include a visit to Riyadh on Wednesday and a major speech in Cairo on Thursday, but no stop in Israel.

At the same time, the two countries have serious issues to discuss, including the settlement policy. In that context, Barak's role is particularly key, as he represents the left flank of Netanyahu's government and has a warmer following in Washington than some of his fellow coalition members, even as he has articulated a position supporting the prime minister's assertion that natural growth must continue.

Officials in the Prime Minister's Office on Tuesday said that understandings on settlement construction with the US had formed the basis of Israel's acceptance of the road map in 2003 and the adoption of the disengagement plan in 2005, firing back at Washington for its demand for a settlement freeze that would include natural growth.

The implication of the officials' comments were clear: that if the US was changing its understandings on the settlements, it was undermining the foundations of the road map and was in essence reneging on understandings that were an essential part of Israel's decision to leave the Gaza Strip.

According to the officials in the Prime Minister's Office, "over the past decade, important understandings were reached on the issues of settlements, understandings that Israel abided by. While Israel committed itself not to build new settlements and to address the unauthorized outposts, there was an effort to allow for normal life in existing communities, especially those in the large settlement blocs that will definitely stay part of Israel in any final-status agreement."

According to those officials, the "overall concept was that neither Israel nor the Palestinians would take unilateral steps that would prejudge a final peace agreement. Those understandings reached between Washington and Jerusalem provided a crucial foundation for US-Israeli cooperation in the peace process.

"On the basis of these understandings, the government accepted the road map in 2003, and adopted the disengagement plan in 2005," the officials continued. "Israel will continue to abide by these bilateral understandings and seeks to strengthen them with the new US administration."

Dov Weisglass, who was intimately involved in reaching these understandings with the US, wrote in Yediot Aharonot on Tuesday that there was "no doubt" that the Bush administration recognized Israel's right to build within the construction lines of the settlements, on condition that no new settlements would be established, that there would be no expropriation of Palestinian land for the settlements and that no budgets would be allocated for encouraging settlement.

Officials in the Prime Minister's Office said there was concern that the US was now attempting to roll back those agreements.

That impression was strengthened by Obama's interview Monday with National Public Radio, in which he claimed to have "said very clearly to the Israelis, both privately and publicly, that a freeze on settlements, including natural growth, is part of those obligations [that Israel must fulfill]."

Although the US needed to maintain its "strong support" for Israel, Washington also had to be "honest" with Israel regarding the direction in which the region was heading, Obama added, three days before his address to the Arab world in Egypt.

"I don't think we have to change strong support for Israel," Obama said in the interview. "We do have to retain a constant belief in the possibilities of negotiations that will lead to peace, and that's going to require, from my view, a two-state solution."

Asked how he would reply to those in the Muslim world who felt the US blindly supported Israel, Obama replied, "Well, what I'd say is, there's no doubt that the United States has a special relationship with Israel. There are a lot of Israelis who used to be Americans. There [are] huge cross-cultural ties between the two countries. I think that as a vibrant democracy that shares many of our values, obviously we're deeply sympathetic to Israel."

And, he added, "I would also say that given past statements surrounding Israel; the notion that they should be driven into the sea, that they should be annihilated, that they should be obliterated - the armed aggression that's been directed toward them in the past - you can understand why not only Israelis would feel concerned, but the United States would feel it was important to back this stalwart ally."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
New residents account for one-third of West Bank settlement growth
2009-05-17
Useful background article on recent Israeli settlement efforts. They continue to create 'facts on the ground' in their effort to ring Jerusalem and nearby areas with settlements that simply will not be dismantled on the day that a 'two-state' solution is signed, assuming that ever happens. Doesn't look like the Israelis have any intention of giving up East Jerusalem. And Obama won't budge them.
Figures released recently by the Central Bureau of Statistics cast doubt on government officials' claims of housing shortages for young couples living in West Bank settlements - the central argument Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu intends to present to U.S. President Barack Obama against freezing settlement construction.

Figures for 2006-07 reveal that the housing shortage in settlements stems largely from "migration" from Israel proper to communities beyond the Green Line, as well as the addition of new immigrants from abroad.
What about transferrees from the Gaza Strip? You know, the ones who were evicted when Israel made Gaza Judenrein?
The data show that in 2007, natural growth accounted for 63 percent of settlement population growth, whereas internal migration accounted for 37 percent. The previous year, they show an addition of roughly 5,600 residents (which accounted for those who arrived minus those who had left) across West Bank settlements. For every 10 residents leaving settlements that year, 15 others arrived.

President Shimon Peres told Obama in their meeting earlier this month that "It is unacceptable that children born in Judea and Samaria will not have a place to live. We can't put them on the roofs." Similar remarks were made to U.S. Mideast envoy George Mitchell when he headed the fact-finding commission examining the causes for the outburst of the Second Intifada. In the report he submitted to then-president George W. Bush in 2001, Mitchell rejected Jerusalem's assertion that Jewish construction in the West Bank was aimed merely at housing natural population growth.

