Maureen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> the validity of it, but I know enough about recent history in that
> area to know that the Israeli leadership, while perhaps not on the
> level of Bull Conner or Lord Willingdon, is far from innocent of any
> wrong doing toward the Palestinian peoples.


I'm sure there are incidents you could point to where person X
could've done a better job, etc.

But at what point do you simply provide options:

1.) Peace.  It means a negotiated settlement.  Israel is willing to
deal, has been for decades (since it's founding really), and is ready
to talk right now.

2.) War.  The result of the unwillingness or inability to do #1.

If you choose war then there are going to be incidents of people behaving badly.

Seems to me that if you don't have a partner to negotiate peace then
the only option is a wall until that partner shows up.

In other words, it seems like it would be a lot harder to find
Palestinians that want negotiated peace than Israelis that want
negotiated peace.

What am I missing?

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