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  • Israel's "new Middle East"*
  • "According to security sources"
  • Behind the smokescreen of the Gaza pullout*
  • From The Hague to Mas'ha*
  • The long road home
  • "You and I and the next war"
  • The great experiment
  • Israel's missed opportunities for peace (partial list)
  • A four-letter word
  • To talk with Hamas
  • A massacre foretold
  • For whom the bells toll
  • "God wills it!"
  • Vanunu: the terrible secret
  • Ehud Barak: a villa in the jungle
  • Pioneers of terrorism
  • Myth-based propaganda
  • A quick guide to the Palestine-Israel conflict
  • In clear sight of Yad Vashem
  • Europe, Israel and the Palestinians
  • Checkpoints and house demolitions
  • The power of saying no
  • Sharon - the end of an era?
  • State land, state people
  • The return of Palestinian refugees is an existential necessity for Israeli Jews
  • Israel's use of terrorist tactics
  • Summer rains and Saad
  • Bickering while Rome burns
  • Inshallah
  • A vision of Palestine
  • Peace work and virtual Palestine
  • Tsunami in Gaza, celebration of peace in Jerusalem
  • Pussycat
  • Kidnap of BBC reporter Alan Johnston
  • Blood on our hands
  • The Livni-Rice Plan
  • Exercise in escapism
  • Flushing out the traitors and criminals in our midst
  • The people of Palestine must seize power now
  • On generals and admirals
  • Crocodile tears
  • Hope at the edge of the precipice
  • Saving Mahmoud Abbas
  • The dirty word
  • Israel keeping on a steady course to apartheid
  • An Israeli love story
  • A stupid war
  • A trap for fools
  • White elephants
  • Not only territory, but viability
  • Saying no to the hunters of Goliath
  • A bruised reed
  • Medical conditions caused by political decisions
  • The Palestinian Mandela
  • So, what is different about the village of Wadi Fuqeen?
  • Revisiting the partition of Palestine
  • Say it with flowers
  • How to get out?
  • Between apartheid and the status quo
  • The right to our Palestinian land must be restored
  • Separate but unequal in Palestine
  • O'Bethlehem
  • Will peace cost me my home?
  • A generous offer to the Palestinian refugees?
  • How they stole the bomb from us
  • Non-stop ethnic cleansing
  • Torture and torment in 2007 AD
  • Israel's Palestinians speak out
  • See Gaza and weep
  • Prerequisites for peace between Israel and Palestinians
  • Help! A cease-fire!
  • The case of the White Bird
  • The hands of Esau
  • Israel paralysing Christianity in Holy Land
  • This time next year?
  • Worse than a crime
  • The strangulation of Gaza
  • An end foreseen
  • Blood and champagne
  • Is Israel using prohibited “thermobarbaric” weapons in its holocaust?
  • The right to equate Gaza with Auschwitz
  • How Israel taught Hamas all it knows
  • "Kill a hundred Turks and rest..."
  • Gaza's “bigger holocaust”
  • Gaza: Oxfam has the answer
  • Photos of the sea
  • "I came, I saw, I destroyed!"
  • The “rogue entity”
  • Manifest destiny?
  • Jewish settlers flood Palestinian neighbours with sewage
  • Good for Carter
  • Time is running out for Israel*
  • The ongoing Nakba
  • With friends like these...
  • Will Gaza ever get a whiff of its offshore gas?
  • Land of Hope and Glory
  • Escaping forward
  • Grabbing Jerusalem's bread and water
  • Ehud Olmert’s Syrian peace spin
  • Palestinians must learn media skills
  • Palestinian envoy to Britain told to be more proactive
  • Israel deporting Jerusalem Christians
  • Who needs enemies?
  • Tactics that ended apartheid in South Africa can end it in Israel
  • Occupation by bureaucracy
  • A mission to uphold the law
  • When guilt turns red
  • Détente or hidden agendas?
  • A West Bank town’s fight to survive
  • "If I forget thee, Umm Touba..."
  • Palestinian family denied even half a house 
  • The powerful own the law
  • The struggle against Jerusalem’s quiet ethnic cleansing
  • Breaking the Gaza siege
  • Truth and consequences under the Israeli occupation
  • Palestinians unfairly hit by Israeli policy in Gaza
  • Double standards and cowardice still guide Western diplomacy
  • Will the Palestinian Authority be there to greet the “freedom” boats when they reach Gaza?
  • Blocking a Gazan's path to San Diego
  • Free Gaza
  • Israeli investigation of assault on Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer a whitewash
  • Photo story: Gazans forced back to the Middle Ages
  • Voyage of the 'Little People' shames self-righteous West
  • Israel's outposts seal death of Palestinian state
  • Sailing into Gaza
  • Israeli PR fails the “decent, honest and truthful” test
  • Palestinian village faces army reign of terror
  • Israelis hinder academic pursuits