Instead, the commission largely accepted the Palestinian claim that there is no difference between the creation of new settlements and expanding existing ones, and determined that Israel should cease all building in the settlements, even that intended for what Israeli officials described as "natural growth."

That demand was contained in the Road Map, an outgrowth of the Mitchell Report, presented to Israel in 2003. A letter sent from Dov Weisglass, then-prime minister Ariel Sharon's diplomatic adviser, to Bush that same year includes an explicit commitment to freezing settlement building, particularly in those outside the "settlement blocs" or east of the separation fence.

U.S. diplomats said their government rejected the argument that Israel must allow every young couple raised in the settlements to find suitable housing in the West Bank.

The diplomats said they had obtained a copy of a classified Defense Ministry report compiled by IDF Brig. Gen. (Res.) Baruch Spiegel attesting that unauthorized building had occurred at about 75 percent of settlements, and that significant infrastructure projects had been initiated at more than 30 of them - including roads, schools, synagogues, yeshivas and even police stations - on privately-owned Palestinian land.

At a press conference last week, the chair of the Yesha council of West Bank settlements, Danny Dayan, and council secretary Pinhas Wallerstein said every year a "quiet eviction" was taking place in the West Bank of young couples raised in settlements who were unable to find housing there. They said 1,600 young couples of the 2,100 who marry annually are forced to find accommodations outside of the communities in which they grew up. Dayan and Wallerstein called on Netanyahu to change construction policy to allow such young people to erect homes in close proximity to those of their parents.

Most legal analysts around the world, including U.S. State Department jurists, view the construction of settlements in the West Bank as a violation of international law relating to war and conquered territories. The Fourth Geneva Convention prohibits states from moving their own citizens into conquered land.

A response from Peace Now to the remarks made by the Yesha council officials, said the "bluff of natural growth is just one of the tricks the government is using to keep it from fulfilling its obligation to freeze settlement building. It is a shame that the president is perpetuating that lie."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Gaza on brink of implosion
2006-04-16
An empty watchtower overlooks a deserted road lined with rusting vehicle parts. The only traffic is a pregnant bitch and a mule and cart. This is Gaza's economic lifeline, the Karni crossing into Israel, which is supposed to handle 1,300 containers of merchandise and food per day in order to sustain 1.3 million people. But nothing is entering or leaving Gaza, and now the funds to purchase what is available there are also drying up, bringing the dire situation of its people to a new and febrile crisis.

Karni is officially closed because the Israeli army has declared a security alert for the Jewish Passover holiday. Yet it has barely been open this year. The effect is a paralysis of Gaza's commerce and severe shortages of basic foods. Not that the locals are in a position to buy what food there is. There is little money because the European Union, Canada and the United States have stopped funding the aid-dependent Palestinian Authority, which can no longer pay its staff's wages.

The result is that families are existing on tiny amounts of money and businesses are facing collapse. Palestinian areas in the West Bank face similar difficulties, but the situation in Gaza is much more severe. John Ging, the Gaza director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, said that, while he did not expect people to starve, 'the clock is ticking towards a crisis'.

To add further misery, in retaliation for militants firing home-made Qassam rockets at Israel, the Israel Defence Force has bombarded the north of Gaza with thousands of artillery shells. Gazans fear external pressures will lead to domestic unrest in which the situation is used as a weapon against Hamas by supporters of Fatah who have not accepted January's electoral defeat.

Confronted with the crisis facing Palestinian society, Russia broke ranks with fellow mediators the EU and Washington yesterday by promising emergency aid to save the authority from complete bankruptcy.

It came as the first anti-government protests took place in Khan Yunis in Gaza, when about 50 policemen, most of them Fatah supporters, blocked Gaza's main artery to demand the government pay their salaries or step aside. Yesterday dozens more stormed a government building and blocked roads.

At the root of Gaza's problems is Israel's determination to force Hamas to recognise the state of Israel and renounce violence. Israel has been joined in its efforts by Britain, the EU and the US. Hamas militants have been on a ceasefire for 16 months but they are determined to withhold recognition of Israel at least until it withdraws from occupied Palestinian territory.

Israel's policy was summed up by Dov Weisglass, an adviser to Ehud Olmert, the Israeli Prime Minister, earlier this year. 'The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger,' he said. The hunger pangs are supposed to encourage the Palestinians to force Hamas to change its attitude towards Israel or force Hamas out of government.

But it is not certain that the Palestinian reality will conform to the Israeli theory. Even if the wage bill is finally paid - with Russia's help - analysts believe it will only provide a short respite until the same problem arises next month.

Mohammed Salah, 38, a barber in the Jabalia refugee camp said that the economic crisis was 'a conspiracy from inside and outside against Hamas. Things are very low at the moment, but if we give up thieves will take over the government,' he said. He estimated that his takings had fallen by 50 per cent. 'I don't turn anyone away. They pay what they can when they can,' he said.

