My political boggle for today...
Last week, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she found it "hard to understand what is going to be gained by having discussions with Hamas about peace when Hamas is in fact the impediment to peace."
Um. Y'know. Well. Just /possibly/, that whole 'talking' thing, it might, y'know, have an effect on them being an impediment to peace. I mean, hey, crazy idea when you've got nukes, I know, but give it a shot.
Um. Y'know. Well. Just /possibly/, that whole 'talking' thing, it might, y'know, have an effect on them being an impediment to peace. I mean, hey, crazy idea when you've got nukes, I know, but give it a shot.
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Unfortunately, Israel's trying to have their cake and eat it. If they're an occupying power, they ought to damn well act like it; and if they're not, and they're ceding the territories, then they ought to do that as well; then they can promptly treat the next round of rocket attacks as an act of war, and simply level the Gaza Strip to a small flat pile of rubble.
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Those things could quite easily be changed.
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Remind me again, who called for those Palestinian elections? Who then refused to acknowledge the winners of those elections because they weren't the people we were supposed to like?
Who has refused to negotiate with Hamas and then threw out "have not proven to be a good faith negotiating partner" when they didn't take the first bad faith offer given?
If you're going to at least come to States' defense, quit making State look like an asshole.
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As for "quit making State look like an asshole" -- Why? That's not the government that the US wanted in there. What was wanted was a government who would be amenable to negotiations on the terms that the US and Israel were setting. Obviously, that didn't happen. So State's trying the stick approach, since Hamas hasn't shown much interest in carrots that aren't acceptable to the other party in the negotiations. Is it working? Not really. Will the carrot approach work better? Probably not at prices the administration is willing to pay, and in this instance, I'm not sure I disagree with them.
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Why? Because we're not willing to haggle.
It's either Israel's sit-at-the-table offer, or nothing. And that's stupid. Because it clearly isn't working, but we're too damned stubborn to try something else. Why? Because they might not be at prices the U.S. or the Likudniks in Israel are willing to offer. And rather then say "well, maybe they should swallow their damned pride and negotiate for a better future," we're just stuck with the same 50-year long bullshit.
And I full-well disagree with that furtherance of bloodshed.
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But, what I dislike is the sense in that quote that there's not point in even /talking/ to the people who are in your way, even in an utterly unofficial capacity, because it sets up very nasty dynamics, y'know?
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But, even if they were and just wanted deniability, there are far better ways to do that than say, "Those people aren't worth talking to," y'know? They invented 'no comment', or even a sniffy 'As an American citizen, Mr. Carter is free to talk to whoever he wishes within the bounds of the law, but we're not opening any negotiations at this time'.