Post by Paddy by Grace on Feb 27, 2009 19:01:27 GMT -7
Netanyahu opposes talks with a PA gov't that includes Hamas
Netanyahu opposes talks with a PA gov't that includes Hamas
Herb Keinon , THE JERUSALEM POST Feb. 26, 2009
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1235410718352&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull
Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu is expected to lobby Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton next week against US recognition of a Palestinian
unity government that includes Hamas, top advisers to Netanyahu said
Wednesday.
Zalman Shoval, one of Netanyahu's five primary foreign policy advisers, said
the Netanyahu diplomatic team was "trying to persuade whomever" that a
Palestinian Authority unity government is a bad idea.
"We shall try to convince our American friends that this is not something
that would help the peace process, and that it would only make it easier for
all sorts of other players - the Europeans and the Russians - to deal with
Hamas," he said. "To return Hamas as a partner is not what America is
interested in."
Shoval said history had shown that when there was an amalgamation between a
moderate and an extremist party, it was only a matter of time before the
extremists called the shots. He used as an example the Nazi party's union in
1933 with the German National People's Party. He noted that within a year
the latter party had disappeared and concluded that the end result of a
Hamas-Fatah merger would not be a more moderate Palestinian political
entity, but a more radical one.
"The idea is the wrong one," he said, adding that Netanyahu's camp believed
the right approach was to continue to isolate Hamas.
"I'm not saying we can prevent it, but we should try," he said.
Another adviser to Netanyahu said that the international community had laid
out three conditions for Hamas to accept, and that it was necessary for
Hamas to accept them and not sweep them under the rug.
Those conditions are recognizing Israel's right to exist, forswearing
terrorism and accepting previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements.
According to the adviser, Israel did not want to strengthen Hamas, but at
the same time wanted to find a mechanism whereby assistance could be
provided to the civilian population of the Gaza Strip. This, the adviser
said, was likely to be the focus of talks over the next few days both with
US Middle East envoy George Mitchell, who Netanyahu will meet shortly after
his arrival Thursday, and Clinton, who will arrive next Monday.
The officials said that Israel would insist that the international
community's conditions for dealing with Hamas were met, and not be changed
because Hamas refused to comply.
Hamas's refusal to accept Israel's existence, and its terrorist activities,
were core problems, the adviser said, and it would be counterproductive to
overlook the problems by seeking structural reform. The adviser added that
structural reform would not make the core problems disappear.
The adviser dismissed concern that the upcoming international conference on
the reconstruction of Gaza scheduled for Sharm e-Sheikh on Monday, in which
billions of dollars were expected to be pledged, including some $900 million
from the US, would effectively tie Israel's hands regarding a possible
future military operation in Gaza, since the world would not look favorably
on a situation where it was spending billions in Gaza, only to have Israel
go back in and wreak havoc.
The adviser said that Israel's right to self-defense was sacrosanct, and
that it would continue to exercise that right when it felt it needed to.
The reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, and finding ways to enable the
region's construction without strengthening Hamas, are expected to dominate
talks Mitchell will have Thursday with Israeli leaders, as well as talks
Clinton will hold when she arrives from the reconstruction conference next
week.
In addition to Mitchell, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana will arrive
for talks Thursday as part of a regional tour, as will Norwegian foreign
Minister Jonas Gahr Store.
Store, who will be staying Thursday night at the American Colony Hotel in
east Jerusalem, and in what seems an attempt at balance, will stay over the
weekend at the King David, is scheduled to go to Gaza on Friday.
Although Norway is one of only a few countries that continued to have
contact with Hamas after the organization came to power in 2006, Store is
not expected to meet Hamas representatives.
Israeli officials said that they had not been informed of any planned
meeting with Hamas in Gaza, and that such a meeting would obviously have
precluded any possible meeting between Store and Olmert or Barak.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said Wednesday that speaking to
Hamas was "the right thing to do," but Egypt and other parties were best
suited to talking directly to the group.
In an interview with Reuters in Cairo, Miliband said Egypt was acting on
behalf of the whole world in its dealings with Hamas.
"Egypt has been nominated... to speak to Hamas on behalf of the Arab League
but actually on behalf of the whole world," Miliband said. "Others speak to
Hamas. That's the right thing to do and I think we should let the Egyptians
take this forward."