And while many supporters of Fatah are enjoying the discomfort of Hamas, they are not enjoying the problems that accompany it. Adib Yusef, 44, and his brother, Ahab, 37, are Fatah supporters who are responsible for a joint household of 14 - four adults and 10 children. Recently Ahab and his wife and three children moved in with his brother to share the rent and bills of £112 per month.

Adid is unemployed, but does odd jobs when he can, and Ahab is a carpenter with the Ministry of Public Works, earning £218 per month. Adib's eldest son is a policeman and is paid £192, which all goes to the family. The wages for February were paid two weeks late in March and there is no indication as to when the March wages will be paid. Adib says the family normally exists on £7.50 per day, but at the moment they are making do on £1.25. All their savings and assets have been used up. Ahab owes £3,750 to a bank for his wedding.

Adib, who is smoking a cigarette he has just bought for six pence, says that the family are existing on handouts from acquaintances. 'We eat potatoes, tomatoes and other vegetables that we can buy cheaply. The problem is not so much what is happening now, but that there is no hope on the horizon,' he said.

Ahab is quick to blame Hamas for the current predicament. 'Hamas used to give out charity coupons, but now they have to give out wages and they find out it is not so easy,' he said. Adib, like many non-Hamas supporters, also blames the West. 'They ask for democracy and then they do not like the result,' he said.

Even before the authority's wages crisis, the economy was in dire straits because of the Israeli closure of Gaza. More than 3,000 containers of goods have been stuck at the Karni crossing and the port of Ashdod in Israel for months. The majority of Gaza's farm produce did not reach its markets and had to be sold at a fraction of its value locally.

For those families who do not have a wage to rely on, the UN relief agency is their life support system. The agency, which was set up in 1948 to cater for the needs of Palestinian refugees, is responsible for 962,000 registered refugees in Gaza and 735,000 of them receive food aid. 'We are living with the consequences of an unprecedented period of closure. We have contingency plans for this event but they have been exhausted,' he said.

'We have run out of reserves, there is a pressure pot of of frustration compounded by the intensity of shelling, and in the midst of all this we have had avian flu and not a shekel has been offered in compensation to the farmers who have lost their livestock,' he said

Raji Serani, director of the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, said that the ultimate effect could be to silence moderate voices. 'I have no idea where this will end, but I fear it will be bleak and black,' he said.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Who Needs a Runway to Keep an Airport Open, Anyway??
2006-04-13
Tawfiq Musmar takes up his place behind the lost luggage desk at Gaza international airport each morning, checking all is in order at the baggage carousel before wandering off to spend much of the day chatting with the "land hostesses" at the check-in counters.

Not a single flight has landed since Israeli army bulldozers tore up the runway in 2001 at the beginning of the Palestinian uprising, and Mr Musmar wonders how long he will be paid to do nothing. Well, he's had a five year run so far.... "There were lots of flights to all the Arab capitals, even Moscow," he said. "Now we get paid but these are not real jobs. Maybe now the jobs are going to disappear like the planes."

For five years the Gaza airport staff have collected their salaries from the Palestinian Authority, not because they earned them but because so many other people depend on the money to survive.

Mr Musmar, 43, earns about £250 a month from which he supports his parents and children. At the check-in desk, Reem Nisreen is paid about £140 a month which pays the rent and feeds her unemployed husband, two children and members of her extended family.

The wages of every one of the PA's 152,000 workers are paid in part from about $1bn (£573m) a year in foreign aid. European and American donors long ago accepted that while they were subsidising many real jobs, such as medical staff and teachers, they were also paying for what amounted to work-for-welfare. Those wages came to be a crucial part of an economy that has contracted by one-third through the intifada. Yep, through no fault of the Palestinians, this horrible economic situation came about.....

As first Washington and then Brussels this week froze aid to the PA after Hamas took power, the dependence of the whole economy on western handouts has been thrown into sharp relief. The question for both the EU and the US is how to keep the salaries flowing without funding what they regard as a terrorist administration. The new Hamas government is already grappling to find $120m for salaries that should have been paid at the beginning of the month after inheriting a deep financial crisis from the previous administration.

Foreign donors say they won't let Palestinians starve, although Dov Weisglass, an adviser to the Israeli prime minister, said Israel has withheld tax revenues due to the PA "to put the Palestinians on a diet". But there will be no foreign funds to the administration until Hamas recognises Israel and formally renounces violence.

The UN calculates that one PA salary supports seven people - more than 1 million in total, or one in four residents of the occupied territories. "PA salaries are the most important component in the Palestinian economy because the rest of the economy has declined so much," said David Shearer, head of the UN's humanitarian assistance office.

"In addition, PA salaries are the most important in the poorest areas of the West Bank and Gaza. In Gaza, 37% of working people are working for the PA."

Nearly half of the PA's employees are in its various security forces. Mr Shearer says that raises the prospect of about 73,000 men with guns looking for alternative ways of making money. "If they don't get paid, what we're really worried about is that while there are a good number who are well-trained and professional, there is also a large proportion that are not, but they're armed. What we fear is an increase in insecurity and criminality and the use of arms to demand jobs," he said. As opposed to the peaceful situation that is going on right now. Think of the puppies, kittens, and baby ducks!

