Me, "I don't know if I am allowed to have an opinion on Israel, being an American Jew, but here goes. The problem with Israel is two fold. You have a world class politician like Prime Minister Netanyahu who knows how to play both sides, Israel and how it deals with Palestinians, and Israel and how it deals with settlements in the West Bank.
The facts are that Israel should not build settlements in the West Bank. It is not their land to do with as it pleases. This is shown time and again every time settlements are abandoned. They are bulldozes down into rubble, God forbid the Palestinians should acquire an abandoned settlement and have a decent place to live and the Israeli thinking is, we built it, we are abandoning it, so we will destroy it. Far better to destroy it then to let it to fall into Palestinian hands.
How many times should the Palestinians be devalued? It is the Palestinians who ran away during one of Israel's numerous wars with its Arab neighbors and are being refused the right to return to their lands. Why? Because millions want to return and Israel is scared there will be a new nation next to it with a huge army. Israel wants a buffer between the Arabs, and since it lost a lot of lives acquiring the West Bank, does not just want to get rid of it.
Then there is the other side of things. There is Netanyahu the politician. He is an excellent politician. He knows exactly how to play with the Israeli people's minds and world leaders. He tells one party, he is a strong leader, and would never give back the West Bank by favoring settlements, while telling world leaders he wants a two state solution. So, for him to react negatively to the U.N. Resolution this week is just another political move by Netanyahu to show the Israeli people he is a strong leader and the world leaders that they have deceived him and the Israeli people.
The thing is that Netanyahu knows that if he starts negotiations with the Palestinians it will be seen as a source of weakness so he does nothing hiding behind the fact he wants no preconditions during negotiations. So years go by, everybody gets a little older and the status quo stays the same. That is the way Netanyahu likes it."
(For years, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, a conservative, has played a double act, competing domestically with his right-wing rivals in backing the settlement project all over the occupied West Bank while professing support for a two-state solution with the Palestinians.
Now, with the stinging United Nations Security Council resolution on Friday condemning Israeli settlement construction as lacking any legal validity, Israeli politicians and analysts on the right, on the left and in the political center say Mr. Netanyahu’s game may soon be up.)
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