Monday, March 28, 2011

Jerusalem: 'Quartet peace plan must take into account Israeli demands'

(Jpost).If the Quartet feels obligated to propose outlines of a final Israeli-Palestinian settlement at the end of its upcoming meeting, it needs to take into account Israeli demands, not only Palestinian ones, government sources said this week amid speculation the Quartet may delineate how it sees a final settlement.

Britain, France and Germany have reportedly been urging the EU and the UN to propose a statement that would say that a future agreement would be based upon the 1967 lines "with agreed upon land swaps," and reach a "just fair and agreed solution to the refugee question."

Israeli officials have recently articulated frustration that some inside the EU are interested in the Quartet issuing a statement mentioning the "1967 lines with agreed upon land swaps," while ignoring Israeli demands, such as that any future Palestinian state needed to be "demilitarized," and that the Palestinians must recognize Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people.

"Why get specific on the issue of borders, but not on anything else?" one official asked.

The idea of the Quartet presenting what it sees as the parameters of a future solution is viewed by some in Jerusalem as an attempt to show the Palestinians an "end game," so they might overcome their objections to negotiating with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu until he stops all settlement construction, including in Jerusalem.

Israeli officials, however, doubt this tactic will work, and that if the Palestinians see that they can get benefits from the international community as a result of refusing to engage with Israel, they will continue to refuse to negotiate, believing this will bring them even more. They also say that this creates the "illusion" that the international community can deliver a peace agreement while avoiding Israel, something one official characterized as a "mirage."

The Palestinians will only return to the table, the official said, if the international community makes clear that the Palestinians will get nothing without returning to talks.

The Quartet is expected to meet in mid-April at the most senior level – US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, EU foreign policy chief Catherin Ashton, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and Blair. No date or venue has yet been set, leading to some doubt in Jerusalem about whether the meeting – at a time when the world's attention is focused on other nations in the region – will even take place.