Among those wondering how long the money will keep coming is Amjad Yusuf, 20, a police officer who has been on the force for three years. His 1,540 shekels (£192) a month salary supports 10 people. Nearly half goes to pay the rent and the family is two months behind. He has not been paid on time for three months. "We're all afraid, not just me, everyone in the force. No one has told us anything but we are worried about where the money is coming from."

Diplomats do not expect the donors to allow the PA to collapse; too much money has been invested in its creation as a step towards a Palestinian state. Kiddies, this is what is called throwing good money after bad... The EU and US say they will continue to fund basic humanitarian needs, such as water, food and education, while not dealing with Palestinian government ministries. But they have yet to work out a way to pay about 39,000 people working in education and 11,000 in health as well as keeping open hospitals and schools heavily dependent on aid. Considering how Hamas ran a bunch of hospitals and schools even before they came to power, this ought to be interesting...

The Palestinian health ministry relies on foreign money for about half of its budget. Juma'a al-Saqa, a director of Gaza City's Shifa hospital, said without it there would be no staff, drugs or operations. "Shifa depends on aid. We couldn't continue to function without it. It pays for drugs, instruments, medical supplies. It pays the salaries," he said.

The hospital has about 1,400 workers, with nurses earning £200 to £350 a month, paid through the PA. Mr Shearer said clinics and hospitals would only stay open by charging. Oh, the barbarity of paying for services!!

The EU is searching for ways around the problem, including funnelling aid through some Arab governments or setting up a trust using the World Bank. The British government has sounded out some UK charities on their willingness to take over aid delivery in areas where the EU can no longer work.

The UN has warned that foreign aid organisations will not be able to pick up the slack and that if there is a shortfall, international law requires Israel, as the occupying power, to provide basic services for the Palestinians.

"Humanitarian assistance can put food in people's mouths," Mr Shearer said. "But it cannot run a health or education system that people have come to rely on. Quite simply, by cutting off money to the PA, people will suffer."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
The old general is slipping away.
2006-02-11
After five weeks of fighting to save the prime minister's brain after a massive stroke, Ariel Sharon's doctors moved their attention to the comatose Sharon's stomach Saturday, after an early morning CT scan revealed that his digestive tract had been seriously damaged by what doctors believed was a small blood clot, which surgeons were attempting to locate and remove.

Hadassah University Ein Kerem Hospital official spokeswoman Yael Bossem-Levy told the growing crowd of local and international journalists assembled outside the hospital that the Prime Minister was rushed to emergency surgery at 11:30 AM. Bossem-Levy described Sharon's condition as critical, with his life in danger.

After the scan, it was decided to operate on Sharon immediately, Bossem-Levy said in a statement. The operation was expected to last between three and six hours, she said. A Kadima source close to Sharon told the Associated Press that the operation seemed to be "going well." Channel 10, meanwhile, reported that doctors have removed a section of the prime minister's intestine.
Not entirely unexpected: people with atherosclerotic disease frequently have it in multiple locations, not just the brain. Intestinal arterial blockage can occur and, if undetected, can be devestating. Many elderly have a little of this and it can resolve without problems, but a complete blockage can result in ischemic or infarcted bowel. That's a surgical emergency.
Sharon's sons Omri and Gilad rushed to the hospital early Saturday morning, and were followed by Sharon confidants Ilan Cohen, Dov Weisglass and Lior Horev, as well as Sharon's personal driver and peronal secretary.

It is still unclear what caused Sharon's latest deterioration. Bossem-Levy said only that the abdominal scan revealed an obstruction in the blood flow to the prime minister's intestines. It was not clear whether Sharon's doctors had stopped the regular dose of blood-thinning medication they had administered since Sharon's first stroke in December. Doctors administered the anticoagulants following the first stroke, which was caused by a small blood clot in a cranial artery, and later admitted that the anticoagulants made it more difficult for them to stop the bleeding from the later hemorrhagic stroke on January 4.

Earlier this month, a feeding tube was inserted into the prime minister's abdomen via keyhole surgery (laparoscopy). Prof. Charles Weissman, chief of anesthesiology, had told The Jerusalem Post that the change in the means of feeding reduces the risk of infection, just as the tracheostomy performed a few weeks ago minimized infection by replacing the breathing tube down his mouth and trachea with a tube attached to a hole in the front of his neck.
It's also an admission that Sharon isn't doing well: the tracheostomy and feeding tube (gastrostomy or PEG) suggest that recovery is slow and will be substantially incomplete. That means there is increasing risk of late complications.
The next official hospital statement will be issued when the surgery is completed, officials said.

Sharon has undergone brain scans from time to time to check whether there was swelling and bleeding. The brain scans had not shown changes, but Sharon has failed to regain consciousness.

Sharon suffered the massive stroke a day before he was to check into Hadassah for what was described as a minor heart procedure. The major stroke came two weeks after he had suffered a mild stroke. Doctors have come under fire from critics who questioned whether Sharon should have been treated with massive doses of anticoagulants after his first stroke, which was caused by a small blood clot in a cranial artery. Doctors admitted that the anticoagulants made it more difficult for them to stop the bleeding from the later hemorrhagic stroke.

