You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Middle East
The deal...
2002-05-06
The Lebanese daily al-Sharq unveiled Friday the agreement made between Israel and Yasser Arafat in order to lift the siege imposed on him, noting that this agreement makes it compulsory for the Palestinian authority to collect all weapons from Gaza and halt the violence, and handing over both Ahmad Saadat, the secretary general of the People's Front For the Liberation of Palestine and Fouad al-Showbaki who is accused of being responsible for the weapons ship "Karin A" said to be smuggling weapons to the Palestinians.
Both of whom were handed over, and whom they're now trying to spring...
The paper quoted high ranking sources that the agreement was made between Muhammad Rashid -- the economic advisor for Arafat -- and Israel's Benjamin Bin Eleazer and resulted in handing over the persons accused of assassinating the Israeli tourism minister Rahbaam Zeifi and breaking the siege imposed on Arafat.
Which resulted in Rashid ending up on a "death to [fill in name here]" pamphlet on Friday, accused of collaborating with Israel...
The agreement speaks of a grace period of six months to make changes on the ground, and the Palestinians will be abide to transfer Arafat to Hisham palace in Areiha as a presidential headquarters and to make changes at all levels of the Palestinian establishments and departments.
And they're already choosing up sides and flinging recriminations on the idea, the VERY IDEA, of reforms. And Washington is pushing them toward reforms regardless of how deeply they're digging in.
Washington, the paper said, had redlined certain Palestinian figures and asked to alienate them from the Palestinian authority including the Palestinian official in charge of the file of Jerusalem Surri Nuseibah and to start proper arrangements by the Palestinian organizations to declare giving up violence and to be involved in the foundations of the Palestinian authority.
Yeah. Figger the odds on that happening. Yasser prob'ly sees that as a six-month grace period to think of some countercharges and deflect attention from noncompliance.
The sources indicated that after that the process of releasing the Palestinian detainees will start. The European and American aid to rehabilitate the infrastructure is linked to developments on the ground. The sources continued that Israel will continue to have control on the West Bank until Arafat will be able to control the situation in an acceptable way and after the end of the first phase, Washington can sponsor a meeting including Sharon and Arafat and might be held in Washington itself.
Now what they're trying to figure is how to get their hands on all that dough and get rid of the Israelis at the same time. What to do? What to do? Maybe some boomers...?
About this agreement, Palestinian sources said that despite its heavy weight on Arafat and the difficulty of implementing it, however, accepting the principle of breaking the siege took place at the pressure of his close advisors and that Arafat is in need of intensive Arab consultation to help him in getting out of the current situation.
Yeah. There's need of consultation, alright. Somehow I can't see Yasser making an agreement that he'll keep, especially when he can't even bring himself to say "Stuh... stuh... (gag) stop ttttthhh... the vvvvuck..." well, you know.
Posted by:Fred Pruitt

#1  Steven den Beste also picked this up. He notes that

"Arafat can't do these things. If he does, he'll be seen as a sell-out by the Palestinians. These terms amount to a defeat of the Intifada, because it will mean that 20 months of violence will have accomplished nothing tangible."

Hero to putz in one week. I like it.
Posted by: Fred   2002-05-06 14:23:08  

00:00