  • Israel turns Gaza into prison for Palestinian scholars
  • Israel must rein in settler movement, protect Palestinian children
  • A new initiative for ending the Israeli occupation...
  • Israel's dark arts of ensnaring collaborators
  • Israeli apartheid in action
  • Keeping the sea-lane to Gaza open permanently
  • A notional interview with Paul McCartney
  • Will fair Britannia be rescued from wicked baron’s tower?
  • Archaeology becomes a curse for Jerusalem's Palestinians
  • Israel’s breeding ground for Jewish terrorism
  • Logic of the Dark Ages
  • Israel’s “city of coexistence” shows its true colours
  • Israel “brand” will magically smell sweeter
  • Tractatus Logico Palestinicus
  • Israel bars visit to father’s grave
  • Israeli murder of 47 in Kafr Qassem commemorated
  • Israel’s travesty of tolerance on display
  • Land thieves
  • Israel tightens chokehold on village of entrepreneurs
  • The real goal of Israel’s blockade of Gaza
  • Who will stop the settlers?
  • Gaza’s Grim Reaper
  • Hebron settlers take their fight into Israel
  • Arab town blamed for Jewish Pride march’s cancellation
  • Spot the difference
  • World leaders sing the praise of fruitless peace talks
  • Oh, come all ye faithful…
  • Hamas will not be shaken by Israeli war crimes
  • Can there be any doubt who the real terrorists are?
  • What is Israel's goal in Gaza?
  • Self-defence
  • Israel’s lie machine working flat out to dodge “killer” question
  • Palestinians – write your history
  • The real goal of the slaughter in Gaza
  • Keep your eye on the ball – the slaughter in Gaza is not about rockets
  • Molten lead
  • Profile of Sderot
  • Speak out against the slaughter in Gaza
  • The nucleus of evil
  • Israel's new war ethic
  • Israel’s propaganda mainstay, Sderot, is a lie (like everything else)
  • Israel’s aim is to make the Gazan prison even more secure
  • Palestinians will never forget
  • Criticism of Israel's war crimes mounts
  • Revise terror list – de-classify Hamas and move forward
  • How many divisions?
  • Blueprint for Gaza attack was long planned
  • “Our humanity is incomplete,” says Queen Rania
  • Israel bars Arab parties from election
  • Could the rising anger of British MPs over Gaza shake America’s complacency?
  • Gaza 2009: betrayal and cowardice brought us to this
  • Israeli assault injures 1.5 million Gazans
  • In Gaza our love for God is in “intensive care”
  • How to sell “ethical warfare”
  • From diet to shoah
  • Israel’s doctrine of destruction
  • Gaza’s pastor speaks of his people’s suffering at Israel’s hands
  • Ritual murder in Gaza
  • Stripping Palestinians of their right to self-defence
  • Black flag
  • Did the Israeli army wage a Jewish jihad in Gaza?
  • Israeli university welcomes “war crimes” colonel
  • Still patting the Mad Dog?
  • Divesting from Israel’s “weapon of mass destruction”
  • “Salt of the earth” send aid convoy to Gaza while Brown sends the Royal Navy to help lawless Israel
  • Be fair to Hamas, Mr Obama
  • The only Palestinian woman in Israel’s parliament
  • Israel’s military Mephistopheles
  • Remember Ophira?
  • Palestinian villages become Israel’s playground
  • Thank you, George Galloway
  • Bedouin baby’s power struggle with Israel
  • Israel’s Occupation
  • Turkey’s fallout with Israel deals blow to settlers
  • Wake up, Christians, or lose the Holy Land
  • Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's shame
  • Biberman & Co
  • Remembering Land Day
  • Changing the rules of war
  • Palestinian student foils Israeli bid to wreck family’s education hopes
  • Israel on trial
  • Who’s the boss?
  • Israel Railways accused of racism over sacked Arab guards
  • Shattering the myth of democracy and equality in Israel
  • Let’s skip Gaza: Pope’s PR blunder
  • Law and justice first, Mr Mitchell. Peace comes later
  • Thanks, Palestinians, for St George!
  • Piracy off the promised land
  • What kind of democracy is that?
  • The emperor’s old clothes
  • Farewell to Gaza’s courageous priest
  • Israeli activist to be jailed for caring – unless the world protests
  • Ghada Karmi exposes Israeli racism
  • Pope’s “pilgrimage” mired in politics
  • Quarrel on the Titanic
  • How many secret prisons does Israel have?
  • Can Obama meet Netanyahu's challenge?
  • Netanyahu adviser moves out of the shadows
  • When will world leaders show “cruel racists” zero tolerance?
  • Calm voice, big stick
  • “If you want peace, prepare for war”
  • “Racists for Democracy”
  • The futility of pursuing a two-state Israeli-Palestinian solution
  • Where are the missing settlers?
  • Forget “negotiations”, Obama: the situation cries out for law and justice
