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David Singer is an Australian Lawyer and Convenor of: Jordan is Palestine International - an organisation calling for sovereignty of the West Bank and Gaza to be allocated between Israel and Jordan as the two successor States to the Mandate for Palestine.
dsinger2000@gmail.com
Previous views
"Palestine" after Bush - Vision or Mirage?
Ending The Ping Pong Game In Gaza
This Holmes is no Sherlock
Gazans Get Pumped. And Dumped.
Gaza Explodes, Arab League Implodes
Gaza: Stateless, Leaderless, Powerless, Mindless
President Bush leaves lasting legacy for Arab League
President Bush and the PLO: Rocket Science, and Commonsense
Has the PLO lost the plot - or missed the boat - again?
His Beatitude's Attitude leaves Bush no latitude
Palestinian Funding Frenzy
Liberating the Palestine Liberation Organization, and Israel
After Annapolis - Political Paralysis
Annapolis drop-ins and Mary Poppins
Annapolis turning into La-La-Land
Land for War with the PA or Land for Peace with Jordan?
President Bush Presses the Palestine Panic Button
Israel's Illusion - Fatah feted is Hamas hated
Palestine, Paralysis and Plato

Views: Abandon Abbas
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Rival Palestinian factions reach deal to cool tensions
Abbas extends deadline to Hamas to endorse Israel recognition plan
Abbas extends deadline to Hamas to endorse Palestinian "prisoners plan"
Abbas rejects any changes to proposal for two-state solution with Israel

 
Abbas anger at Bush for recognizing Jewish State bodes ill for peace
By David Singer   May 24, 2008


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PLO Chairman, President of the Palestinian Authority and Constable of the West Bank Mahmoud Abbas was clearly not happy with the remarks made by President Bush on the occasion of the 60th Anniversary of Israel's reconstitution as an independent Jewish state within its biblical homeland 2000 years after it had last flourished there.

In what the Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram's Publisher Mursi Attallah described as "a Torah (Old Testament) inspired speech", President Bush told the Knesset:

"We gather to mark a momentous occasion. Sixty years ago in Tel Aviv, David Ben-Gurion proclaimed Israel's independence, founded on the 'natural right of the Jewish people to be masters of their own fate.' What followed was more than the establishment of a new country. It was the redemption of an ancient promise given to Abraham and Moses and David -- a homeland for the chosen people in Eretz Yisrael."

President Bush's words affirming such ancient and historical Jewish rights certainly did not break any new ground that would justify Abbas's outrage as he told a news conference in Sharm El Sheikh: "What President Bush said at the Knesset made us angry and did not satisfy us. We told him what we need is a balanced position."

Similar moving and eloquent words to those spoken by President Bush had been used by the Peel Commission in 1937 when attempting to resolve the then escalating conflict between Jews and Arabs in Palestine. The Commission's words were equally as compelling as President Bush's:

"While the Jews had thus been dispersed over the world, they had never forgotten Palestine. If Christians have become familiar through the Bible with the physiognomy of the country and its place names and events that happened more than two years ago , the link which binds Jews to Palestine and its past history is to them far closer and more intimate. Judaism and its rituals are rooted in those memories. Among countless illustrations it is enough to cite the fact that Jews, wherever they may be, still pray for rain at the season it is needed in Palestine. And the same devotion to the Land of Israel, Eretz Israel, the same sense of exile from it, permeates Jewish secular thought. Some of the finest Hebrew poetry written in the Diaspora has been inspired, like the Psalms of Captivity , by the longing to return to Zion."

Arab leaders then refused to accept the truth inherent in those words -- just as Abbas today refuses to accept the words spoken by President Bush in the Knesset.

President Bush's Road Map is but the latest in a long line of well intended and serious attempts by the international community to resolve the conflict in Palestine between Jews and Arabs since the League of Nations in 1922 affirmed "the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and to the grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country".

This recognition affording the Jewish people the right of self determination in Palestine did not take place in isolation but as part of a series of international obligations that granted the Arabs the right to self determination in what today is called Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Jordan - an area a hundred times the size of the former Palestine.

President Bush had made it clear to Abbas four years ago that the successful outcome to his Roadmap involved Abbas accepting Israel as the Jewish State existing alongside a 23rd Arab state that would be created for the Arab residents of former Palestine under the President's plan.

Yet the idea of a Jewish State has long been anathema for Abbas since his days in exile in Tunis with Yasser Arafat more than 25 years ago. He has been unable to rid this monkey off his back as he continues to lead the Palestine Liberation Organisation whose Charter rejects the very words uttered by President Bush in the Knesset last week and by the Peel Commission six decades ago.

The most Abbas has been able to bring himself to grudgingly acknowledge was contained in the following statement made by him last December: "From a historical perspective, there are two states: Israel and Palestine. In Israel, there are Jews and others living there. This we are willing to recognize, nothing else."

That is not the historical perspective President Bush expressed in the Knesset last week. As long as Abbas refuses to recognise the President's perspective, he will be incompetent and impotent to move forward in negotiations.

Arab leaders such as Anwar Sadat of Egypt and King Hussein of Jordan were prepared to make the quantum leap and recognise Israel as the Jewish State -- a jump that Abbas is still obviously not prepared to take judging by his reaction to President Bush's speech in the Knesset.

Abbas's outburst at President Bush's remarks indicates that he is just one more in a long line of failed Arab leaders who refused to accept the idea of Jews having their own state. As a result, he ensures continued suffering and humiliation for those whose national interest he was supposed to advance.

Until Abbas recognizes that the Jewish People deserves its own nation, he can hardly expect the United States and the world, let alone Israel, to deliver on a silver platter a state for his own beleaguered people.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


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