The extensive bleeding and the lengthy operations Sharon underwent to stop it have led experts to conclude that he must have suffered severe brain damage and was unlikely to regain consciousness. If he does awaken, most say, the chances of his regaining meaningful cognition or activity are slim.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
US to adopt Lebanon model in dealing with new Palestinian government
2006-01-30
The US won't deal with Hamas ministers in a future Palestinian Authority government, but will also not cut off ties with the PA as a result of Hamas's inclusion, diplomatic officials said Monday.

According to the officials, the US formula for dealing with a PA government following Wednesday's elections would be based on the "Lebanese model." In Lebanon, the officials said, the US continues to have strong ties with the government in Beirut even though Hizbullah is part of it. It does not, however, have any contact with the one Hizbullah minister.

The officials said that since Hamas was on the US list of terrorist organizations, the US would be legally proscribed from having contact or dealing with Hamas officials, even if they were PA ministers.

At the same time, they said, the law would not necessarily proscribe the US from continuing to deal with the PA or contributing money to it.

These comments came as Israeli diplomats were quietly holding conversations with their counterparts in Europe and the US over the steps they should take if Hamas became the dominant force inside the PA.

The US Congress passed a resolution late last year condemning Hamas's participation in the election, and warning that financial assistance to the PA could be blocked if Hamas's terrorist infrastructure was not dismantled.

The EU has also indicated that a Hamas victory could jeopardize its financial support for the PA, with foreign policy chief Javier Solana even saying during a visit in December that EU taxpayers would not want to support a PA government supporting terrorism and Israel's destruction.

The EU has also enshrined in two key agreements with the PA a renunciation of terrorism and commitment to the peace process and road map, and Israeli officials are holding discussions with European counterparts to see how these clauses could be implemented.

Both the Quartet - the US, EU, Russia and UN - and the EU's foreign ministers are scheduled to meet separately soon after the PA elections and discuss the results and their ramifications, and Israel is also waiting, diplomatic officials said, to see the results before lobbying for any specific statement from either body.

Indeed, inside Israel's policy-making forums there are differences of opinion regarding the best course of action to take in the long term toward Hamas participation in the PA governing institutions.

The main differences, according to a senior diplomatic source, revolved around what was the more likely scenario following a strong Hamas showing.

One school of thought, reflected by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's adviser Dov Weisglass and much of the defense establishment, maintains that a strong Hamas showing would lead to a new round of terrorism, as Syria and Iran would use Hamas's new-found legitimacy to continue encouraging terrorism.

Another school, led by National Security Council head Giora Eiland, argues that a strong Hamas showing would lead to the moderation of at least some elements of Hamas, and that Israel should not rule out dealing with those elements at some point.

It is the conflict between these two approaches that led Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert on Sunday to ask both the National Security Council and a blue-ribbon government team headed by Weisglass to present him with possible scenarios and policy recommendations following the elections.

Meanwhile, Robert Satloff, executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said at the Herzliya Conference Monday that Israel's muddled policy on Hamas was partly responsible for its already having gained political legitimacy through the election process.

He said this contradictory policy had cost it a "great diplomatic opportunity" to stand firm and prevent Hamas's participation in the elections in the West Bank.

Years ago the Americans and the Israelis demanded that to talk to the PLO, the organization had to recognize both UN Security Council Resolution 242 - Israel's right to exist - and renounce terrorism. Today, he said, the world legitimizes Hamas without demanding from it what was demanded from the PLO a quarter-century ago.

"There are those who believe that the organization is mellowing, that it is shedding its original mission," he said. "There are those who even say that Hamas holds the key to the eventual settlement of the conflict. Accept this analysis at your peril," Satloff warned against mistaking tactical flexibility for strategic change, and said Hamas would have no trouble talking with Israel, out of the belief that it could negotiate Israel out of existence.

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told the conference that since the international community viewed the PA elections as a way for the PA to gain the legitimacy it needed to dismantle the terrorist organizations, Israel must work with the international community after the elections to ensure that this is done.

Meanwhile, former US president Jimmy Carter, speaking at the Herzliya Conference on Monday, urged Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas on Monday to stamp out terror, and told Israel it should withdraw from more West Bank settlements.

"[Violence] is inherently counterproductive for the well-being of the Palestinian people and obviously prevents any further progress in the peace process," said Carter, who is here to help monitor Wednesday's Palestinian legislative elections.

Carter called on the Palestinian Authority "to take every possible effort, even including a direct military confrontation, to control those within the Palestinian community who advocate terrorism or violence as a weapon to be used."

Carter also said the disengagement from Gaza was not enough.

"You can't have a Palestinian state living in peace and dignity if [the West Bank is] filled with Israeli settlements," he reasoned, adding that it was "reasonable" for Israel to retain settlements near its pre-1967 border.