Netanyahu opposes talks with a PA gov't that includes Hamas
Herb Keinon , THE JERUSALEM POST Feb. 26, 2009
www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1235410718352&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull
Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu is expected to lobby Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton next week against US recognition of a Palestinian
unity government that includes Hamas, top advisers to Netanyahu said
Wednesday.
Zalman Shoval, one of Netanyahu's five primary foreign policy advisers, said
the Netanyahu diplomatic team was "trying to persuade whomever" that a
Palestinian Authority unity government is a bad idea.
"We shall try to convince our American friends that this is not something
that would help the peace process, and that it would only make it easier for
all sorts of other players - the Europeans and the Russians - to deal with
Hamas," he said. "To return Hamas as a partner is not what America is
interested in."
Shoval said history had shown that when there was an amalgamation between a
moderate and an extremist party, it was only a matter of time before the
extremists called the shots. He used as an example the Nazi party's union in
1933 with the German National People's Party. He noted that within a year
the latter party had disappeared and concluded that the end result of a
Hamas-Fatah merger would not be a more moderate Palestinian political
entity, but a more radical one.
"The idea is the wrong one," he said, adding that Netanyahu's camp believed
the right approach was to continue to isolate Hamas.
"I'm not saying we can prevent it, but we should try," he said.
Another adviser to Netanyahu said that the international community had laid
out three conditions for Hamas to accept, and that it was necessary for
Hamas to accept them and not sweep them under the rug.
Those conditions are recognizing Israel's right to exist, forswearing
terrorism and accepting previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements.
According to the adviser, Israel did not want to strengthen Hamas, but at
the same time wanted to find a mechanism whereby assistance could be
provided to the civilian population of the Gaza Strip. This, the adviser
said, was likely to be the focus of talks over the next few days both with
US Middle East envoy George Mitchell, who Netanyahu will meet shortly after
his arrival Thursday, and Clinton, who will arrive next Monday.
The officials said that Israel would insist that the international
community's conditions for dealing with Hamas were met, and not be changed
because Hamas refused to comply.
Hamas's refusal to accept Israel's existence, and its terrorist activities,
were core problems, the adviser said, and it would be counterproductive to
overlook the problems by seeking structural reform. The adviser added that
structural reform would not make the core problems disappear.
The adviser dismissed concern that the upcoming international conference on
the reconstruction of Gaza scheduled for Sharm e-Sheikh on Monday, in which
billions of dollars were expected to be pledged, including some $900 million
from the US, would effectively tie Israel's hands regarding a possible
future military operation in Gaza, since the world would not look favorably
on a situation where it was spending billions in Gaza, only to have Israel
go back in and wreak havoc.
The adviser said that Israel's right to self-defense was sacrosanct, and
that it would continue to exercise that right when it felt it needed to.
The reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, and finding ways to enable the
region's construction without strengthening Hamas, are expected to dominate
talks Mitchell will have Thursday with Israeli leaders, as well as talks
Clinton will hold when she arrives from the reconstruction conference next
week.
In addition to Mitchell, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana will arrive
for talks Thursday as part of a regional tour, as will Norwegian foreign
Minister Jonas Gahr Store.
Store, who will be staying Thursday night at the American Colony Hotel in
east Jerusalem, and in what seems an attempt at balance, will stay over the
weekend at the King David, is scheduled to go to Gaza on Friday.
Although Norway is one of only a few countries that continued to have
contact with Hamas after the organization came to power in 2006, Store is
not expected to meet Hamas representatives.
Israeli officials said that they had not been informed of any planned
meeting with Hamas in Gaza, and that such a meeting would obviously have
precluded any possible meeting between Store and Olmert or Barak.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said Wednesday that speaking to
Hamas was "the right thing to do," but Egypt and other parties were best
suited to talking directly to the group.
In an interview with Reuters in Cairo, Miliband said Egypt was acting on
behalf of the whole world in its dealings with Hamas.
"Egypt has been nominated... to speak to Hamas on behalf of the Arab League
but actually on behalf of the whole world," Miliband said. "Others speak to
Hamas. That's the right thing to do and I think we should let the Egyptians
take this forward."