-
Website
http://themoderatevoice.com/ -
Original page
http://themoderatevoice.com/25616/gaza-and-israel-thomas-friedman-is-naive/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
superdestroyer
1859 comments · 63 points
-
kathykattenburg
1926 comments · 1145 points
-
runasim
1626 comments · 143 points
-
GeorgeSorwell
1840 comments · 643 points
-
Father_Time
1381 comments · 448 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Glenn Greenwald Hits The Healthcare Debate Nail On The Head
14 hours ago · 20 comments
-
Howard Dean’s Bombshell
2 days ago · 98 comments
-
SNEAKY END-RUN ON HEALTHCARE
9 hours ago · 9 comments
-
Congress Has Really Dropped The Ball On Its Most Pressing Concern (P.S. Not Healthcare)
12 hours ago · 11 comments
-
I’m Not Phil Ochs Anymore
4 hours ago · 3 comments
-
Glenn Greenwald Hits The Healthcare Debate Nail On The Head
And I suppose, under your worldview, it'd be okay for Israel to continue the blockade, keep statehood off the table, and expand the settlements in the West Bank.
With Israel's latest massacre in Gaza, they've pushed the Palestinians there into solidarity with Hamas. At this point, it seems as if there are two ways forward for Israel. End the massacre and deal with a military weakened but more politically popular Hamas, or reoccupy Gaza and completely eradicate Hamas and hope that a better ruling party rises from the ashes. In the latter scenario, it seems unlikely that a more moderate group will just spring up, and the Palestinians won't accept an Israeli run political party after the recent bloodshed. Unless, of course, Israel wants to actually take responsibility for improving the lives of the Palestinians in real concrete ways, like ending the blockade, giving them money, food, rebuilding infrastructure, etc.
I suspect people like Friedman actually would believe HAMAS was being honest about any truce it would sign, then break later.
#1, the Palestinians grow, find or push forward a leader who knows how to engage without simply provoking via rocket irritations. Hanan Ashrawi comes to mind but she is in the West Bank - I'm not sure who such a person would be in Gaza.
#2 - They must choose and push forward leadership that will engage for as long as it takes to permanently resolve the land division and rulership issues related to nation-building.
#3 Neither side can come to the table and expect to demand and receive a one-state solution with the expulsion of whichever population doesn't want the one-state or to leave - this is an unacceptable option.
#4 However, the parties can drill down to why it is that they want one-state and then craft a one-state OR A TWO-STATE that enshrines those needs WITHOUT EXPULSION of any population
They can use the process to offer and reject as many permutations of what such a nation or nations would look like given the various needs of the populations, but at no time is military force to be used in the formation of these nations (or nation).
Anyway - those are the non-negotiables I'd start with.
But for the record, Chris, we have to stop with this "what will Israel do for the Palestinians." It takes two to tango so let's not insult anyone if we're talking about moving forward.