When will the Palestinians learn that the US is not a sincere broker and that 
any negotiations done with them will be one sided in favor of everything Israel 
wants? 
   
  http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/feb2007/rice-f22.shtml
  
  RiceÂ’s Middle East visit: Bullying and intimidation dressed up as diplomacy  
By Jean Shaoul
22 February 2007  US Secretary of State Condoleezza RiceÂ’s much trumpeted 
meeting on Monday, February 19 with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and 
Mahmoud Abbas was a calculated public humiliation of the Palestinian president.
  
  Far from being a new diplomatic initiative designed to bring about a just 
resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Rice used the occasion to 
dictate Washington and JerusalemÂ’s terms for any future Palestinian government.
  
  Following separate talks with Olmert and Abbas, the three met, without aides 
other than RiceÂ’s Arabic translator, in a West Jerusalem hotel before 
adjourning to RiceÂ’s suite.
  
  Rice told the Palestinians in no uncertain terms that AbbasÂ’s proposals for a 
new Palestinian government did not meet with her approval, the concessions 
offered by Hamas were totally inadequate and until the Hamas government 
completely renounced its programme, no Palestinian state was on offer. She made 
clear that the only terms acceptable to the Bush administration were the total 
suppression of all opposition to IsraelÂ’s plans for a Greater Israel, based on 
the permanent retention of its settlements in the West Bank.
  
  The talks lasted a mere two hours and ended with a terse 90-second statement 
from Rice. Abbas confirmed his position as a US puppet by dutifully lining up 
alongside Olmert to endorse her remarks.
  
  Rice said that the three had discussed the changed political circumstances 
arising from the proposal for a Hamas-Fatah government; the meeting had been 
“useful and productive,” and she would be back in Jerusalem “soon.” She left 
without taking any questions from reporters and there were no announcements 
from either the Israeli or Palestinian leaders.
  
  A Hamas spokesman set the record straight. Ismail Radwan said the meeting was 
a failure and that its purpose was to put pressure on Abbas to pull out of the 
proposed National Unity government and take on Hamas. “Rice did not succeed in 
pressuring President Abbas to withdraw from the unity government. We call on 
the US administration to respect the Palestinian peopleÂ’s will and recognise 
the [Hamas-led] government and open a dialogue,” he said.
  
  The meeting took place against the backdrop of an agreement brokered by Saudi 
King Abdullah in Mecca between Hamas, led by Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, and 
Fatah led by President Mahmoud Abbas, that were on the point of outright civil 
war, to form a National Unity government.
  
  The electoral victory of Hamas in January 2006 had led, on the insistence of 
the US and Israel, to an economic boycott and isolation of the Palestinian 
Authority (PA). The Quartet, the US, European Union, Russia and the United 
Nations, cut off all direct aid to the PA, bringing the Palestinian economy to 
a halt and its people to the brink of starvation, while Israel illegally 
withheld the tax and customs it collects on behalf of the PA.
  
  IsraelÂ’s demands on Abbas to suppress all Palestinian resistance to its 
illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories and its all-out war on Gaza 
last summer only served to increase the tensions between the rival parties.
  
  The Mecca agreement, which Abbas announced on February 9 after two days of 
talks, was widely welcomed within Palestine. It follows his failed attempt to 
mount a political coup at WashingtonÂ’s behest last December, when he said he 
would dissolve the Hamas government and call new presidential and parliamentary 
elections. That unconstitutional move threatened a civil war and was unlikely 
to lead to an election victory for Fatah.
  
  While this latest arrangement is a reflection of AbbasÂ’s unwillingness to 
take on Hamas with either guns or at the polls, it achieves the same ends: the 
unseating of an elected government. The Hamas government has now resigned and 
Haniyeh has five weeks to form a new National Unity government, which he will 
head, as set out under the agreement.
   
  The aim is to end the factional fighting between the two parties, terminate 
any militant resistance to Israel and secure the international recognition that 
will restore economic aid to the PA. The Saudi Kingdom has pledged $1 billion 
to counter Iranian and Shiite influence and restore its own position in the 
region.
  
  Hamas will cede six cabinet posts to Fatah and four to so-called 
independents, including the most powerful portfolios and the only ones with any 
real power: interior, finance and foreign relations.
  
  It made major concessions to Fatah and IsraelÂ’s key demands: the acceptance 
of IsraelÂ’s right to exist, the renunciation of violence, the acceptance of 
previous agreements between Israel and the PA—a reference to the Oslo Accords 
that make a future Palestinian state dependent upon negotiations rather than 
the Israeli withdrawal from land seized in the 1967 war. Specifically it agreed 
to recognise Israel as a “reality” and respect or honour previous agreements, 
having dropped its previous insistence that any agreements be “in the higher 
interests of the Palestinian people.”
  
  The new government would adopt the so-called prisonersÂ’ charter, drawn up by 
both Fatah and Hamas last year calling for a Palestinian state within the land 
captured by Israel in 1967 with its capital in Jerusalem. It further called for 
Hamas to work towards joining the PLO, the umbrella group dominated by Fatah 
which has recognised Israel and would be responsible for negotiating future 
agreements with Israel.
  
  Even Mohammad Dahlan, Fatah official and warlord, a fierce opponent of Hamas 
and an Israeli favourite to assume the interior ministry, said that with such 
an agreement in place Israel could no longer use the excuse that there was no 
Palestinian “partner for peace.” He pointed to the change in government, a long 
period without much militant opposition to Israel and the Mecca agreement 
between Abbas and Haniyah.
  
  HamasÂ’s leader in exile in Syria, Khalid MashaÂ’al, one of the participants in 
the Mecca talks, used the Guardian to publicly renounce HamasÂ’s long held call 
for a Palestinian state on the whole of Mandate Palestine (Israel and 
Palestine). He offered a resolution of the conflict based on a Palestinian 
state within its 1967 borders of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem and 
Gaza.
  
  This was rejected by Zvi Heifetz, IsraelÂ’s ambassador in London, writing in a 
comment piece in the Guardian headlined, “Hamas has not delivered.”
  
  Washington and Jerusalem do not want negotiations with Hamas, but total 
surrender and the suppression of all opposition to IsraelÂ’s expansionist 
agenda. To this end, the Olmert government has sanctioned the transfer of arms 
to Abbas and the White House has sought financial resources from Congress for 
military aid to Abbas to suppress Hamas, to be channelled via Israel and Egypt.
  
  Israel used the run-up to the meeting with Rice to pile the pressure on 
Abbas. While Fatah officials and Palestinian commentators acknowledge that 
Hamas has shifted its position, an Israeli official said, “The fact is Hamas 
moved a little bit, which is positive. But we donÂ’t think it moved far enough. 
Mahmoud Abbas moved towards Hamas, which we don’t like.”
  
  Tzahi Hanegbi, the head of the foreign affairs committee of IsraelÂ’s 
parliament, went further. He said that Mr. Abbas had awarded “a significant 
victory to Hamas.”
  
  On Friday before the talks, Olmert announced that President George W. Bush 
had assured him that the US would continue to boycott any new Palestinian 
government that failed to recognise Israel, renounce violence and accept 
agreements. It signifies that the US will accept only a Palestinian state whose 
sole function is to police the Palestinian people and prevent any opposition to 
IsraelÂ’s illegal occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
  


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