  • Jewish town in Galilee demands “loyalty oath”
  • “The victim is the guilty party”: 12 Israeli Arabs indicted over Jewish gunman’s death
  • Israeli Premier Netanyahu’s media manipulations
  • All in a day’s work for the Israeli army: beating and torturing children
  • Canadian ambassador to Israel honoured at illegal park
  • Israel’s Holocaust reparations swindle
  • Israeli doctors colluding in torture
  • Netanyahu reaffirms commitment to racism and expansionism – thanks to US tax dollars
  • Israel calls on Jewish fanatics to “save” Galilee from its own Arab citizens
  • The two-state solution, Israeli-style
  • The Johnny procedure
  • Israel offers Palestinians day shoppers, not statehood
  • Internet surfers paid to spread Israeli propaganda
  • Israel’s Netanyahu lies to fend off Obama’s pressure
  • Can an “Arab soul” yearn for Israel’s anthem?
  • Israel seeks ways to silence human rights groups
  • Israel’s school apartheid highlighted by court case
  • Israel begins sell-off of refugees’ land
  • US turns blind eye to Israel's new separation policy
  • The IDF – Israel's organ grinder
  • The first Israeli Jew in Fatah’s parliament
  • Boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel now urgent – Israeli academic
  • Israeli fascism: the “Bogie” Ya’alon horror show
  • The long struggle to reclaim Beersheva’s Great Mosque
  • Israel turns up the heat to evict Bedouin from desert lands
  • The travelling music is always the same
  • Prof Yehuda Hiss: the missing link in Palestinian organ theft?
  • Palestinian embassy in London strangely silent as Israeli terror-strikes and land-grabs continue
  • Israeli advertisements warn against marrying non-Jews
  • Israel’s Arab citizens call general strike in response to wave of “racist” measures
  • Israel blocks money to Gaza’s disabled
  • Branded “an enemy of Palestine” – should I laugh or cry?
  • How low will Israel stoop to win the propaganda war?
  • The not-so-hidden persuaders
  • How US tax breaks fund Israeli settlers
  • UN General Assembly president “frustrated” in his attempts to end blockade of Gaza
  • Israel’s fear of Jewish girls dating Arabs
  • On Palestinian civil disobedience
  • The comic genius of Binyamin Netanyahu
  • Binyamin Netanyahu’s UN speech: the pathology of evil
  • Gaza peace protester is prisoner in own home
  • Goldstone report's fate sealed by threats to Palestinian economy
  • Deception, spin and lies
  • “Silly season” fatwa
  • Israeli police don Arab disguise: notorious army method to be used inside Israel
  • Self-defence stories from Gaza
  • “Where have all the friendships gone...”
  • How the “most moral army in the world” wages war on students
  • Time for Britain to make amends for crimes against Palestine
  • A line in the sand: Barack Obama’s treachery in the Middle East
  • Spotlight on Palestine: an interview with Stuart Littlewood
  • The United Nations should acknowledge Palestine’s statehood
  • “Campus Watch” copycats close in on Israeli professors
  • Arab teens need “protecting from Israeli justice”
  • NATO had better steer clear of Israel
  • Have Israeli spies infiltrated international airports?
  • What festive cheer will the West bring to the Holy Land this Christmas?
  • “...And a little child shall lead them”
  • Israel’s Arab women workers need not apply
  • Israel’s notorious Hannibal procedure: army directive behind shooting of mental patient
  • Rules of human decency apply to Israelis too
  • Spot the difference: Israel’s Prussian heritage – and destiny?
  • Israeli-style “justice” for Palestinian student Berlanty – official version
  • Israeli war crimes suspect says quest for justice is for losers
  • Partition in Palestine is still the issue
  • Egypt’s President Mubarak blows his chance to behave decently
  • Gaza's untold story
  • Reaching the Gates of Hell is not so easy
  • Tactics of desperation: using false accusations of “anti-Semitism” as a weapon to silence criticism of Israel’s behaviour
  • Egypt lacks the milk of human kindness
  • The Iron Wall
  • Gaza robbed of the most basic human right: the right to health
  • Spiteful Mubarak succeeds only in creating a PR disaster for Egypt and himself
  • What next, Viva Palestina?
  • Truth will prevail: Israel panicking as the truth catches up with it
  • Israel's new rocket defence system
  • Gaza: what are promises of humanitarian aid worth?
  • In memory of Martin Luther King
  • The Liebarak
  • “Lost tribe” on fast track to Israel
  • Barack Obama’s paralysis in face of Zionist lobby
  • Arab politicians face tide of “persecution” in Israel
  • Israel stole 2 billion dollars from Palestinian workers: 40-year deception exposed
     
