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Sunday, January 13, 2013

After the elections: Europe to proimpose 'peace plan'

Lebanon's Naharnet reports that the European plans to proimpose a 'peace plan' for Israel and the 'Palestinians' after the upcoming Israeli elections.
The European Union is drawing up a detailed new plan to restart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, and expects to present it after this month's Israeli general election, Yediot Aharonot reported Sunday.
Citing diplomatic sources in Jerusalem, Israel's top-selling daily said the plan was intended to "bring about the establishment of a Palestinian state on the basis of the 1967 lines with east Jerusalem as its capital."
The plan will include "clear timetables for the completion of the negotiations on all the core issues in the course of 2013."
The newspaper said the plan is expected to be presented around March, to give time for the formation of a new Israeli government after the general election on January 22.
The newspaper said the plan "apparently will also include a demand to freeze all construction in the settlements."
The report said the British and French foreign ministries are sponsoring the initiative, which is also backed by Germany and could be adopted by the full EU.
"There's a lot in the works behind the scenes," the newspaper quoted high-ranking Israeli political officials as saying.
"The Europeans don't have the capability to force an agreement on us, but they definitely may embarrass us," they added.
"It is reasonable to assume that the Palestinians will accept a document of that sort, but Israel will be hard put to do so. That's going to paint us into a corner."
Observers have long speculated that the international community would renew its efforts to restart direct peace talks, on hold since late September 2010, after the Israeli election.
And on Saturday, Israeli opposition candidate and former foreign minister Tzipi Livni appeared to allude to the potential EU plan, warning that "in March the world will put a peace plan on the table."
"Either we can have it imposed upon us or we can initiate a plan of our own," she said.
This 'peace plan' has all the failings of the previous 'peace plans.' It presumes the outcome of 'negotiations' and it places a deadline after which presumably only one party (Israel) will have something to lose, thereby ensuring that the 'Palestinians' will give nothing to make a deal.

What we need to get in there is that any plan will be subject to a referendum of the Israeli electorate, which is in no mood to approve any 'peace plan' right now. 

What could go wrong?

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2 Comments:

At 3:25 AM, Blogger Empress Trudy said...

It's not that the Arabs will give nothing toward a deal it's their refusal to agree that a deal should be discussed or considered. With the Arabs and the EU it's all carrot no stick. There's no point to them even coming to the table at all.

 
At 1:36 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

they have all means to press arabs. they give money

H.R. 104: To recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, to relocate to Jerusalem the United States Embassy in ...

http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/113/hr104/text

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-113hr104ih/pdf/BILLS-113hr104ih.pdf

 

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