The release of the next
batch of Palestinian terrorists from Israeli jails is scheduled to take
place some time next week, following a discussion about which 26
murderers with Jewish blood on their hands will be returning to the
bosom of their families.
The families of their victims,
in contrast, suffered another blow on Thursday, when the High Court of
Justice rejected a petition against the move -- the third of four such
prisoner releases that Israel consented to under the agreement that
restarted Israeli-Palestinian discussions.
The only issue that Washington
is concerned about, however, is the revelation that Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu is about to approve construction tenders for 600 new
apartments in Jerusalem and 800 in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank). If
there's one thing that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry can't stand,
it's an inconvenient statement about "expanding Israeli settlements"
when he's in the process of deluding himself and everybody else about an
imminent treaty between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
This is ironic for many
reasons. First of all, adding housing units to existing neighborhoods
does not constitute expansion. The Palestinian leadership knows this
very well. It is also aware that the Israeli government doesn't always
follow through on building permits, but has proven to be capable of
forcing its citizens to move out of their homes for political purposes.
Gaza ended up free of Jews in 2005. PA President Mahmoud Abbas has good
reason to hold out for a far greater expulsion of Jews.
In the second place, Abbas and
his henchmen have no interest in reaching an agreement with Israel,
certainly not one that involves Palestinian guarantees of Israeli
security. This is why they have not budged one iota on the issue of
Israeli military presence -- however limited -- in any sensitive areas,
such as the Jordan Valley. Indeed, their goal is not to live
side-by-side with Israel, but to precipitate its demise.
Thirdly, the Palestinian
terrorists who have already been released as part of a senseless
goodwill gesture to jump-start negotiations have neither expressed
remorse nor renounced future violence against Jews.
Finally, there has been a sharp
rise in Palestinian terror, directly linked to Kerry's shuttle
diplomacy between Jerusalem and Ramallah. This week alone, there was a
bus bombing outside of Tel Aviv, the stabbing of an Israeli security
guard north of Jerusalem and two rocket launchings from Gaza into
Ashkelon, the latter leading the defense establishment to deploy
batteries of Iron Dome missiles near Beersheba, Ashdod and Sderot.
Nevertheless, chief Palestinian
negotiator Saeb Erekat "strongly condemned [Israeli construction plans
for] damaging for the peace process." He also suggested that if next
week's prisoner release coincides with an announcement of building
tenders, the PA should apply for membership in 63 international
organizations, among them the International Criminal Court, where it
would sue Israel for war crimes, such as -- get this -- settlement
construction.
Kerry ought to be
paying closer attention to the reason his pipe dream is going up in
smoke. He also would do well to note the vehemence with which Abbas
spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeineh denied a Yedioth Ahronoth report on
Thursday alleging that the Israeli prime minister and the PA president
have been engaging in clandestine talks for the past few years,
via middlemen. According to the expose, these back channel negotiations
were conducted in London, possibly between Palestinian businessman
Bassel Aqel and Netanyahu confidante Isaac Molho. The aim of these
purported meetings was to make diplomatic progress during the period of
negotiation stalemate.
The fact that an Abbas
representative rushed to deny the existence of such cooperation, and
that Netanyahu's office refrained from commenting on it, suggests the
story is true. But if it is, why wouldn't Abbas -- who has sworn his
allegiance to Kerry's "two-state solution" process -- readily admit it?
Wouldn't this add to his credibility with the secretary of state?
The answer is that he doesn't need to worry about the West. Indeed, no
matter what Abbas says or does, the cash continues to flow into the PA
to fund its network of corruption and terrorist infrastructure.
But he does have to take Hamas in Gaza and other Palestinian
organizations in the West Bank into account. After all, they actually
pose a threat to his precarious grip on power.
Each batch of terrorists that Israel releases bolsters Abbas' standing among the radicals. Peace, like statehood, is as beside the point to the Palestinian negotiating team as a few hundred housing units. Indeed, the Arab war on Israel never was about the real estate.
Ruthie Blum is the author of "To Hell in a Handbasket: Carter, Obama, and the 'Arab Spring.'"
Guest Comment:
Kerry ought - but he could care less - to be paying much closer attention to the reasons his pipe dream is going up in smoke...
First, adding
housing units to existing neighborhoods does not constitute expansion
over the Green line. The Arab-Palestinian leadership knows this very
well. They are also aware that the Israeli government doesn't always -
in fact hardly ever - follow through on these empty declarations with
issuing building permits. But it has proven over and over again to be
despicably capable of forcing its citizens to move out of their homes
for political purposes that achieved nothing politically. Gaza ended up
free of Jews - Judenrein - in 2005. PA President Mahmoud Abbas has good
reason to hold out for a far greater expulsion of Jews and Kerry is
pushing Israel hard for this outcome.
Secondly, Abbas
and his henchmen have no interest in reaching an agreement with Israel,
certainly not one that involves Arab-Palestinian guarantees of Israeli
security. This is why they have not budged one iota on the issue of
Israeli military presence, however limited, in any sensitive areas, such
as the Jordan Valley. Indeed, their goal is not to live side-by-side
with Israel, but to precipitate its demise.
And, there
has been a sharp rise in Arab-Palestinian terror, directly linked to
Kerry's obsessive shuttle diplomacy between Jerusalem and Ramallah. But
Kerry is out to achieve on other failed American foreign diplomacy
objective, on the back of the Jews.
Nevertheless,
the chutzpah of chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat is beyond the
pale. He "strongly condemned [Israeli construction plans for]
damaging the peace process." He also suggested that if next week's
prisoner release coincides with an announcement of building tenders, the
PA should apply for membership in 63 international organizations, among
them the International Criminal Court, where it would sue Israel for
war crimes, such as -- get this -- settlement construction.
Nurit G.
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