Sunday, December 23, 2007

Only Mofaz Not Objecting to Talks with Hamas

Hillel Fendel

Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz, a former Defense Minister, was alone among top Israeli figures last week in saying that indirect talks with Hamas via a third party would be acceptable to him. Other Israeli officials said that even if the Hamas terror organization is interested in a hudna (a temporary ceasefire, with the option to abruptly renew hostilities at a time convenient to Hamas), Israel will not negotiate with it.

Indirect talks with Hamas may in fact be taking shape - with Egypt, once again, as the go-between. Defense Minister Barak is now scheduled to meet with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak this Wednesday in Cairo, and Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal of Damascus is also scheduled to arrive in Cairo this week. The captive Shalit and other topics are on the agenda.

Egypt is also making efforts to bring about a reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah - something that Foreign Minister Livni has said would lead to the end of talks between Israel and Fatah/Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas.

Hudna Honey Trap
Israeli government leaders have totally negated, over the past few days, any talks with Hamas. Defense Minister
Ehud Barak said last night, "At present, there is nothing to consider. If the Kassam rockets and mortar shells towards Israel stop, and if Hamas accepts the Quartet's conditions [most notably, recognition of Israel - ed.], then we will reconsider."

Another senior, unnamed, government figure was quoted in the daily Yisrael Hayom as saying, "The mechanism for an [Israeli-agreed] ceasefire is very simple: When the terrorism stops and when Gilad Shalit comes home, we will cease our fire."

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni have also said in recent days that talks with Hamas are not in the cards.

"If Israel wants to enable Hamas to improve its military capabilities, be better prepared for war in the future, and to choose its most convenient time to begin hostilities, Israel should accept the hudna." So says former Deputy IDF Intelligence Chief Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Yaakov Amidror. "But if Israel wants to live and realizes it must fight Hamas, it must not allow itself to enter the honey-trap of a hudna."

Comment: We all understand that a hudna is a short term lull in terrorist activity. It is NOT a peace action. During this time our enemy rearms, re-organizes and prepares for more activity against us. The enemy dictates the terms. If Israel wants to take a proactive approach it will begin dictating its terms. To do otherwise has proven disasterous for us over the last decades.

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