Gantz-Abbas meeting changes nothing for Palestinians
BY Osama Al Sharif
If anyone is familiar with the law of diminishing returns it must be Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The peace process that he had embraced since the early 1990s is no more, and in the last decade not a single round of diplomatic talks was held with Israel. So when Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz paid a rare visit to Ramallah on Sunday night to meet with Abbas, sources close to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett were quick to reiterate that there was no diplomatic process with the Palestinians in the horizon.
Abbas” office did not comment on the public meeting, the first of its kind since 2010, but Gantz tweeted that he had discussed security policy, civilian and economic issues and that he told Abbas that Israel seeks to take measures that will strengthen the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) economy. He went further to say that he discussed shaping the security and economic situations in the West Bank and in Gaza. “We agreed to continue communicating further on the issues that were raised during the meeting.”
The meeting took place a day after Bennett returned from his first official visit to Washington. Before he left he made it clear that there would be no peace with the Palestinians and the Israeli siege on Gaza will continue as long as Hamas rules the coastal enclave. He told The New York Times that there will be no progress in the peace process with the Palestinian, claiming peace talks would not happen because the Palestinian leadership is fractured and rudderless, as well as because he is resolutely opposed to Palestinian sovereignty.
While the Biden administration has committed to the two-state solution it is not ready to launch a new peace process. Its priority for now is to support the financially troubled PA and Palestinian institutions and improving the lives of Palestinians including those in the Gaza Strip. The White House has pressured Israel to ease the economic blockade of Gaza and support efforts for reconstruction following last May’s showdown which inflicted heavy damages to the enclave’s infrastructure.
Israel had agreed to increase Jordanian exports to the West Bank recently and under US pressure will take steps to advance what Bennett called “fiscal measures” to support the PA.
It is clear that the US and Israel are worried about the survival of the PA. Politically Abbas, Fateh and the PA had suffered badly following last May’s military confrontation between Hamas and Israel. Furthermore, Palestinian institutions are going through political paralysis with no signs that Abbas is willing to set a new date for legislative and presidential elections. The PA has been rounding critics and activists and using force against journalists. The human rights situation is getting worse and the European Union (EU) and the United Nations have expressed concern over the use of force against Palestinian exercising freedom of expression and assembly. Palestinians have been demonstrating against the PA following the death last June of activist Nizar Banat while in custody.
Those close to Abbas say he feels isolated and refuses to listen to close aides. Already there is chatter in the Israeli press about the day after Abbas, who refuses to name a successor.
The Gantz-Abbas meeting covered the only thing that remains of the Oslo Accords; security coordination. Hamas was quick to condemn the meeting saying that the only thing that Abbas cares about is maintaining security coordination with Israel which is an insult to the Palestinians.
Egypt has given up on its mediation between Hamas and Fateh to end intra-Palestinian friction and reach reconciliation. Hamas feels emboldened after its recent clash with Israel as its popularity in the West Bank has spiked at the expense of Fateh which remains deeply divided.
It is ironic that Abbas” survival now depends on the goodwill of Israel which is being ruled by a premier whose ideological beliefs reject Palestinian statehood as a matter of principle. With no political breakthrough in sight, Israel will continue expanding settlements, subjugating Palestinians and cementing apartheid rule. The PA can do nothing to stop the slow encroachment on Palestinian lands while the current US administration will not sponsor a new political process but hopes to manage the conflict by improving the lives of Palestinians.
It is a sad reality that after decades of struggle for liberation, the Palestinians find themselves facing a ruthless occupation that defies international law on a daily basis, on the one hand, and an authoritarian president who remains delusional about the prospects of negotiating a peace deal with Israel, on the other. Even sadder is that Palestinian activists and critics are being hunted down for demanding basic rights not by Israel but by the PA’s security forces.
Israel’s support of the 86-year-old Abbas aims at keeping the Palestinians at bay and under control, while negotiating long-term truce with Hamas. It is an ideal situation for Israel, for now, but one that is unsustainable in the long run.
