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لنكن
عمليين مع الفلسطينيين المحرر لوس
أنجلوس تايمز- 21/3/2007 إن خطوة أمريكا في اللقاء
بمسئولين فلسطينيين صحيحة
طالما أنها توقف المساعدات عن
الفلسطينيين حتى اعترافهم بحق
إسرائيل في الوجود. EDITORIAL Be practical with the
Palestinians The U.S. is right to meet with Palestinian officials
as long as it keeps up the aid embargo until they
recognize Israel's right to exist. March 21, 2007 AS IF PURSUING a peace agreement between Israel and
the Palestinians weren't difficult enough, the United
States now faces the added complication of dissension
from some of its European allies. Averting an open split
may require some creative diplomacy by the Bush
administration. On Tuesday, France announced that it favored a
resumption in European Union aid to the Palestinian
Authority now that the Fatah movement of President
Mahmoud Abbas has formed a coalition government with the
Islamic party Hamas. Meanwhile, Germany's ambassador to
Britain was suggesting "more active input from
Europe" in resolving the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, a seemingly innocent suggestion that may
unnerve Israelis, who long have distrusted European
intentions. There is a danger that some European countries —
with the notable exception of Britain — will "go
wobbly" (as former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
might say) by easing the current pressure on the new
Palestinian government to recognize Israel's right to
exist. But the best way for Washington to preserve a
united front may be to join its European allies in
maintaining lines of communication to moderate members
of the Palestinian coalition. That, indeed, is what the Bush administration is
doing even as it refuses to resume aid to the
Palestinian Authority because of Hamas' refusal to
recognize Israel — one of the requirements of the
so-called quartet of the United States, the United
Nations, Russia and the European Union. The other
conditions are that Hamas renounce violence and accept
past peace agreements. On Tuesday, the U.S. consul general in Jerusalem met
the Palestinian finance minister in the West Bank town
of Ramallah. In authorizing such a contact, Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice was breaking ranks with Israel,
which has refused to talk to representatives of the
Hamas-Fatah coalition. But, now as in the past, some
daylight between the U.S. and Israeli positions is
desirable — for both Israel and the United States —
because it allows Washington to play interlocutor. The Bush administration rightly is drawing the line,
however, in refusing to restore aid to the Palestinian
Authority until Hamas satisfies the quartet's
conditions. And Hamas has not done so. In a speech last
Saturday, the Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh,
defended "resistance in all its forms" even as
Abbas was pleading with Palestinians to reject "all
forms of violence." On Monday, a Hamas sniper shot
and wounded an Israeli electric company worker near the
Gaza border. Fortunately, an embargo on aid to the Palestinian
Authority hasn't prevented humanitarian assistance from
reaching Palestinians through organizations such as the
U.N.'s World Food Program. That fact makes it easier for
the United States to argue — even as it talks to
Palestinian moderates — that the quartet must hang
tough with Hamas. http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-mideast21mar21,0,6023643.story?coll=la-opinion-leftrail ----------------- نشرنا
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