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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Arafat Urged Attacks when Talks Faltered: Hamas
2010-09-30
[Asharq al-Aswat] The late Paleostinian leader Yasser Arafat urged Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, to carry out attacks inside Israel when he felt peace talks had failed, a Hamas big turban said in remarks published on Wednesday.

"Arafat signalled to the Hamas movement to carry out a number of military operations in the heart of the Jewish state when he felt that the negotiations with the occupation government had failed," Mahmud Zahar said during a meeting with Hamas MPs on Tuesday, according to the Hamas-linked Falasteen newspaper.

He spoke on the 10th anniversary of the outbreak of the second Paleostinian intifada, or uprising, which engulfed the occupied territories months after the collapse of the 2000 Camp David peace talks.

His comments come as renewed peace talks between Israel and the Paleostinians again appear to be on the verge of collapse in the face of a dispute over Israeli settlements. Hamas opposes the new talks.

At the height of the uprising in 2002 Paleostinian forces of Evil launched scores of suicide kabooms in Israeli cities as Israel frequently carried out large-scale military incursions across the West Bank and the Gazoo Strip.

Arafat had always insisted that the uprising was a spontaneous reaction to the Israeli occupation and that he had no control over Hamas, the long-time rivals of his secular Fatah movement.
Arafat had always lied. He lied to the world in English, he lied to the Israelis in English and Hebrew, and he lied to his own people in Arabic. Being the creative man that he was, each set of lies was different.
He publicly condemned attacks targeting civilians inside Israel, including those carried out by the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, the armed wing of Fatah.

Arafat died of mysterious causes in a Paris hospital in November 2004 after having been besieged in his headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah for nearly three years.

His successor, Paleostinian president Mahmud Abbas, always opposed the militarisation of the uprising and moved to end it when he assumed power.

An Israeli-Paleostinian summit in February 2005 was widely seen as signalling the end of the uprising, although the violence continued. Some 4,700 people had been killed by then, around 80 percent of them Paleostinians.
Posted by:Fred

#2  "Our day"
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2010-09-30 06:59  

#1  Go ahead, make are day.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2010-09-30 06:57  

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