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May 20, 2011

Palestinian Sees Prospects of Deal Receding

By ISABEL KERSHNER

JERUSALEM — After  
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/o/barack_obama/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 President Obama’s high-profile speech on Thursday in which he laid out broad 
principles for reaching an Israeli-Palestinian deal, the  
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/palestinians/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
 Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, called an emergency meeting at his 
headquarters in Ramallah in the West Bank. He advised his associates not to 
comment on the speech, according to a senior Palestinian official who attended 
the meeting, but to wait instead for Mr. Obama’s meeting with the prime 
minister of  
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 Israel in the White House “and see if there are any positive signs.” 

By the end of that meeting, judging by the statements of Mr. Abbas’s 
associates, the prospects of renewed negotiations leading to a swift agreement 
appeared at least as distant, if not more, than before. 

The official, Nabil Shaath, a leader of Mr. Abbas’s party and a veteran 
negotiator, said that Mr. Obama’s speech had “contained little hope for the 
Palestinians,” except for the one sentence that spoke of the borders of a 
future Palestinian state being based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed 
land swaps, a shift in American diplomatic language that addressed a long-held 
Palestinian demand. 

But sitting alongside Mr. Obama after a two-hour meeting in the Oval Office, 
Mr. Netanyahu publicly and forcefully shot down that notion. Ignoring the 
element of land swaps, which would afford negotiators some flexibility, the 
Israeli leader totally rejected the idea of withdrawing to the pre-1967 lines, 
reiterating that they are “indefensible” and do not take into account the 
“demographic changes,” meaning the large Israeli settlement blocs that have 
taken hold in the West Bank over the last 40 years. 

Yet Mr. Netanyahu is “continuing to make that demographic change through 
settlement and colonization,” fumed Mr. Shaath in a telephone interview from 
Ramallah. He noted that Mr. Obama made only passing reference to the continuing 
construction in his speech and did not mention it at all in his statement on 
Friday. 

In a world of nuclear weapons, rocketry, and powerful air forces like Israel’s, 
Mr. Shaath added, it was irrelevant to speak of borders as indefensible, 
especially, he said, when applied to “a tiny country like Palestine.” 

Adding to the sense of Palestinian outrage, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, the official 
spokesman of Mr. Abbas, issued a statement after the Obama-Netanyahu meeting 
saying that Mr. Netanyahu’s position was “an official rejection of Mr. Obama’s 
initiative, of international legitimacy and of international law.” 

It was the Palestinians who walked out of the last round of peace negotiations 
last September after a partial Israeli moratorium on building in the 
settlements expired. In order to return to talks, Palestinian officials say, 
they want to hear Mr. Netanyahu agree to the 1967 lines as the basis for 
negotiations and a renewed, if temporary, settlement freeze. 

In the absence of negotiations, the Palestinian leadership plans to seek 
international recognition of a Palestinian state in the United Nations General 
Assembly in September, an idea that is opposed by the United States and that 
could isolate Israel. 

Mr. Shaath said that Mr. Obama’s speech conceded most issues to the Israelis, 
including viewing Israel as a Jewish state, opposing the plans for United 
Nations recognition and criticizing the Fatah faction for its recent 
reconciliation pact with Hamas, which the United States designates as a 
terrorist organization. 

On the refugee issue, one of most delicate and intractable in the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Mr. Obama managed to upset both sides. Mr. Shaath 
criticized the president for suggesting that refugees could be left, like the 
status of Jerusalem, for discussion at a later stage after the subjects of 
borders and security. The Israelis were critical that Mr. Obama failed to spell 
out that the solution for Palestinian refugees of the 1948 war and their 
descendants lay not in Israel, but within the borders of a future Palestinian 
state. 

Mr. Netanyahu said Friday that it was time to tell the Palestinians that any 
return of refugees to Israel proper was “not going to happen.” 

Mr. Shaath, the veteran Palestinian negotiator, said that any idea that the 
positions articulated in Washington might induce the Palestinians to abandon 
their march toward the United Nations was “utterly ridiculous.” 

Palestinian officials brushed aside the statements by Mr. Obama and Mr. 
Netanyahu that the recent pact between Fatah and Hamas raises serious problems 
and requires answers from the Palestinian leadership. Fatah leaders said that 
the reconciliation was an internal affair that had nothing to do with the peace 
process. 

In Israel, the news channels broadcasted the statements at the White House in 
real time, but there was little immediate reaction since the meeting ran late 
into the Sabbath eve. Channel 2 News, which generally has the highest ratings, 
extended its Friday news program to cover the event, but minutes later the 
commercial channel reverted to its usual programming — a local singing contest 
that is the Israeli equivalent of “ 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/a/american_idol/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
 American Idol.” 

But the Palestinians were not alone in their view that the recent developments 
in Washington had not helped the peace process. In a critique of Mr. Obama’s 
speech, Robert Satloff, executive director of The Washington Institute for Near 
East Policy, which is widely seen as pro-Israel, said that the approach to 
Israeli-Palestinian peace enunciated by Mr. Obama had “within it the seeds of 
deepening tension and perhaps even rift between the two sides.” 

Mr. Satloff’s article was recommended to reporters by Mr. Netanyahu’s media 
department as “one of the best analyses of the situation.” 





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