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	Strategic Thinking Needed to Juggle 
	Israeli-Palestinian Equation  
	By James Zogby 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 19, 2011 
	 On the very day that The New York Times reported that the Israeli 
	military had demolished the homes of Palestinians in the Jordan Valley in 
	order to clear the area to consolidate Israeli control, that very same 
	military was being rebuffed in its efforts to remove an illegal Jewish 
	settler outpost in that very same occupied West Bank. There were also 
	reports of violent settlers running amok in the West Bank committing 
	violence against Palestinians and Israeli military personnel, and other news 
	accounts of thousands of extremist rabbis demonstrating outside of Israel's 
	Supreme Court in opposition to government efforts to silence one of their 
	leaders. He had been arrested for advocating violence against Palestinians 
	(maintaining, for example, that it was acceptable to kill innocent 
	Palestinian children before they grew to adulthood and became a real threat 
	to Jews). These incidents combined, demonstrate, in a nutshell, why I have 
	lost confidence in the so-called "peace process" and current U.S. 
	peacemaking efforts.
  While Israel continues to oppress and humiliate 
	Palestinians, and while extremist Israeli settlers continue to run roughshod 
	over both Palestinians and the Israeli military, it just seems downright 
	short-sighted and silly for the U.S. to have nothing more interesting to 
	offer than their lame mantra that "parties need to return to the negotiating 
	table". And yet that is about all they have to offer at this point - with 
	results no more promising now than they have been for the past few decades.
	 As it currently stands, the Israeli-Palestinian problem is too big and 
	too deep to be solved by pretending that simple negotiations can fix things. 
	Neither side is in a position to negotiate, and the U.S. team doesn't appear 
	to have a creative thought that can help change this situation. Israeli 
	politics have moved decidedly to the right. With a half million settlers in 
	the West Bank (many of them armed to the teeth and ideologically committed 
	to stay on "their land" no matter what deal their government might sign with 
	the Palestinians), the Israeli government not only has no interest in 
	finding a solution that would be fair to the Palestinians, I'm not convinced 
	that they could or would muster up the resolve to convince their hard-line 
	public to accept even an unfair settlement with the Palestinians. The 
	Israelis have become used to having their way with the Palestinians and know 
	that no one, including their patron and protector, the U.S., will do 
	anything to stop them. For their part, the Palestinians have no real 
	leverage to stop Israeli behaviors and they are, therefore, in no position 
	to negotiate with their dominant occupier and oppressor. The Palestinian 
	leadership is fragmented, and their body politic is divided. Gaza is 
	isolated and under a blockade, while the West Bank is also under complete 
	Israeli control and has become dependent on the largess of international 
	donors.
  Just a few weeks ago we had a glimmer of hope that the 
	Palestinians were ready to take steps to alter this stagnant situation. The 
	major Palestinian factions were reconciling and their leadership was ready 
	to directly challenge Israel and the United States by demanding that the 
	U.N. vote on Palestinian Statehood. But with the U.S. and Israel opposed to 
	Palestinian unity and a United Nations vote and pushing the Palestinians to 
	stop both efforts, and the Palestinian factions unable to agree even on a 
	temporary government, hopes have dimmed.
  It is not that a U.N. vote, 
	by itself, would create a state, or that Palestinian unity would, by itself, 
	bring peace. Neither are silver bullets. Healing the fractured Palestinian 
	polity is quite simply a necessity so that the Palestinian Authority can be 
	seen to represent its entire constituency. The push for a U.N. vote, on the 
	other hand, is an important effort by the Palestinians to buttress their 
	position vis a vis the Israelis with leverage from the international 
	community (much in the same way that the Israelis buttress theirs with votes 
	from the U.S. Congress).
  What made both of these two Palestinian 
	initiatives more desirable than the lame U.S. efforts to restart talks, is 
	that the Palestinian steps were attempts at juggling the equation, while 
	simply restarting talks does nothing but bring together the parties, as they 
	are, to talk about a situation the Israelis don't really want to change and 
	the Palestinians are powerless to change.
  If there is to be 
	Israeli-Palestinian peace, the current dynamics at work in Israeli and 
	Palestinian societies and in the Israeli-Palestinian relationship must be 
	changed. That will require strategic thinking and a willingness to shake 
	thing up, especially in Israel. Both Israeli's sense of entitlement and 
	their ability to operate with impunity must be ended. And the Palestinians 
	must feel supported, empowered and responsible for their own destiny. 
	 Palestinian unity, the political boost that would come from a strong 
	U.N. vote and an expanded mass non-violent resistance effort in the occupied 
	territories - just might help to do the trick. It would give the 
	Palestinians a much needed shot in the arm and it would force the Israelis 
	to debate and rethink their policies and the costs associated with their 
	behaviors. On the other hand, listening to the U.S. and backing away from 
	reconciliation, and dropping the U.N. vote (in much the same way the P.A. 
	listened to the U.S. and initially dropped the U.N. human rights report on 
	the Gaza War) - would be devastating to the Palestinian leadership, would 
	only serve to further embolden Israeli hardliners, and would, in the end, 
	make peace even more remote than it is today. 
  
	  
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