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By

Peter Simon

Opinion

Why the Palestinians are so intransigent

April 3, 2010 24:41
3 min read

The Palestinians do not want peace. Indeed, they do not even agree to
speak with us. While the leaders of the only country in the Middle East (well, not the only country) whose universal greeting is the word "shalom" take every opportunity to shout "let's talk," it is the Palestinians who are refusing the outstretched hand of peace and proving themselves stubborn in negotiations. They're not coming. As such, let us use this space to sound a desperate call to their leaders: Let's talk.

Let's talk with an Israeli government that boasts of at least six ministers in its "forum of seven" of top decision-makers who say they do not believe in an agreement with you. Ehud Barak, who represents the "leftist" wing in the group, is the father of the "no partner" doctrine that crushed to smithereens the remnants of the Israeli peace camp. To his right sit Moshe Ya'alon and Avigdor Lieberman, Eli Yishai and Benny Begin, all of whom are led by Benjamin Netanyahu. None of these figures believes in an agreement with you, non-partners that you are. It is only America they wish to appease.

So come and talk to them. Sit down and talk, without preconditions, with a government that views a temporary cessation of construction in the settlements as an insufferable "edict." Sit down and talk with those who have long ago decided that Jerusalem and the endless settlement blocs will remain under Israeli sovereignty. Come and talk just like you did with previous governments, those who appeared in photo-ops with you and then settled on your lands, proposed "far-reaching" solutions that fall short of the fair minimum from your standpoint and then kill 1,400 people in Operation Cast Lead.

Come and talk with those who have imposed a brutal siege on your Gaza Strip. Speak with those who are not ready to talk with a movement that captured a majority of votes in a democratic election. Talk with those who imprisoned your founding father in the Muqata, claiming that he is an obstacle to peace, and, after he left the scene, said his successor was "too weak" to make peace. Come and talk with those who claimed that the absence of peace is due to terrorism, and that when there is no terrorism, there is also no peace.