Later, in an interview with Channel 2, Carter said Israel's intention to draw its own borders unilaterally if it is unable to negotiate a deal with the Palestinians could be acceptable "if the borders don't intrude too deeply into the West Bank."

He said a role in Palestinian government could lead Hamas to "moderate their position and remove their commitment to terrorism and induce them to recognize Israel's right to exist and to exist in peace."

As president, Carter presided over the negotiations that led Israel and Egypt to sign a peace treaty in 1979.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Sharon Aide Emerges As Leading Figure
2006-01-15
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's attorney has emerged as the leading architect of foreign policy in Israel in wake of his client's massive stroke. Dov Weisglass, Sharon's attorney and adviser, has been maintaining Israel's contacts with the United States and other Western powers, particularly in the area of Palestinian relations. Weisglass has also convened Israeli military and security chiefs to plan for Palestinian legislative elections on Jan. 25. "It can't be that Weisglass is running the country," Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin, a critic of Sharon, said.

Weisglass's influence has been heavily criticized by the parliamentary opposition. Parliamentarians have pointed to Weisglass's continued professional involvement with projects in the Palestinian Authority, including the Austrian-owned casino in the West Bank town of Jericho.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Palestinians Arrest 30 in West Bank
2005-10-07
YATTA, West Bank (AP) - Palestinian police went door-to-door early Friday in this West Bank town, arresting 30 suspected criminals in one of the biggest moves toward restoring law and order in the chaos-ridden Palestinian territories. But in a sign of ongoing lawlessness, an unknown group said it had kidnapped three leaders of the Islamic group Hamas in three West Bank towns. In a leaflet, the al-Farouk bin al-Khatab Brigades accused Hamas of putting itself above the law. Hamas, however, accused Palestinian security agents of arranging the kidnappings.

Palestinian security forces have been severely weakened by nearly five years of fighting with Israel, corruption and internal rivalries, leaving them virtually powerless to stop militants and armed gangs in the Palestinian areas. But since Israel's withdrawal last month from the Gaza Strip, where lawlessness is most severe, Palestinians have increasingly demanded a restoration of order.

Threatened by the instability, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has ordered his forces to rein in criminals and enforce a ban on public displays of weapons, leading to fierce gunbattles with Hamas militants. In the toughest fighting, three Palestinians, including a policeman, were killed in one battle this week.

More than 200 policemen participated in Friday's arrest raid in Yatta, searching for drug and arms dealers and other wanted criminals, said Ahmed Rabai, the Hebron-area police chief. Village residents said they could not recall such a heavy crackdown by Palestinian police. Police raided the village before dawn, surrounded homes and called on suspects to surrender. Homes were searched and illegal weapons were confiscated.
"This campaign was ordered by political leaders to enforce law and order and to bring justice to normal Palestinians and make the Palestinian people feel safe," Rabai said. "This campaign will continue not only in Yatta town, but also in other villages and in the city of Hebron itself."

Israel and the United States have demanded that Abbas rein in militants. Abbas has been reluctant to take such a step, fearing civil war, and has tried to co-opt the groups. But the growing chaos may be forcing Abbas to act.

In the latest unrest, three local Hamas leaders in the West Bank were taken from their homes at gunpoint late Thursday, though one of them, Riad Abdel Karim al-Raz, was freed early Friday. The other two men, Bassem Abeido of Hebron and Hassan Safi of Bethlehem, remained in custody. The Khatab Brigades claimed responsibility for the abductions.
"This is a response to Hamas' violations and disregard for law and order and their attacks on security institutions and Palestinian leaders. We warn Hamas and ask them to stop their policy and learn their lessons. This is our first response," the group said in a leaflet obtained by The Associated Press.
"This is his claim, his threatening and my message."
Hamas is in a power struggle with the ruling Fatah movement ahead of January parliamentary elections, and since Israel's pullout from Gaza, Hamas has become increasingly brazen in challenging Abbas.
Yummm, popcorn
Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman in Gaza, accused Abbas' security forces of carrying out the kidnappings. "We denounce the kidnappings, and we hold the Palestinian Authority security apparatus responsible. They are responsible for protecting all Palestinian people, including Hamas."

But Fatah officials and militants with the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, a violent group linked to Fatah, denied involvement in the abductions.
Little is known about the Khatab Brigades, named after one of the first followers of the Prophet Mohammed.

Karim, the Hamas leader in Tulkarem, said after his release Friday that he had no idea who kidnapped him or what they wanted. "People came and took me by force. They didn't treat me well, and then they apologized and told he I would be taken home," he said. Karim, head of the engineering department at A-Najah University in Nablus, suffered a black eye and had his shirt torn by his captors.

The lawlessness is also of concern to Israel, Army Chief Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz said in an interview published Friday in the Jerusalem Post.
"Anarchy puts the Palestinian Authority in grave danger," Halutz told the English-language daily. "The anarchy today is a consequence of the Palestinian Authority's unpreparedness to tackle the problem when it was small. They are still doing too little, but I hope it isn't too late."
He said with a sly grin
The issue is expected to arise at a summit next week between Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Saeb Erekat, a top Palestinian negotiator, met with Dov Weisglass, Sharon's top adviser, to prepare for the summit Friday.

