Player1x3 said:
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See... Palestine? Nothing you said there actually differs from Palestine... well outside of Russia.

Player1x3 said:
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See... Palestine? Nothing you said there actually differs from Palestine... well outside of Russia.

Kasz216 said:
See... Palestine? Nothing you said there actually differs from Palestine... well outside of Russia. |
It doesn't differ from Israel either...i mean Israel and Palestinia are 2 different names for the same region
Player1x3 said:
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Except for the part where Israel's been a legitamite country since 1948... with the "palestinian" parts largely in Israeli hands because Egypt and Jordan didn't want to bother anymore.

Kasz216 said:
Oh I agree with all of that, except the last part. The large difference currently is that Palestine isn't a nation. Other nations existence are less disputable because they are currently nations. An "flipped" example would be something like Kosovo. Which was disputable as a nation, then became one, and now it a nation. This is slightly different since more or less Palestine is more of a "no mans land" then it is a part of Israel, but it's closer then compaing Palestine to say Greece, later Kosvo or even something like South Ossetia.
What Palestine needs to do is make a public "Sweetheart" deal like in the Palestine papers and say "this is our deal, it's completely onesided against us, but we just want peace." Israel would more or less be pressured to accept by everyone. However they CAN'T do that because there people have generally been lied to about what a deal would look like and that they were fairly even bargaining partners. Thoughts that the Palestine papers might be true was enough to force negotiatior resignations. As it stands, it's a no win situation... because Hamas gains political power from the status quo, and Fatah would lose power if they made a deal that could actually get done or revealed just how weak their barganning plan is.
It's all political cowardness. |
That's why i've been saying for a long time that it's Israel that needs to be the one to man up and double down. Boot the illegal settlers and then agree to a land-swap on the remaining settlements. The only real negative pressure against Israel is the rocket attacks from Gaza, however, which are more or less a non-issue, and thus why Israel won't back down and will continue strangling Palestine until there is a second Intifada, which they'll use as an excuse to deport them all.

Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.
Mr Khan said:
That's why i've been saying for a long time that it's Israel that needs to be the one to man up and double down. Boot the illegal settlers and then agree to a land-swap on the remaining settlements. The only real negative pressure against Israel is the rocket attacks from Gaza, however, which are more or less a non-issue, and thus why Israel won't back down and will continue strangling Palestine until there is a second Intifada, which they'll use as an excuse to deport them all. |
I would agree with that if it wasn't for the fact that they already did double down once before with the unilateral withdrawl. It hadn't worked, and things have only gotten more corrosive since.
With the way Palestinian political culture is, Israel double downing would likely be seen as the rocket attacks and other terrorist attacks WORKING and a reason to increase them. Just like what happened during the unilateral withdrawl.

Kasz216 said:
I would agree with that if it wasn't for the fact that they already did double down once before with the unilateral withdrawl. It hadn't worked, and things have only gotten more corrosive since. With the way Palestinian political culture is, Israel double downing would likely be seen as the rocket attacks and other terrorist attacks WORKING and a reason to increase them. Just like what happened during the unilateral withdrawl. |
We've been over this ground before, i feel. My thought on the matter is that the West Bankers would learn from Gaza experience, and see that a terroristic response to an Israeli good-faith gesture would simply worsen their condition. Political leadership in the West Bank would make a more responsible approach and move towards recognized statehood, and then the independent, Fatah-run West Bank could "petition" Israel to go in and weed out Hamas with West Bank troops moving in to occupy and integrate the Gaza Strip afterwards
Hamas i feel has been effectively isolated in that one slot, but if things continue as they are, the Hamas alternative will become much more viable in the West Bank and soon enough we'll be back to a situation where there'll be no chance for peace until someone's been booted out altogether.

Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.
Mr Khan said:
We've been over this ground before, i feel. My thought on the matter is that the West Bankers would learn from Gaza experience, and see that a terroristic response to an Israeli good-faith gesture would simply worsen their condition. Political leadership in the West Bank would make a more responsible approach and move towards recognized statehood, and then the independent, Fatah-run West Bank could "petition" Israel to go in and weed out Hamas with West Bank troops moving in to occupy and integrate the Gaza Strip afterwards Hamas i feel has been effectively isolated in that one slot, but if things continue as they are, the Hamas alternative will become much more viable in the West Bank and soon enough we'll be back to a situation where there'll be no chance for peace until someone's been booted out altogether. |
Never been over that part before. I'd be for a similar plan. Such a plan being, solve West Bank first, then handle gaza... with public recognition on both sides that Gaza is currently being left off the table negotiation wise.
Do it any other way however and Gaza will themselves increase the attacks, seeing the double down as there victory since both territories are "one nation."
Honestly, i'd be more of a fan of a three state solution all together. Seems like even after an agreement is reached having a nation divided in half with a nation in the middle who they'd been at "war" with for decades seems unworkable.
Not sure exactly how passage between the two terrtories would work. Afterall even after the agreement there will be plenty of people trying to get into Israel, and likely some angry israelis looking for easy retribution as well.

Kasz216 said:
Never been over that part before. I'd be for a similar plan. Such a plan being, solve West Bank first, then handle gaza... with public recognition on both sides that Gaza is currently being left off the table negotiation wise. Do it any other way however and Gaza will themselves increase the attacks, seeing the double down as there victory since both territories are "one nation." Honestly, i'd be more of a fan of a three state solution all together. Seems like even after an agreement is reached having a nation divided in half with a nation in the middle who they'd been at "war" with for decades seems unworkable.
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One highway through the corridor in between, run with guard towers and barbed wire, with Israeli tunnels going underneath the highway wherever it undercuts existing roads. Kind of the opposite of what they're doing in West Bank currently, except this would be through the Negev where very few people live unlike the over-populated West Bank.

Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.
Mr Khan said:
One highway through the corridor in between, run with guard towers and barbed wire, with Israeli tunnels going underneath the highway wherever it undercuts existing roads. Kind of the opposite of what they're doing in West Bank currently, except this would be through the Negev where very few people live unlike the over-populated West Bank. |
How inviting....
Guess it's better then the alternative.
Not sure i'd opt for Israel to route out hamas if they made a West Bank deal first, seeing west bank prosper in comparison i think would be enough motivation.
I mean. Granted that's already happening to a huge degree, but being "abandoned" by the WB completely i think would be pretty shocking.
As things are the PA might have an economic adavantage to it as well. What with the PA putting money itno Gaza but hama keeping all gaza money back to itself. Political backlash may be too much though.
