On
Thursday morning, Israeli President Shimon Peres made a statement about
the decision on the part of the European Union to engage in boycotts,
divestment and sanctions against any Israeli goods or services produced
or undertaken beyond the 1967 borders -- including the teachings of
Hebrew University professors.
Rather than
condemning this move as state-sponsored anti-Semitism, Peres waxed
poetic about his respect for the EU. He then criticized the "timing" of
the release of its anti-Israel resolution, and urged that the EU "give
peace a chance."
After all, he
pointed out, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has been in Jordan all
week, and he is on the verge of making a real breakthrough on the
Palestinian-Israel front.
"The supreme
efforts that [Kerry] has made will bear fruit on both sides," Peres
assured. Couldn't the EU at least postpone its plans for a while?
"Nothing will happen if you wait a few months," Peres admonished. "This is a critical period. Don't spoil [Kerry's chances]."
By the end of
the day, however, it was the Palestinian Authority that nixed
negotiations. The only thing surprising about this obvious outcome of
Kerry's sixth visit to the region since taking up his post was the media
reportage indicating that peace talks were finally about to resume. So
rampant were the rumors on this score that Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's office was forced to dispel accusations that he had
consented to begin negotiations with Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas by accepting the 1949 armistice lines as a precondition
for sitting down at the proverbial table.
Naturally, Kerry
is on his way back to the U.S. empty-handed. And, contrary to his
earlier hints that "real progress" was being made in getting the
Palestinians to discuss the possibility of "reviving stalled talks,"
State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki set the record straight.
"There are currently no plans for an announcement on the resumption of peace talks," she said.
No kidding.
As soon as Abbas
returned to Ramallah after meeting with Kerry in Amman on Tuesday and
Wednesday, the PLO Executive Committee and the Fatah Central Committee
went ballistic -- figuratively, for a change, though actual rockets were
fired into Israel from Gaza at around the same time on Thursday.
The PA officials
were not interested in hearing from Abbas that a delegation of Arab
League foreign ministers, also in Jordan with Kerry this week, was
satisfied with the secretary of state's guidelines for jump-starting the
talks. Though these suggestions have not been made public, one can
guess that they include recognizing Israel's right to exist in some
shape or form. Oops.
In response to
this characteristic intransigence on the part of the Palestinian
leadership, U.S. President Barack Obama phoned Netanyahu to "encourage
[him] to continue to work with Secretary Kerry to resume negotiations
with the Palestinians as soon as possible."
Apparently,
pounding on the only open door in the Middle East sums up U.S. foreign
policy in a nutshell. This makes a lot of sense, since the rest of the
region is burning with flames fanned by a deadly mixture of White House
and State Department ideology and inaction. Ignorance, too, plays a
major role.
Take Kerry's
joint press conference on Wednesday with Jordanian Foreign Minister
Nasser Judeh, following a meeting with the ministerial delegation
assigned by the "Arab League Committee on the Peace Initiative."
Reiterating his mantra about peace being "in everybody's interest,"
Kerry went on to disseminate the great lie of all time.
"Many ministers
said to me today ... that the core issue of instability in this region
and in many other parts of the world is the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict," he orated with pathos, indicating his full agreement with the
assessment.
In fact, not a
single Arab-Muslim upheaval -- not Iran's race for a nuclear bomb; not
Syria's chemical-weapon-charged civil war; not Egypt's violent repeat of
its false "democratic" revolution -- nor any strife elsewhere in the
world, is even remotely connected to the "Palestinian-Israeli conflict."
The refusal of
the U.S. to acknowledge, let alone stress, this truism is as dangerous
to American interests as it is to Israel's. Furthermore, it constitutes a
green light to Europe to proceed with its pernicious program to
delegitimize the Jewish state.
Peres is wrong that the EU decision to enact a boycott is "ill-timed." On the contrary, its timing is impeccable.
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