BY Osama Al Sharif
If anyone is familiar with the law of diminishing returns it must be Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The peace process that he had embraced since the early 1990s is no more, and in the last decade not a single round of diplomatic talks was held with Israel. So when Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz paid a rare visit to Ramallah on Sunday night to meet with Abbas, sources close to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett were quick to reiterate that there was no diplomatic process with the Palestinians in the horizon.
Abbas” office did not comment on the public meeting, the first of its kind since 2010, but Gantz tweeted that he had discussed security policy, civilian and economic issues and that he told Abbas that Israel seeks to take measures that will strengthen the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) economy. He went further to say that he discussed shaping the security and economic situations in the West Bank and in Gaza. “We agreed to continue communicating further on the issues that were raised during the meeting.”
The meeting took place a day after Bennett returned from his first official visit to Washington. Before he left he made it clear that there would be no peace with the Palestinians and the Israeli siege on Gaza will continue as long as Hamas rules the coastal enclave. He told The New York Times that there will be no progress in the peace process with the Palestinian, claiming peace talks would not happen because the Palestinian leadership is fractured and rudderless, as well as because he is resolutely opposed to Palestinian sovereignty.
While the Biden administration has committed to the two-state solution it is not ready to launch a new peace process. Its priority for now is to support the financially troubled PA and Palestinian institutions and improving the lives of Palestinians including those in the Gaza Strip. The White House has pressured Israel to ease the economic blockade of Gaza and support efforts for reconstruction following last May’s showdown which inflicted heavy damages to the enclave’s infrastructure.
Israel had agreed to increase Jordanian exports to the West Bank recently and under US pressure will take steps to advance what Bennett called “fiscal measures” to support the PA.
It is clear that the US and Israel are worried about the survival of the PA. Politically Abbas, Fateh and the PA had suffered badly following last May’s military confrontation between Hamas and Israel. Furthermore, Palestinian institutions are going through political paralysis with no signs that Abbas is willing to set a new date for legislative and presidential elections. The PA has been rounding critics and activists and using force against journalists. The human rights situation is getting worse and the European Union (EU) and the United Nations have expressed concern over the use of force against Palestinian exercising freedom of expression and assembly. Palestinians have been demonstrating against the PA following the death last June of activist Nizar Banat while in custody.
Those close to Abbas say he feels isolated and refuses to listen to close aides. Already there is chatter in the Israeli press about the day after Abbas, who refuses to name a successor.
The Gantz-Abbas meeting covered the only thing that remains of the Oslo Accords; security coordination. Hamas was quick to condemn the meeting saying that the only thing that Abbas cares about is maintaining security coordination with Israel which is an insult to the Palestinians.
Egypt has given up on its mediation between Hamas and Fateh to end intra-Palestinian friction and reach reconciliation. Hamas feels emboldened after its recent clash with Israel as its popularity in the West Bank has spiked at the expense of Fateh which remains deeply divided.
It is ironic that Abbas” survival now depends on the goodwill of Israel which is being ruled by a premier whose ideological beliefs reject Palestinian statehood as a matter of principle. With no political breakthrough in sight, Israel will continue expanding settlements, subjugating Palestinians and cementing apartheid rule. The PA can do nothing to stop the slow encroachment on Palestinian lands while the current US administration will not sponsor a new political process but hopes to manage the conflict by improving the lives of Palestinians.
It is a sad reality that after decades of struggle for liberation, the Palestinians find themselves facing a ruthless occupation that defies international law on a daily basis, on the one hand, and an authoritarian president who remains delusional about the prospects of negotiating a peace deal with Israel, on the other. Even sadder is that Palestinian activists and critics are being hunted down for demanding basic rights not by Israel but by the PA’s security forces.
Israel’s support of the 86-year-old Abbas aims at keeping the Palestinians at bay and under control, while negotiating long-term truce with Hamas. It is an ideal situation for Israel, for now, but one that is unsustainable in the long run.