    Israel's missed opportunities for peace (partial list)
    By Uri Avnery*

    28 May 2006

    Uri Avnery recounts how in its 58 years of existence Israel has missed every opportunity to resolve the conflict with the Palestinians. This, he says, may lead to the conclusion that Israel "did not want peace at all".

    "The Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity!" This phrase, coined by Abba Eban, has become a by-word. It also illustrates a wise Talmudic saying: "He who finds fault in others (really) finds his own faults."

    No doubt, from the beginning of the conflict, the Palestinians have missed opportunities. But these are negligible compared to the opportunities missed by the State of Israel in its 58 years of existence.

    The list that follows is far from complete.

    On the morrow of the war of 1948, in which Israel was founded, we could have achieved peace.

    During the war, all the territory in which, according to the United Nations resolution of November 1947, the Arab Palestinian state should have been established, was occupied by Israel, Jordan and Egypt. Israel conquered and annexed about half of it, and the rest was divided between Jordan (which annexed the West Bank) and Egypt (which occupied the Gaza Strip). More than half the Palestinians were driven from their homes - partly by the war itself, partly by a deliberate Israeli policy. The name Palestine disappeared from the map.

    In the Swiss town of Lausanne, a tripartite committee, representing the United States, France and Turkey, was convened in order to mediate between the parties. The Palestinians were not invited, since they were no longer recognized as a political entity. But a delegation of three prominent Palestinians did appear, ostensibly to speak for the refugees, but in reality to represent the Palestinian people. They contacted the Israeli representative, Eliyahu Sassoon, and offered to open direct negotiations for peace. On instructions from Jerusalem, Sassoon declined.

