May 16th

Experts warn time running out for two-state solution for Mideast crisis
Media Mention of Ghaith al-Omari In Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) - May 16, 2013 - 12:00am




May 15th

 

NEWS:
 
Palestinians protest on the 65th anniversary of the Nakba. (AP)
 
On the anniversary of the Nakba, some Palestinians reiterate the importance of the right of return. (Xinhua)
 
Critics decry Israel's silence on the Arab Peace Initiative. (AP)
 
The ICC lead prosecutor says she has received a complaint about Israel's 2010 flotilla raid and will investigate. (AP)
 
Palestinian journalists say they were assaulted by Israeli occupation forces near Bethlehem. (Ma'an)
 
Israel says mortar shells from Syria have again landed in the occupied Golan Heights. (AP)
 
Dutch prosecutors say they will not go ahead with charges against a company that rented equipment used to build Israel's West Bank separation barrier. (AP)
 
After meeting in Cairo, Fatah and Hamas once again agree to form a unity government, this time within the next three months. (AP)
 
Reports in the Arab media suggest Iran may have convinced Syria to allow Hezbollah to open a front against Israel on the Golan Heights. (Ha'aretz)
 
Palestinians are returning to a Christian village in the northern Galilee. (The Guardian)
 
Google's inclusion of Palestine in its list of landing pages is a small change that has made a big difference to Palestinians. (NPR)
 
A Jerusalem family specializes in tattooing Orthodox pilgrims for Easter. (AP)
 
KFC food is being smuggled through Gaza tunnels. (Xinhua)
 
Ownership of a profitable amusement park in northern Gaza is mysterious, as Hamas denies controlling it. (The National)
 
women's collective in a Gaza refugee camp specializes in traditional cuisine. (The Guardian)
 
Palestinians in the West Bank compete with Chinese-made kaffiyehs. (Christian Science Monitor)
 
The Boulder, Colorado City Council is considering sister city-relations with Nablus. (The Denver Post)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
David Kenner interviews Hamas leader Mishaal. (Foreign Policy)
 
Ibrahim Sharqieh says 65 years after the Nakba, Palestinians have little to cheer about. (CNN)
 
The National says the pain of the Nakba has not diminished over time. (The National)
 
Marco Greenberg says Israel could learn a thing or two about PR from Google. (Ha'aretz).
 
Asmaa al-Ghoul looks at Islamic Jihad's relationship with Iran and Iranian arms. (Al Monitor)
 
George Robinson looks at a new movie, "State 194," about PM Fayyad's institution-building program. (The Jewish Week)
 
Ben Caspit looks at the future of Israel's defense budget. (Al Monitor)
 
Omar Shaban argues the Palestine Investment Fund needs reform. (Al Monitor)

May 14th

 

NEWS:
 
Several Palestinians are injured by Israeli occupation forces during Nakba day protests in the West Bank. (Ma'an)
 
Hundreds of Arab and Jewish students commemorate the Nakba at Tel Aviv University. (Xinhua)
 
Pres. Putin and PM Netanyahu discuss Syria. (AP)
 
Israel is moving to bolster the Palestinian economy and build ties to the PA. (Xinhua)
 
Israel shuts Gaza's only commercial crossing for Jewish holidays. (Xinhua)
 
Human rights groups say Pres. Abbas is preparing to criminalize torture. (Ma'an)
 
Palestinians say settlers burn fields near Nablus. (Ma'an)
 
Jewish extremists are accused of "price tag" attacks inside Israel and the occupied territories. (Ma'an)
 
A Palestinian man convicted of hijacking a plane in 1968 has been deported from Canada after 26 years in prison. (AP)
 
In remarks targeted mainly at the Syrian regime, Hamas says it rejects the rule of any Arab state over Palestinians. (Xinhua)
 
Netanyahu is under fire for his allegedly "costly lifestyle" at the public expense. (AP)
 
Israeli occupation authorities plan to build about 1,000 Palestinian homes in "Area C." (Jerusalem Post)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
Shlomi Eldar says he knows the basics of Sec. Kerry's peace proposal. (Al Monitor)
 
Ami Ayalon says the recent Arab League statement on land swaps was nothing new. (Ha'aretz)
 
Anshel Pfeffer is concerned about the dreams some Israelis have to destroy Muslim holy places and replace them with a Jewish temple. (Ha'aretz)
 
