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by Alan M. Dershowitz
• November 1, 2016 at 8:00 am
U.S. President Barack Obama addresses the UN General
Assembly's seventy-first session, September 20, 2016. (Image source: United
Nations)
The Obama Administration is sending strong signals that once the
election is over it may make a major push to resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the United Nations. Despite repeated
invitations by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Palestinian
Authority President Abbas to meet without preconditions, the stalemate
persists. Some blame it on Palestinian unwillingness to recognize Israel as
the nation state of the Jewish People and to compromise to the so-called
"right of return." Others — including the current U.S.
Administration — lay the blame largely at the feet of the Netanyahu
government for continuing to build in the West Bank, most recently approval
of between 98 and 300 new homes in Shiloh. Whatever the reasons – and they
are complex and multifaceted — President Obama should resist any
temptation, during his final weeks in office, to change longstanding
American policy — that only direct negotiations between the parties will achieve
a lasting peace.
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