    David Ben-Gurion did not want any negotiations that might have compelled him to take back at least some of the refugees, and perhaps even to give back some of the territory just occupied. Contrary to the UN resolution, he was determined to prevent at all costs the establishment of a Palestinian state. He believed that the Palestinian question had been closed, that the very name Palestine had disappeared forever, that the Palestinian people had ceased to exist. Much blood was shed because of this monumental mistake.

    In July 1952, the revolution of the Free Officers took place in Egypt. One sole voice in Israel welcomed it publicly - the weekly news magazine Haolam Hazeh, which I edited. Ben-Gurion did indeed voice a rhetorical appeal to the formal leader of the revolution, the old general Muhammad Naguib, but the moment it became clear that the real leader was Gamal Abd-al-Nasser, Ben-Gurion declared war on him. The appearance of Abd-al-Nasser frightened Ben-Gurion, because here was a new type of Arab: a young officer, energetic, charismatic, striving to unite the Arab world.

    From his ascent to power until his death, 18 years later, the Egyptian leader sent out feelers again and again to find out if a settlement with Israel was feasible. Ben-Gurion rejected all these efforts and systematically prepared for the war of 1956, in which Israel tried, in collusion with France and Great Britain, then two predatory colonial powers, to overthrow Abd-al-Nasser. Thus he fixed for generations the image of Israel as a foreign implant in the region, a bridgehead of the hostile West.

    Ben-Gurion was a sworn enemy of the pan-Arab idea and did everything possible to block its realization - an effort that was crowned with success by his heir, Levy Eshkol, in the war of 1967. Like many decisions of Israeli governments, this one also contained a logical contradiction. Almost all Palestinians lionized Abd-al-Nasser. They were ready to let the Palestinian identity be absorbed into pan-Arabism. Only after the defeat of pan-Arabism, not least by Israel, did the specific Palestinian identity return to centre stage.

    It is difficult to estimate the seriousness of the dozens of Abd-al-Nasser's peace feelers throughout the years. They were just never put to the test.

    The historic opportunity, the mother of all opportunities, came with the 1967 Six-Day War.

    The Israeli army won an incredible victory over three Arab armies. After the six days, Israel was in possession of all the territory of historic Palestine, as well as the Sinai Peninsula and the Golan Heights. The entire Arab world was humiliated and powerless, and reacted with empty and bellicose phrases (the famous "No's" of Khartoum). The Palestinian people was in a state of shock. It was one of the rare historic moments when a whole people is able to change its basic conceptions.

    At that momentous time we could have made peace with the Palestinian people and offered them life in a free state of their own, within the pre-war borders, in peace with Israel. While the war was still going on, I personally proposed this to the prime minister, Levy Eshkol. He rejected the idea out of hand. The temptation to acquire new territories and settle there was just too strong.

    (I must explain here why I mention myself in this article: I was an eyewitness to many of the events, and to some of them I am now the sole remaining witness.)

    I raised the idea again and again in the Knesset, of which I was a member at the time. To reinforce my arguments, I held a series of conversations with the local leaders of the Palestinian community and ascertained that they were ready to establish a Palestinian state, instead of returning to Jordanian rule. I have in my possession a document signed by the prime minister's advisor for the occupied territories, Moshe Sassoon (the son of the Sassoon from the Lausanne affair) in which he confirmed my findings.

    We missed the opportunity to make peace with the conservative, moderate leadership of the Palestinian community - and got the Palestine Liberation Organization instead.

    In October 1973 the Yom Kippur (or Ramadan) War broke out. The main blame for the war must rest with Prime Minister Golda Meir, who had arrogantly and rudely rejected all the peace proposals made by the Egyptian president, Anwar Sadat.

    In spite of initial Israeli setbacks, the war ended in an Israeli military victory. Yasser Arafat, by now the uncontested leader of the Palestinian people, drew the conclusion that it was impossible to vanquish Israel militarily. A sober and pragmatic leader, Arafat decided that the Palestinian national aims must be attained through a settlement with Israel.

