Dec 13, 2007 19:52 | Updated Dec 14, 2007 21:43 
Palestinian Affairs: Under pressure
By KHALED ABU TOAMEH 
Jerusalem Post

Pressure on the Palestinian Authority to boycott Wednesday's peace talks with 
Israel continued almost to the last minute. 
Hamas and Islamic Jihad were the first to call on the PA leadership to stay 
away from the talks following Tuesday's IDF operation in the Gaza Strip, which 
left six Palestinians killed. 

Later, some Fatah officials joined the bandwagon by publicly calling on PA 
President Mahmoud Abbas to suspend all contacts with Israel in protest against 
the military operation. The pressure on the PA mounted as Al-Jazeera started 
airing scenes of bodies of Palestinian gunmen killed in the fighting with IDF 
troops. 

As the operation was under way, Abbas called an emergency meeting in his office 
with his advisers and negotiators to discuss the possibility of boycotting the 
Wednesday session in Jerusalem. But a message from the Israelis and Americans, 
that this was just a limited operation and that the IDF had actually begun 
pulling out of the southern Gaza Strip, prompted Abbas to decide in favor of 
sending his team to Jerusalem the following day. 

Still, there was one more problem. How could PA negotiators be seen sitting 
with Israeli government officials at a fancy hotel in Jerusalem while the 
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip were burying those killed during the IDF 
operation? 

So the PA negotiators decided that they would attend the meeting in Jerusalem 
on condition that no camera crews or journalists were permitted to cover the 
event. The last thing negotiators Ahmed Qurei and Saeb Erekat wanted was to be 
seen embracing Israelis and posing for photos in public only hours after major 
TV networks showed Israelis and Palestinians fighting each other in the Gaza 
Strip. 

To avoid criticism, the negotiators were quick to announce after Wednesday's 
meeting that the talks were "difficult and tense." 

They also rushed to appear on Al-Jazeera and other TV stations to tell the 
Palestinians and Arab viewers that they went to the talks to demand an end to 
settlement construction and military operations in the Gaza Strip. Qurei and 
his team were keen on showing everyone that they had actually "reprimanded" 
their Israeli counterparts because of the decision to build new housing units 
in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Har Homa. 

Their "tough" stance, however, was directed more toward the Palestinians than 
Israel. The PA officials are not insensitive to the sentiments of their people 
and they can tell when their public is angry with Israel. And on Tuesday, many 
Palestinians, especially those living in the Gaza Strip, were very angry. 

Some officials in Abbas's office are convinced that Israel was deliberately 
trying to undermine the status of the PA on the eve of the beginning of the 
"final status" talks. They believe that Tuesday's military campaign in the Gaza 
Strip and the decision to build new apartments in Har Homa were part of a 
"conspiracy" aimed at embarrassing the PA leadership and damaging its 
credibility among Palestinians. 

Some of the officials have even gone as far as arguing that Defense Minister 
Ehud Barak, chairman of the Labor Party, had ordered the military operation to 
scuttle the peace talks, thus weakening his Kadima rival, Prime Minister Ehud 
Olmert. In short, these officials believe that political rivalries in Israel, 
not the rocket attacks on Sderot and the Negev, were behind Tuesday's military 
drive. 

"Israel's provocative measures are intended to keep us away from the 
negotiating table," explained one official. "The Israelis are doing all these 
things with the hope that we would boycott the peace talks. Then they would 
rush to tell the world that the Palestinians are not serious about making 
peace. But we didn't fall into this trap and that's why we decided to go to 
Jerusalem despite the Israeli military aggression and the continued 
construction in settlements." 

As for the "core" issues - Jerusalem, borders, refugees and settlements - that 
are now on the table, Palestinian representatives say it would be a "miracle" 
if the two sides manage to reach an agreement in the foreseeable future. Asked 
to speculate how much time was needed to strike a deal on these issues, a 
skeptical aide to Abbas replied, "Probably between 80 and 200 years." 

Yet the main problem that Abbas and his lieutenants continue to face is not 
whether the bulldozers are continuing to work in Har Homa, but the fact that 
many Palestinians still don't see them as a better alternative to Hamas. Nearly 
two years after Abbas's Fatah faction lost the parliamentary election to Hamas, 
and six months after his forces lost control over the Gaza Strip, the 
Palestinians still don't see major changes in Fatah. Nor do they see Fatah 
learning from its previous mistakes. 

In fact, the Palestinians look at the Mukata "presidential" compound in 
Ramallah and continue to see the same old faces of those who failed their 
people time and again over the past 15 years. The negotiators who came to 
Jerusalem on Wednesday are the same figures that negotiated on behalf of the 
Palestinians at Madrid, Oslo, Paris, Cairo, Wye River, Camp David and, finally, 
Annapolis. 

As far as many Palestinians are concerned, these officials belong to an era of 
financial corruption, embezzlement and anarchy which they wish to forget. 
Perhaps that's the reason why most Palestinians have no confidence in the peace 
talks that were launched this week. 

Kirim email ke