There are signs the Israeli government is considering taking unilateral
action if peace talks with the Palestinians remain stalled, a move which
could involve a withdrawal from parts of the West Bank along the lines
of a 2005 pullout from the Gaza Strip.
Defence Minister Ehud Barak told a high-profile security conference on
Wednesday that inaction was not an option and Israel could not wait
forever to reach an accord.
“Israel cannot afford to tread water,” Mr. Barak said. If a deal “proves
to be impossible, we have to consider a provisional arrangement or even
unilateral action”.
The statement reflected a growing sense of urgency in Israel about
ending its 45-year entanglement with the Palestinians, even if no peace
deal is possible.
Two decades of on-again, off-again peace talks have failed to yield an
agreement, and negotiations have been frozen for more than three years.
And as time passed, a shift of thinking has quietly occurred in Israel —
the occupation of Palestinian lands may ultimately be bad for Israel
simply because ruling millions of Arabs will demographically sink the
Jewish state.
The new twist
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has grown increasingly vocal
about the need to separate from the Palestinians, now has a broad
coalition freeing him of nationalists who claim biblical rights to the
West Bank.
Mr. Netanyahu, who for years rejected most concessions to the
Palestinians, has also raised concerns in recent months that continued
control of the more than two million Palestinians in the West Bank would
threaten Israel's character as a democracy with a Jewish majority.
Palestinian officials quickly rejected the idea of unilateral Israel
moves clearly concerned that after a partial pullout leaving them well
short of their goals, Israel would have scant reason to negotiate
further.
Mr. Netanyahu was a leading opponent to the 2005 Gaza pullout, resigning
as Finance Minister at the time to protest what he believed was a
surrender to violence.
The withdrawal, in which Israel uprooted all 8,500 Jewish settlers and
thousands of soldiers, achieved its goal of enforcing a separation
between Israel and the 1.5 million Palestinians of the tiny,
impoverished strip.
But most Israelis nonetheless see it as a failure — shortly after the
pullout, Hamas militants violently seized control of the territory from
the more moderate Palestinian Authority of President Mahmoud Abbas,
turning it into a hotbed of fundamentalist Islam and a base for frequent
rocket attacks on southern Israel.
Mr. Netanyahu has warned he will not allow the same thing to happen in
the larger, more central highland of the West Bank, where rocket squads
would have Israel's international airport and major cities in easy
range.
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