Linah Alsaafin says the PA is struggling to find a way to stop Israeli expansion in the occupied Jordan Valley. (Al Monitor)
 
Hilary Rose and Steven Rose say Steven Hawking's boycott of an Israeli government conference was significant because of the importance of science to Israel's economy. (The Guardian)
 
Steve Caplan says Hawking should have gone to Israel and listened to Israelis and Palestinians. (The Guardian)
 
Moshe Arens says Israel is already a binational state and must do more to integrate its Arab citizens. (Ha'aretz)
 
Abeer Ayyoub says Palestinians were divided over the visit of Islamist cleric Qaradawi to Gaza. (Al Monitor)
 
Elisheva Goldberg says a new candidate for Sephardi Chief Rabbi in Israel is a noted anti-Arab racist. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)
 
Bernard Avishai says Israelis need to rethink the interplay between peace and security in light of regional instability. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)
 
Larry Diamond says Israel and its neighbors desperately need a US-brokered two-state solution. (The Atlantic)
 
Ori Nir says Israelis and others need to stop pretending the occupation is normal or routine. (Chicago Tribune)

May 13th

NEWS:
 
A dozen regional Christian leaders complain they were mistreated by Israeli police during Orthodox Easter services. (AP)
 
Pres. Abbas says Israeli settlers must be stopped from entering Muslim holy places in Jerusalem. (Xinhua)
 
Draft laws by Hamas to impose harsh "religious" punishments, including amputations for theft, spark a major controversy in Gaza. (Al Monitor)
 
Palestinian NGOs urge the PA and Hamas to stop issuing new laws and decrees as long as the schism prevails. (Xinhua)
 
Fatah and Hamas are due to meet again in Cairo on Tuesday regarding national unity. (Xinhua)
 
PM Fayyad says insuring press freedom should be one of the main responsibilities of the PA. (Ma'an)
 
 
An Israeli cabinet minister accuses Russia of destabilizing the Middle East by selling arms to Syria. (AP)
 
Palestinian public sector employees once again strike due to delayed salary payments. (Ma'an)
 
Israeli forces arrest two former Palestinian militants who had been granted amnesty. (Xinhua)
 
In June the PA will stop paying fines imposed by Israel on Palestinian detainees. (Ma'an)
 
An Israeli interrogator accused of torture says detainees must be made to feel anything is possible. (Ha'aretz)
 
Abbas says renewed negotiations require Israeli recognition that a two-state solution is the intended outcome. (Xinhua)
 
The Times of Israel describes what it calls "secret" negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians in 2010. (Times of Israel)
 
The Israeli government says it is postponing planned settlement expansions in occupied east Jerusalem "for political sensitivity." (Jerusalem Post)
 
Israeli settlers are divided on the approach of a military commander in the occupied West Bank. (Ha'aretz)
 
In the latest twist to a long-running saga, Israeli officials now claim a young boy, Muhammad Al-Dura, believed shot during the start of the second intifada, was never killed at all. (Jerusalem Post)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
Efraim Halevy says the Israeli government doesn't want the Assad regime to fall. (Foreign Affairs)
 
Elie Podeh says Israel is missing a huge opportunity by ignoring the Arab Peace Initiative. (Ha'aretz)
 
Nathan Guttman asks how big a breakthrough the recent Arab League statement really is. (The Forward)
 
Rami Khouri calls China's recent peace proposal "intriguing." (The Daily Star)
 
William Sutcliffe talks about his new novel "The Wall." (The Guardian)
 
Shlomo Avineri accuses cosmologist Stephen Hawking of hypocrisy for boycotting an Israeli government conference. (Ha'aretz)
 
The Boston Globe says Hawking had every right to make his nonviolent protest. (Boston Globe)
 
Akiva Eldar calls Hawking's boycott "unjust and unwise." (Al Monitor)
 
Barry Rubin says, with the region in political turmoil, bashing Israel has become almost pointless. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Asmaa al-Ghoul says Islamic Jihad takes a much harder and clear line than Hamas in opposing a two-state solution. (Al Monitor)
 
Lara Friedman and Daniel Seidemann say, in opposing Google's inclusion of Palestine in its range of landing pages, some Israelis are the ones clinging to a virtual reality. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)