Erekat said the Israelis want to see progress on security matters, while the Palestinians are pushing for the release of prisoners held by Israel, full control of the Gaza-Egypt border and a resumption of peace talks. Although Israel left Gaza, it has refused to allow the Palestinians to open their own border crossing with Egypt. Erekat said progress was made during Friday's meeting, and that he and Weisglass would meet one more time before the summit, expected on Tuesday.
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Israel-Palestine
Israel Puts Off Talks After Hamas Mortar Attacks
2005-02-11
Talks between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators yesterday to discuss the implementation of agreements reached at Tuesday's Middle East peace summit were shelved by Israel after a series of mortar attacks in the southern Gaza Strip, a Palestinian official said. "The Israelis have informed us that they are postponing the meeting because of the mortar attacks and the security situation in the Gaza Strip," the official told AFP on condition of anonymity. "The meeting will now take place on Saturday evening or on Sunday," he added. The meeting had been due to bring Palestinian Cabinet Minister Saeb Erekat and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's top adviser Dov Weisglass together to discuss the details agreed on at Tuesday's summit in Egypt.
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Israel-Palestine
Israel Caps Helizaps
2005-01-27
Jerusalem, Jan 26 : Agreeing to a key Palestinian demand, Israel has decided to halt its policy of "targeted assassinations" after Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Mahmoud Abbas reached a breakthrough deal 'in principle' with militant Hamas faction.

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has also decided to resume political contact with Palestinian leaders, which was frozen on January 14 following an attack in the Gaza Strip, public radio announced today. The contact with Israeli officials will re-start "very quickly", notably through Dov Weisglass, one of Sharon's main advisors, it said.

Israel informed the PA about its decision to stop "targeted" killings, which was taken after generals from the two sides met yesterday to plan deployment of the Palestinian policemen in central and southern Gaza, security officials told Ha'aretz daily.

Abbas yesterday reached an agreement 'in principle' with Hamas leaders in Gaza over the militant faction's participation in the PA's diplomatic decision-making and in a future Palestinian government, sources involved in Abbas' talks were quoted as saying in the local media. The agreements were reached in Abbas' meetings with top Hamas leaders in the territories -- Mahmoud al-Zahar and Ismail Haniyeh.
Both sides had their fingers crossed.
A "supreme diplomatic authority" will be established as per the agreement, which will include participation from all factions, to replace PLO as the key body responsible for approving any diplomatic agreements with Israel, the sources were quoted as saying.
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Israel-Palestine
Palestine, Israel in Gaza deal
2005-01-27
Israel and the Palestinians resumed political contacts yesterday and finalised a deal to deploy thousands of Palestinian security forces to curb attacks in southern and central Gaza. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon froze all contacts with the Palestinians in mid-January after a suicide attack killed six Israelis at the Karni crossing between Gaza and Israel. The move cast a major shadow across Mahmoud Abbas' inauguration as Palestinian Authority president the following day, but Sharon has since been impressed by Abbas's efforts to end the bloodshed.

After authorising security contacts last week, Sharon dispatched his senior adviser Dov Weisglass for talks with Palestinian negotiations minister Saeb Erakat yesterday. "We discussed in great depth and detail several political and security issues, mainly preparations for a summit between the Palestinian and Israeli leadership," Erakat said. The two would meet again next week for further preparations, he added. Sharon's office said "contacts were renewed after positive developments in the Palestinian Authority and the efforts to prevent terror". Abbas praised the meeting for having "very good negotiations on every issue."
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Israel-Palestine
Concern grows for Mahmoud Abbas' safety
2005-01-02
Color me cynical, but Abbas has been the leading and most highly visible candidate to run the Paleo Splodeydope Syndicate and International Aid Sinkhole ever since Brother Arafat failed the Hatpin Test. Why is concern only growing now?
AS THE Palestinian bureaucracy gears up for next Sunday's presidential election, fears are growing for the safety of leading candidate Mahmoud Abbas, while Palestinian officials claim Israeli authorities have done little to ensure a smooth election process.
Fears. Whose fears? Nobody's in particular, I see. Just some nameless dread, swirling about Occupied Paleoland. Or perhaps author Annette Young won't reveal her sources...
In the first major elections since 1996, an estimated 1.5 million voters are expected to turn up at more than 1,000 polling booths across the West Bank and Gaza next Sunday, which has been declared a national holiday by Palestinian authorities.
Holidays are always celebrated with fireworks. And popcorn. And lawn chairs...I've got mine!
The election will be viewed as an important litmus test for the upcoming Palestinian legislative assembly elections, expected to be held before June.
Again, we have no idea whose "view" has an interest of this election.
But with just one week to go, there are growing concerns on both Palestinian and Israeli sides that deemed frontrunner and Fatah candidate Abbas is under risk of assassination from militants. A former prime minister, Abbas, who took over the PLO after Arafat's death on November 11, is favoured as a future peacemaker by Israel and the United States. "All of us in the Palestinian peace camp believe this to be a serious concern," Palestinian Cabinet minister Saeb Erekat told Scotland on Sunday. "But there is a limit to what we can do under Israeli occupation."
Aha! Erekat is concerned. Shoulda guessed. And now he goes off to the woodshed. (Gets out hickory axe handle...)

