vrijdag 10 december 2010

Israel as a Rogue State 151

Remembering to Forget Israel's Nonexistent Settlement Freeze
12/09/2010 by Peter Hart


The big news in the U.S.-guided Israel/Palestine talks is that a renewal of a so-called "settlement freeze" in the West Bank is basically dead. Ethan Bronner has a post-mortem of sorts in the New York Times (12/9/10), where he describes the backdrop for the previous round of negotiations:

The Israelis had insisted that the only way forward was through direct talks. Yet when those talks began in September, the Israelis engaged in little substance. The Palestinians had insisted that there could be no direct talks without a settlement freeze, yet they waited nine months into the last such freeze before agreeing to negotiate.

Bronner added that a "second settlement freeze was viewed as unnecessary and politically painful to achieve."

But the first "freeze" wasn't a freeze at all--though it was often portrayed that way.  I have an article in the new issue of Extra! that lays out the case. (Subscribe today and you can read the piece.)

What's especially interesting is the fact that Bronner once wrote one of the few pieces explaining that the freeze was mostly fiction. As he explained back in July:

an examination of the freeze after more than seven months suggests that it amounts to something less significant, at least on the ground. In many West Bank settlements, building is proceeding apace. Dozens of construction sites with scores of Palestinian workers are active.

To be able to write these facts once, and then somehow forget them, takes a special kind of talent.

Tags: Ethan Bronner, settlement freeze, West Bank

Tags: Ethan Bronner, settlement freeze, West Bank
Posted in Israel/Palestine, New York Times | Permalink | Trackback | Share

1 opmerking:

Sonja zei

BREAKING!

Minister Rosenthal: Kabinet wil 'Israël-bashing' bestrijden

Het kabinet van VVD en CDA met gedoogsteun van PVV wil het verschijnsel 'Israël-bashing' - het voortdurend negatief bejegenen van de Joodse staat - zoveel als mogelijk tegengaan.

Rosenthal: Israël-bashing tegengaan
Dat zegt minister Uri Rosenthal (VVD, Buitenlandse Zaken) zaterdag in een interview met de Volkskrant.

Thuis
'Ik vind het van groot belang dat Israël in het Midden-Oosten de enige democratische rechtsstaat is, met alle kritiek die je op sommige punten kunt hebben,' zegt hij.

Rosenthal, zelf van Joodse afkomst, zegt dat hij zich 'thuis voelt' bij de warme woorden die in het Regeerakkoord staan opgenomen over Israël. 'Wij willen weerstand bieden aan Israël-bashing, we willen investeren in de relatie met Israël.'