Palestinians sense danger for Abbas

Occupied Jerusalem, August 22: Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, may pay a heavy price for agreeing to resume talks despite the prospect of renewed Israeli colony expansion in September and widespread scepticism among Palestinians that talks will yield results.

Palestinian politicians and analysts say that any breakthrough is highly unlikely, and there is a sense among many Palestinians that the talks are being renewed on Israeli rather than Palestinian terms.

“This is political suicide for Abbas, it will weaken him, not only in the face of Hamas but also from within Fatah,” says Hani Masri, director of the Badael think tank in the West Bank capital of Ramallah. “People will see the colonies continuing to be built and his credibility will come to its lowest point. The [Palestinian] Authority will get weaker and weaker.”

Fatah is Abbas’ political party while Hamas is the Islamist movement that controls the Gaza Strip.

Turnaround

The return to direct talks marks a stark turnaround from Abbas’ earlier statements that no negotiations would happen until all Jewish West Bank colony activity was halted. Palestinians see colonies as eating away at the territory of their future state, and so see talks as useless in the face of their expansion.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to halt all construction, although in November 2009 he did agree to a limited slowdown of building that is due to expire on September 26.

The Obama administration, which initially appeared to back Abbas’ demand for a halt in Israeli colonies, has since softened its position. The Middle East Quartet’s statement did not explicitly repeat earlier calls for a colony freeze.

“Abbas is so weak he will go back to the negotiations even though he knows he will gain nothing,” says Hassan Khreisheh, an independent member of the Palestinian Legislative Council from Tulkarem in the West Bank.

Hamas’ prime minister in Gaza, Esmail Haniya, said “there is no use at all in resuming the negotiations.”

Gaza

The last round of direct talks was held in December 2008 between Abbas and then Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. Abbas ended negotiations that month when Israel launched a devastating Army operation in Gaza. Indirect contacts only resumed in May 2010, with each side holding separate negotations with US envoy George Mitchell.

Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said he has not seen the invitation and does not know when it will arrive. Israeli officials said Thursday they wanted no preconditions for resuming the talks.

-Agencies