Saeb. Abbas is not being threatened by the Israeli occupation. Stop wringing your hands and crying to the Western press like a schoolgirl. If Mahmoud is being threatened by your dogs, slap a muzzle on 'em, take away their toys, and throw 'em back in the kennel. The Israelis would be delighted to house sit the loonies 'til sometime after the election. If they are too rabid and can't otherwise be controlled, shoot 'em.

But I bet *your* thugz are doing exactly what they've been told.
On Thursday, Abbas attended a rally in Jenin where he was greeted by a group of some 20 Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade gunmen who let off dozens of rounds of bullets. The gunfire was described as a "greeting" by the militants' leader Zakaria Zubeidi, who is also one of Israel's most wanted men. Although Zubeidi is reportedly suspicious of Abbas's moderate politics and his willingness to negotiate with Israel, he said he will support him.
And here's the real problem. If Abbas acts too much like a moderate, the loonies will kill him. If he throw in with the fundies, Israel just might have to 'let' the loonies kill him. They are pretending to try to have an election, but the hatred and seething is so intense it will burn *anyone* who stands anywhere near it.
Still, there is severe worry among Palestinian and Israeli security services that other hardline militants may not be so forgiving and will attempt to kill Abbas on the grounds that his candidacy is a threat to their existence. "We believe the major threat comes from Iranian-backed extremist groups who have made it clear that Abu Mazen [Mahmoud Abbas] is fair game," said Ranan Gissin, a spokesman for Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon.
That's an interesting diversion. Look at Iran, not at Hamas, or Islamic Jihad, or Al-Aksa (now Arafat) Martyrs Brigades. All the headbands and masks are just so much campaign materiel.
In the meantime, officials at the Palestinian Central Elections Committee (CEC) say despite promises from the Israeli government, both candidates and election workers have been unable to move freely. "The reality on the ground, particularly in Gaza, is very different," said Majdi Abu Zaid, the CEC regional co-ordinator in Gaza. "Elections depend heavily on movement, transfer of staff and material, not to mention candidates," he said. "In Gaza, it has been almost impossible to get through checkpoints, and in one case it took us a month to arrange a permit for one of our vans to travel from Gaza City to Rafah."
My sympathy meter almost quivered ther, but I recovered. Exactly what does that have to do with Mahmoud's personal safety? That's right. Exactly nothing. Just a extraneous graf to show us what meanies the Zionists are.
Erekat, who has been meeting regularly with officials from the Israeli prime minister's office, has urged the international community to place pressure on Israel "to ensure free and fair elections". "I have been and will continue to raise these issues with Dov Weisglass [Sharon's chief of staff]," he said. "But, again, there is only so much we Palestinians can do as we are under Israeli occupation, so it is up to the likes of British Prime Minister Tony Blair and President Bush to do their bit."
Knock it off with the "We can't control our trigger fingers cos we're Occupied," Saeb. It's getting old and stale.
Gissin disputed the Palestinians' claims, arguing that the Israelis had done everything possible to facilitate the elections. "We have provided maximum access for the candidates," he told Scotland on Sunday. "However, I will stress that we have the right to defend ourselves in view of the fact that the Palestinians are doing nothing about reining in terrorists." He added: "There are more extremist groups who want to scuttle this process. The only thing free about this election will be the freedom of armed men to dictate the outcome."
Sadly, I agree with his assessment.
Most of the seven candidates are running on independent tickets, with the exception of Abbas and Bassam al-Salhi, the secretary-general of the Palestinian Communist Party. However, Abbas is expected to win with a sizeable majority. The CEC says several hundred international observers will join 20,000 local election monitors to ensure the election occurs without hiccups. Other details still to be finalised this week include how to physically collect votes from some 125,000 eligible voters living in East Jerusalem. In 1996, Israeli authorities allowed Palestinian citizens in East Jerusalem to vote by postal ballot, and last week they announced that the same procedures will apply next Sunday. The issue of having polling booths in East Jerusalem is a thorny one for Israel. By allowing polling booths, it would be seen as de facto acknowledgement of Palestinian sovereignty of the city. But CEC officials say that they have yet to receive final confirmation of how the postal vote in East Jerusalem will be conducted.
"We'll get back to you on that."
Meanwhile, escalating violence in the Gaza Strip is also creating concern for those organising next week's election. A missile fired by an Israeli aircraft killed two Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip on Friday, the second day of an operation the army said was aimed at stopping mortar and rocket attacks on Jewish settlements.
Yup. The Zionists are just randomly firing missiles willy-nilly all over Gaza, especially when Abbas is campaigning.
N.B. Here is another article written by Annette Young.
Link



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