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Middle East & Israel Breaking News » Middle East » Article

Abbas claims Israel doesn't want peace


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Israel does not want peace, does not want to stop settlement construction and does not want the two-state solution, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said on Sunday.

Addressing supporters during a rare visit to Bethlehem and Hebron, Abbas said that the Palestinians would not make any additional concessions and would continue to demand their rights.

"I don't know what the Israelis want," he said. "They must start thinking about what needs to be done if they really want peace."

Meanwhile, Hassan Khraisheh, deputy speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, called on Abbas to seriously consider dissolving the PA because of the failure of the peace process.

"This authority was created so that it could prepare for the establishment of a Palestinian state," Khraisheh said. "But after more than 15 years of thorough negotiations with Israel, this state still hasn't been established."

On Sunday, The Jerusalem Post, quoting senior PA officials, revealed that Abbas was already considering dismantling the PA, to protest Washington's failure to force Israel to freeze settlement construction.

Abbas said that he was not setting preconditions for resuming peace talks with Israel, but was only demanding the implementation of the road map plan for peace in the Middle East.

"We have accepted the road map and United Nations resolutions and we have fulfilled all our obligations toward the peace process," Abbas declared. "We have made big achievements regarding security and the economy [in the West Bank], while the Israelis haven't done anything."

He told the crowd that Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Hebron, with their mosques and churches, will forever remain Palestinian cities.

"No matter how much they [Israel] try to assault our holy sites and lands, we won't allow them to do so," he said. "Jerusalem will remain the eternal capital of the Palestinian people."

Abbas urged the Palestinians not to lose faith in peace, and to continue their efforts to achieve security, stability and independence.

He also lashed out at Hamas, accusing the Islamist movement of foiling Egyptian efforts to end the crisis with Fatah.

Abbas's visit to Bethlehem came amid renewed talk about tensions between him and PA Prime Minister Salaam Fayad.

A senior PA official said that Abbas was surprised to hear on Sunday morning from the Israeli media about secret understandings between Fayad and President Barack Obama over US recognition of Fayad's plan for an independent Palestinian state.

Such recognition would purportedly transform any Israeli presence in the West Bank and eastern Jerusalem into an illegal incursion, to which the Palestinians would be entitled to respond in self-defense.

A source close to Fayad said that no such secret deal had been reached with the Americans.

Fayad recently unveiled a detailed plan for creating a de facto state within two years. But many believe its undeclared intention is to unilaterally create a Palestinian state within two years.

Portions of Fayad's plan for statehood have been welcomed by the Israeli government because of its emphasis on building infrastructure and bolstering the Palestinian security forces as well as its economy.

But Israel has opposed any move by the Palestinians to unilaterally declare a state, nor does it believe that America would support such a move.

Speaking last week at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon addressed the veiled threat of a unilateral Palestinian declaration of statehood when asked about Fayad's plan.

"The emergence of a Palestinian state will only be the result of consensus and successful negotiations," Ayalon said. He added that he believed the two-year time line was unrealistic.

A Foreign Ministry official told the Post on Sunday that the US administration does not favor unilateral moves and has very clearly called on both Israelis and Palestinians to resume negotiations.

"A negotiated peace is the only game in town at the moment," the Foreign Ministry official said.

The senior PA official told the Post that Abbas was "unaware" of any secret deal between Obama and Fayad.

"The Americans should know that Fayad is the prime minister and not the president," the official said. "Any attempt to bypass President Abbas will fail, because he's the only address."

A Fatah operative closely associated with Abbas said that there is growing concern among Fatah leaders that the US was trying to "replace Abbas with Fayad."

"There's a feeling that the Americans have reached a decision to turn Fayad into the president of the Palestinian Authority," the Fatah official said. "This has created tensions between the two men."

Azzam al-Ahmed, a senior Fatah official and Abbas loyalist, said that his faction considers Abbas the only suitable candidate to lead the Palestinians.

"There is no substitute for President Abbas," he said, in a clear message to the US.

He also did not rule out that possibility that Abbas would postpone the elections slated for January 24, due to the ongoing crisis with Hamas.