    He instructed his people to establish secret contacts with Israelis who had connections to the centre of the Israeli establishment. I myself conveyed messages from him to the new prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin. Like Eshkol before him, Rabin was prepared to listen patiently, but he rejected the Palestinian feelers. "I won't take the first step towards a Palestinian solution," he told me in 1976, "Because the first step will inevitably lead to a Palestinian state, which I do not want."

    (Intermezzo: Rabin, like all the Israeli leadership at that time, advocated the "Jordanian Option", which meant giving back a part of the occupied territories to King Hussein and annexing the rest to Israel. Once, Foreign Minister Yig'al Allon informed Rabin that Henry Kissinger proposed turning Jericho over to Hussein immediately, in order to give him a foothold on the West Bank and perhaps enable him to prevent the PLO from becoming the dominant factor. Remembering that Golda Meir had promised to hold elections before giving back any territory, Rabin answered Allon: "I am not prepared to go to elections because of Jericho.")

    Already in 1974, Arafat induced the Palestinian National Council (the PLO parliament-in-exile) to pass a resolution that opened the way to the two-state solution. It took him 14 more years to get the council to adopt a resolution that officially set up the State of Palestine in a part of the country - thereby recognizing Israel's rule over 78 per cent of historic Palestine. That was a revolutionary decision with far-reaching consequences. Israel did not hear and did not see. It just ignored it.

    In November 1977, Anwar Sadat did something unprecedented in history: in spite of the state of war existing between Israel and Egypt, he came to Jerusalem, the centre of the enemy camp. He offered peace: not just peace between two states, but between Israel and the entire Arab world, with Palestine at the centre.

    When the negotiations started at Cairo's Mina House, at the foot of the Pyramids, the Egyptians hoisted the Palestinian flag, together with the flags of the other Arab nations invited. The Israeli delegation raised hell, and the Egyptians were compelled to pull the flags down.

    At the 1978 Camp David conference, where the peace terms were worked out, Sadat fought valiantly for a settlement of the Palestinian issue. The foundations for an Israeli-Palestinian peace could have been laid there. But Menachem Begin refused adamantly. In the end, a meaningless document was adopted. In it, Begin did recognize "the just requirements of the Palestinian people", but immediately added a letter asserting he meant "the Arabs of the land of Israel".

    Arafat was present at the session of the Egyptian parliament, when Sadat announced his planned visit to Jerusalem. He applauded. He also proposed sending a Palestinian delegation to Mina House. Among his colleagues, a revolt broke out. It was the only time during his long career when his position was seriously threatened. But the situation would probably have been different, if Sadat had obtained Begin's agreement to the establishment of a Palestinian state in the occupied territories, as he requested. It is possible that this failure cost Sadat his life.

    In September 1993, a year after the return of Rabin to power, a historic breakthrough was achieved. The State of Israel and the PLO, on behalf of the Palestinian people, at long last recognized each other and signed the Declaration of Principles of Oslo. This envisaged that, within five years, the final status would be realized.

    At the last moment, Rabin's emissaries, mostly military men, made many changes in the text previously agreed upon. The Israeli obligations became much more vague. Arafat did not care. He believed Rabin and was convinced that the agreement would necessarily lead to the establishment of the Palestinian state.

    But almost from the first moment, Israel began violating the agreement. Specific dates for implementation were laid down - but Rabin smashed the agreed timetable, declaring that "there are no sacred dates". The passage between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, an essential item in the agreement, was not opened (to this very day). The third and most important "redeployment" (withdrawal) of the Israeli army was not carried out at all. The negotiations for the final status, that were meant to be concluded by 1999, did not even start in earnest.

    In 2000, Prime Minister Ehud Barak compelled Arafat to come to a conference at Camp David, without any preparations or prior understandings. That was the last opportunity to reach agreement with Arafat, then at the height of his authority.