BY Osama Al Sharif
If anyone is familiar with the law of diminishing returns it must be Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The peace process that he had embraced since the early 1990s is no more, and in the last decade not a single round of diplomatic talks was held with Israel. So when Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz paid a rare visit to Ramallah on Sunday night to meet with Abbas, sources close to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett were quick to reiterate that there was no diplomatic process with the Palestinians in the horizon.
Abbas” office did not comment on the public meeting, the first of its kind since 2010, but Gantz tweeted that he had discussed security policy, civilian and economic issues and that he told Abbas that Israel seeks to take measures that will strengthen the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) economy. He went further to say that he discussed shaping the security and economic situations in the West Bank and in Gaza. “We agreed to continue communicating further on the issues that were raised during the meeting.”
The meeting took place a day after Bennett returned from his first official visit to Washington. Before he left he made it clear that there would be no peace with the Palestinians and the Israeli siege on Gaza will continue as long as Hamas rules the coastal enclave. He told The New York Times that there will be no progress in the peace process with the Palestinian, claiming peace talks would not happen because the Palestinian leadership is fractured and rudderless, as well as because he is resolutely opposed to Palestinian sovereignty.
While the Biden administration has committed to the two-state solution it is not ready to launch a new peace process. Its priority for now is to support the financially troubled PA and Palestinian institutions and improving the lives of Palestinians including those in the Gaza Strip. The White House has pressured Israel to ease the economic blockade of Gaza and support efforts for reconstruction following last May’s showdown which inflicted heavy damages to the enclave’s infrastructure.
Israel had agreed to increase Jordanian exports to the West Bank recently and under US pressure will take steps to advance what Bennett called “fiscal measures” to support the PA.
It is clear that the US and Israel are worried about the survival of the PA. Politically Abbas, Fateh and the PA had suffered badly following last May’s military confrontation between Hamas and Israel. Furthermore, Palestinian institutions are going through political paralysis with no signs that Abbas is willing to set a new date for legislative and presidential elections. The PA has been rounding critics and activists and using force against journalists. The human rights situation is getting worse and the European Union (EU) and the United Nations have expressed concern over the use of force against Palestinian exercising freedom of expression and assembly. Palestinians have been demonstrating against the PA following the death last June of activist Nizar Banat while in custody.
Those close to Abbas say he feels isolated and refuses to listen to close aides. Already there is chatter in the Israeli press about the day after Abbas, who refuses to name a successor.
The Gantz-Abbas meeting covered the only thing that remains of the Oslo Accords; security coordination. Hamas was quick to condemn the meeting saying that the only thing that Abbas cares about is maintaining security coordination with Israel which is an insult to the Palestinians.
Egypt has given up on its mediation between Hamas and Fateh to end intra-Palestinian friction and reach reconciliation. Hamas feels emboldened after its recent clash with Israel as its popularity in the West Bank has spiked at the expense of Fateh which remains deeply divided.
It is ironic that Abbas” survival now depends on the goodwill of Israel which is being ruled by a premier whose ideological beliefs reject Palestinian statehood as a matter of principle. With no political breakthrough in sight, Israel will continue expanding settlements, subjugating Palestinians and cementing apartheid rule. The PA can do nothing to stop the slow encroachment on Palestinian lands while the current US administration will not sponsor a new political process but hopes to manage the conflict by improving the lives of Palestinians.
It is a sad reality that after decades of struggle for liberation, the Palestinians find themselves facing a ruthless occupation that defies international law on a daily basis, on the one hand, and an authoritarian president who remains delusional about the prospects of negotiating a peace deal with Israel, on the other. Even sadder is that Palestinian activists and critics are being hunted down for demanding basic rights not by Israel but by the PA’s security forces.
Israel’s support of the 86-year-old Abbas aims at keeping the Palestinians at bay and under control, while negotiating long-term truce with Hamas. It is an ideal situation for Israel, for now, but one that is unsustainable in the long run.
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Gantz-Abbas meeting changes nothing for Palestinians
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