Saturday, August 04, 2001

Is There No Choice? But the Israeli government view ignores facts that loom large among Palestinians. Israel has repeatedly failed to carry out promises and negotiated agreements � to make further redeployments from occupied territory, for example. Israel has made a two-state solution to the conflict less and less attractive by continuously building and enlarging settlements on land that would be part of the Palestinian state. The Palestinian view at the time of the Camp David conference last year was well described in The New York Review of Books by Robert Malley, a special assistant to President Clinton who was at Camp David, and Hussein Agha. "Seen from Gaza and the West Bank," they wrote, "Oslo's legacy read like a litany of promises deferred or unfulfilled. Six years after the agreement, there were more Israeli settlements, less freedom of movement and worse economic conditions. Powerful Palestinian constituencies � the intellectuals, security establishment, media, business community . . . � whose support was vital for any peace effort were disillusioned . . ., doubtful of Israel's willingness to implement signed agreements." http://www.nytimes.com/2001/08/04/opinion/04LEWI.html?todaysheadlines