    Instead, Barak treated Arafat with open contempt and submitted what amounted to an ultimatum - a list of terms that may have seemed "generous" from the Israeli point of view, but fell far short of the minimum needed by Arafat. Returning home, Barak declared that Arafat wanted to "throw us into the sea". This way, Barak paved the way for Ariel Sharon's ascent to power and to the siege on Arafat, which ended in his murder.

    Arafat was a tough national leader who disdained no means to achieve freedom for his people - diplomacy, violence, even doubletalk. But he had a huge personal authority, and he was able and willing not only to sign a peace agreement, but also to convince his people to accept it.

    Those who did not want the strong and charismatic Arafat got Mahmoud Abbas, who finds it much more difficult to assert his authority.

    In Novermber 2004, Arafat died. In free elections, a large majority chose Mahmoud Abbas as his successor. "Abu Mazen", as he is generally known, has been for a long time identified with the idea of peace with Israel, more than any other senior Palestinian leader.

    The Israeli government, which had demonized Arafat for many years, could have embraced his successor. It was another opportunity to achieve a reasonable compromise. True, Abbas does not have the authority of Arafat, but if he had achieved impressive political gains, his position would have been much strengthened. But Prime Minister Ariel Sharon boycotted him, ridiculed him publicly as a "plucked chicken", and refused even to meet him.

    Those who did not want Abbas got Hamas.

    In January 2006, the Palestinian public elected Hamas in an election that was a model of democracy.

    There were several reasons for this choice. A part of the PLO leadership had become corrupt. More importantly, since the Oslo agreements, the living conditions of the Palestinians under occupation had become incomparably worse. And, most importantly, since the Oslo agreements, the Palestinian people had not come a single step closer to the establishment of the state of Palestine, while the settlements were being enlarged and the occupation deepened incessantly. The "separation" from Gaza, which was carried out without any dialogue with the Palestinians, served Israel as a pretext for imposing a blockade on the strip and turning life there into hell.

    With the advent of Hamas to power, the Israeli government retrieved from the attic all the old slogans that had served in their time against the PLO: that it was a terrorist organization, that it did not recognize Israel's right to exist, that its charter called for Israel's destruction. But Hamas has scrupulously abstained for more than a year from violent attacks. Coming to power, it could not abnegate its ideology overnight, but more than once it has found ways to hint that it would agree to negotiate with Israel and recognize it within the Green Line borders.

    A government interested in peace would have grasped the opportunity and put Hamas to the test of negotiations. Instead, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert decided to break off all contact with them and to urge the United States and Europe to literally starve the Palestinians into final submission.

    Probably, the same rule will apply again: those who do not want Hamas will get Islamic Jihad.

    Throughout the region, extreme Islamist elements are gaining strength. One of the reasons is the festering wound of the Palestinian problem in the heart of the Arab world.

    For 58 years, our governments have missed every opportunity to heal this wound. We could have achieved peace between Israel and secular-national Palestinian leaders. If the conflict, God forbid, turns into a clash between religions, there will be no opportunity to miss opportunities - there just will not be any opportunities.

    The number of the opportunities rejected and the consistent way they were trampled upon by all Israeli governments may lead to the conclusion that they did not want peace at all. There has always been a tendency in Israel to prefer expansion and settlement to compromise and peace. According to this outlook, there always is "no one to talk with", there is "no solution", we shall "forever live by the sword". "Unilateral" steps, whose real aim is to annex more land, are consistent with this tendency.

    If this tendency achieves final victory in Israel, it will be a disaster for the state, which has just become 58 years old.

    But it should be remembered that there are also tendencies in Israel that point in another direction. Slowly but steadily, the illusion that there is or can be a military solution to the conflict is evaporating. At the same time, support for a Greater Israel and for the settlements is dwindling. The implosion of the Likud and the growing support for "convergence" are stages on the way to a realistic approach.

    If this process continues, it will become clear that there is no lack of opportunities. All we have to do is grasp them with our two hands.



    *Uri Avnery is an Israeli journalist, writer and peace activist.



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