Sources in Ramallah noted that Fayad had not come out strongly in support of Abbas after the latter's announcement that he would not run in the next elections. Unlike many senior PA and Fatah officials, Fayad has refrained from making a public appeal to Abbas to reconsider his decision.

Meanwhile, Hamas announced that Fayad does not have a mandate to reach any agreement on behalf of the Palestinians. Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri condemned Fayad as a tool in the hands of the Israelis and Americans.

"Fayad does not represent the Palestinian people," Abu Zuhri said. "His ideas are aimed at covering up for the failure of the so-called peace process."

But Dan Diker, a senior analyst for the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, said he believed that it would be Abbas who would unilaterally declare a Palestinian state somewhere in the next 16 to 20 months, since Fayad lacked the authority to do so.

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Post comment | Terms | Report Abuse
131. #99 Sam. That you don't know how Jews stole Palestinian land is amazing.
Ron - USA (11/10/2009 22:19)
130. #115 Wallace. Pacepa, Romanian was not near highest Spviet Bloc defector.
Ron - USA (11/10/2009 18:59)
129. #106 Ray Saperstein using a lie to accuse another
Ron - USA (11/10/2009 18:21)
128. #38 Eitan Netanyahu did not offer Abbas a Palestinian state in 2009
Ron - USA (11/10/2009 18:15)
127. Palestine a new Kosovo
matt - (11/10/2009 15:04)
126. to #' 114 - 116 Wallace W. Lincoln USA
sandi s - USA (11/10/2009 09:39)
125. to # 106 Ray & # 107 Abie USA
sandi s - USA (11/10/2009 09:32)
124. Libelous charges against Abbas by one who doesn't know better. #117 Lee
Ron - USA (11/10/2009 06:29)
123. Abbas claims Israel doesn't want peace
Robert Nickisson - Australia (11/10/2009 06:20)
122. Mr Ennis, your lack of knowledge is incredible
Ray Saperstein - USA (11/09/2009 23:14)
121. Thanks Wallace Brand
Abie Dee - US (11/09/2009 23:09)
120. Mr. Ennis
Abie Dee - US (11/09/2009 23:02)
119. Abbas and peace.
fred - Canada (11/09/2009 22:21)
118. Let's talk about what the Arabs have done for peace
Gee - (11/09/2009 21:26)
117. Why do some believe mass murderers? How many more times will abu mazen spout this crap before hes done??
Lee - UK (11/09/2009 21:21)
116. Palestinian Homeland a fiction created by the Soviets
Wallace Edward Brand - USA (11/09/2009 20:50)
115. More nonsense by Ennis
Wallace Edward Brand - USA (11/09/2009 20:38)
114. What nonsense by Ennis
Wallace Edward Brand - USA (11/09/2009 20:35)
113. What the civilized want
David W. Lincoln - Alberta, Canada (11/09/2009 19:53)
112. to 106
William M Ennis - Canada (11/09/2009 19:38)
111. to 107 Stop lying
William M Ennis - Canada (11/09/2009 19:34)
110. # 103 Insane again
M - (11/09/2009 19:16)
109. Fayad's plan is the only game in town.
David - (11/09/2009 19:15)
108. Arafat in a suit Abbas. "we will not make any more concessions"
M - (11/09/2009 19:11)
107. Israel doesn't want peace ??????
Abie Dee - US (11/09/2009 18:21)
106. "Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Hebron,... will forever remain Palestinian cities".
Ray Saperstein - USA (11/09/2009 18:15)
105. PA doesn't want real peace or they would recognize Israel and renounce terrorism!
C.J.M. - U.S.A. (11/09/2009 18:04)
104. # 82. As usual, he's wrong.
The other Bob - USA (11/09/2009 17:41)
103. Israel, by refusing to accept Palestinian's right to statehood based on UN borders, will invite terrorist attacks upon itself including nuclear bombs
insan mukmin - Malaysia (11/09/2009 17:23)
102. Napoleon
Jordan Ariel - (11/09/2009 16:41)
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