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Books

Israel/Palestine: a clash of arms and opinions

Two new volumes focus on the intensity of Arab-Jewish differences in Palestine and Israel, with differing emphases

April 16, 2009 10:23
Norwegian Foreign Minister Kurt Vollebek and Yasir Arafat being asked about a talks stalemate in 1997

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

2 min read

Impossible Peace: Israel/Palestine Since 1989
By Mark LeVine
Zed Books, £14.99

‘A Senseless, Squalid war’ — Voices From Palestine 1945-1948
By Norman Rose
The Bodley Head, £20

There is no shortage of books purporting to explain the origins and history of the conflict between Israel and the Arab world. By way of justification for adding to this ever-burgeoning library, Mark LeVine, of the University of California, promises a “fresh and honest” account of the collapse of the peace process initiated at Oslo in 1993.

The nub of Dr LeVine’s argument is that Oslo was destined, and probably designed, never to bring about lasting peace because it was predicated, not on the establishment of a Palestinian-Arab state equal to the Jewish state in terms of its economic foundations and capacity for socio-economic independence, but on a model of dependence and (hence) subservience. At best, Oslo would have given birth to a client-state without financial autonomy, let alone geographical integrity.