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Monday, September 15, 2008
MK Yuval Steinitz: 'Two-state solution should be dead...would bring about Israel's demise'

'Two-state solution should be dead'
Tovah Lazaroff , THE JERUSALEM POST Sep. 14, 2008
www.jpost.com
/servlet/Satellite?cid=1221142472433&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

After a decade of attending rallies and protests, Yuval Steinitz was certain
that peace had finally arrived when the first Oslo Accord was signed on the
White House lawn on September 13, 1993, exactly 15 years ago this week.

As a philosophy professor at the University of Haifa and an active member of
Peace Now, Steinitz recalled that he went out that night with friends to
celebrate the dawning of a new era for Israel.

But after two years, as the Palestinians armed themselves in the West Bank
and suicide bombers began blowing themselves up in Israel, a disillusioned
Steinitz came to the conclusion that instead of fostering peace, the accords
that had held so much promise were actually leading Israel on a path to its
demise.

"Oslo could have been right. I gave it a chance, but then I had to be a
skeptic and reexamine my position. Then I felt that what we did was a
terrible mistake," said Steinitz.

"I realized that, to my frustration, we were giving up land for war and
terror and incitement," he said.

As the Palestinians continued with their anti-Israel and anti-Semitic
rhetoric, he worried that "instead of a demilitarized Palestinian state we
might end up with a militarized Palestinian state in the center of the
country."

By 1995 he began to lobby against the Oslo Accords and in 1999 he left the
academic world and successfully ran for Knesset as a member of the
right-wing Likud Party, which he has represented in the Knesset ever since.

To his sorrow, said Steinitz, the principles of Oslo remain intact in the
Annapolis process and direct negotiations continue between Israeli and the
Palestinian leaders, despite the dangers they pose.

His objection to territorial compromise is not rooted in a belief in
biblical Israel, but is the outcome of a security analysis, said Steinitz,
who is a former head of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

"For any foreseeable future I do not see a partner, or any possibility to
leave Judea and Samaria or even part of it," he said.

"The idea of a two-state solution should be dead, today, because
unfortunately a Palestinian state in Judea and Samaria would bring about
Israel's demise," he added. Such a Palestinian state, he warned, would
"immediately become an outpost for Iran." The Hamas takeover of Gaza less
than two years after Israel withdrew from the area was a scenario that could
repeat itself in the West Bank, he warned.

The only reason Kassam rockets had not been fired at the center of the
country or at Ben-Gurion International Airport was because Israel had a
military presence in the West Bank, said Steinitz.

It was true, he said, he was among those in the Likud who supported the Gaza
withdrawal in 2005, largely for demographic reasons.

On paper, he said, it was an idea that made sense, but Israel failed in its
execution because it did not take certain security measures. In particular,
he argued, it should have held onto the Philadelphi Corridor on the
Gaza-Egypt border.

The same demographic considerations are not in play in the West Bank where
the birth rate was lower than in Gaza, said Steinitz.

Until there was a reliable partner, Israel should not be engaged in
negotiations with the Palestinians, said Steinitz, adding the lack of a
Palestinian partner that was committed to peace was the reason Oslo failed.

"We underestimated the pressure coming from the outside Arab world against
real peace and real compromise between Israel and the Palestinians,"
Steinitz said.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas talks nicely of peace but he
supports terrorism, Steinitz claimed.

When Abbas hugged Lebanese terrorist Samir Kuntar this summer, who killed
three people in Nahariya, including a four-year-old girl, he showed that he
was no different than former PA leader Yasser Arafat, Steinitz said.

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