Published 02:29 18.05.11

Latest update 02:29 18.05.11


Netanyahu blasts Abbas over 'distorted' Times op-ed


Responding to Palestinian PM's New York Times op-ed, PM says Palestinian
leadership sees establishment of independent state as a way to continue the
conflict with Israel, rather than end it.


By Jonathan Lis <http://www.haaretz.com/misc/writers/jonathan-lis-1.443> 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, due to leave today on a state visit to
the United States, yesterday slammed an op-ed published by Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbasin the New York Times. In an unusual move, Netanyahu
released a signed response to the op-ed, accusing Abbas of blatantly
distorting history.

Netanyahu took particular issue with the Palestinian president's description
of the events of 1948, the war and the beginning of the Palestinian refugee
problem. "This is a blatant distortion of well-known, documented historic
facts," he wrote. "The Palestinians were the ones who declined the partition
plan into two states, which was upheld by the Jewish yishuv. Arab armies
aided by Palestinians were the ones who attacked the Jewish state in a bid
to destroy it. None of this is mentioned in the op-ed. It is also possible
to deduce from the article that the Palestinian leadership sees the
establishment of a Palestinian state as a means to continue the conflict
with Israel, rather than to end it."


Mahmoud Abbas and Benjamin Netanyahu, AP

Mahmoud Abbas and Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem.


Photo by: AP

Sources in the Prime Minister's office had even harsher words. "One can only
conclude from this article that Abbas has decided to turn his back on even
pretending to be walking the road of peace, and instead chose the strategy
of setting up a Palestinian state and then using this improved position to
wage a diplomatic and legal war against Israel," one source said. He
stressed that while Israel remains committed to the two-state solution,
"Abbas, sadly, chose a different path."

Officials in Netanyahu's office went on to dissect the Abbas op-ed, pointing
out various claims which they said were false. One point they stressed in
particular was Abbas's assertion that Palestinian refugees were the cause,
rather than the result, of the war. They said that in more than one
location, it was the Palestinian leaders who urged Palestinians to get out
of the way of the advancing Arab armies.

The sources also said Abbas's strategy in the past two years was to avoid
negotiations with Israel.The demand for a settlement freeze as a
pre-condition was also a way to put off negotiations, they said. They
bemoaned the fact that the Palestinian president had no moral qualms about a
reconciliation with the Hamas, which refuses to recognize the existence of
Israel.

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama said it was "more vital than ever" to work
to revive Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts even as political upheaval
engulfs much of the broader Middle East.

Speaking after talks with Jordan's King Abdullah at the start of a week of
intense diplomacy, Obama pledged to keep pressing for a two-state solution
to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The president is due to deliver a major
policy speech on the "Arab Spring" on Thursday, to meet Netanyahu on Friday,
and to address AIPAC on Sunday.

 



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