May 10th

 

NEWS:
 
In comments directed towards Israel, Hezbollah claims Syria will provide it with "game changing" weapons. (New York Times)
 
Sec. Kerry and Pres. Abbas discuss peace in a phone call. (Xinhua)
 
Israeli officials suggest talks with Palestinians may resume in June. (YNet)
 
Palestinian officials say Kerry may present a new peace proposal in early June. (The Media Line)
 
Sec. Hagel says the US is determined to support its Middle East allies, including Israel and Egypt. (JTA)
 
El Salvador is set to establish diplomatic relations with Palestine. (JTA)
 
Israel arrests 13 Palestinians, and, in a separate incident, a PA security officer, in the occupied West Bank. (Xinhua/Ma'an)
 
In a visit to Gaza, the prominent Doha-based Islamist cleric Qaradawi rejects Israel's existence. (AP)
 
PLO officials say Israel's latest settlement announcement "sabotages" the possibility of new peace talks. (AFP)
 
Palestinians say they have called for an emergency Arab League meeting to discuss Jerusalem. (Ma'an)
 
With no actual elections in sight, the Palestinian "reality" TV show, "The President," is a big hit. (AP)
 
The boycott of an Israeli government conference by cosmologist Stephen Hawking gives new prominence to the BDS campaign. (CSM)
 
Israelis are more confident in Pres. Obama than Palestinians, but both want him to take the lead on peace. (JTA/Jerusalem Post)
 
Young Palestinians and Israeli settlers hold a rare meeting to discuss coexistence in occupied Hebron. (Ma'an)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
Lior Akerman, a former senior Israeli security official, says PM Fayyad's resignation is a loss for both Israelis and Palestinians. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Guy Bechor says Israel shouldn't go forward with new peace talks until Palestinians hold a new national election. (YNet)
 
Jonathan Cook says Israel isn't interested in a negotiated agreement with the Palestinians. (The National)
 
Nir Hasson says the construction of Route 20 in northern Jerusalem makes any future division of the city far more difficult. (Ha'aretz)
 
Bradley Burston says extreme right-wing "pro-Israel" advocacy is often just self-defeating hate speech. (Ha'aretz)
 
Jennifer Lipman says Hawking's boycott of an Israeli government conference won't inform or change anyone's views. (The Guardian)
 
The Economist says the boycott campaign can carry a heavy price for some Palestinians. (The Economist)
 
Eyad Abu Shakra says Israel's air strike in Syria was designed to send multiple messages to various parties, and seems successful. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
 
Asmaa al-Ghoul says Palestinian Islamic Jihad is reshaping and intensifying its political profile. (Al Monitor)
 
Akiva Eldar says "Jerusalem Day" means nothing when it's not celebrated by 67% of its residents. (Al Monitor)
 
Nadav Eyal says PM Netanyahu is striking a different tone on peace these days, probably in response to US policy. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)
 
Nick Witney and Daniel Levy say, if Europe is going to make a difference, it's going to have to really oppose Israeli expansionism. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)

May 9th

 

NEWS:
 
President Obama and PM Netanyahu discuss regional security and Middle East peace in a phone call. (Reuters)
 
Sec. Kerry will visit the Middle East again in two weeks and reiterates there is a short windowfor renewed peace efforts. (AP)
 
Former Pres. Clinton will also visit Israel in June. (Xinhua)
 
China is also attempting to begin to become a player in Middle East peace. (New York Times/AP)
 
The State Department urges respect for freedom of worship after charges Israel restricted Palestinian Christian travel to Jerusalem this Easter. (JTA)
 
A senior figure in the Israeli Shas party urges Netanyahu to adopt the Arab League peace initiative. (Ha'aretz)
 
Israeli media reports the government has approved 296 new settlement housing units near Ramallah. (Ma'an)
 
Israel releases the grand mufti of Jerusalem after questioning. (New York Times)
 
Young Palestinians clash with Israeli occupation forces at the Al Aqsa mosque compound. (Ma'an)
 
Pres. Peres assures Jordan that Israel will honor agreements regarding holy sites. (Jerusalem Post)
 
The UN decries rising poverty in occupied East Jerusalem. (Al Jazeera)
 
Fatah officials say Palestinians don't take orders from the Syrian regime. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Physicist Stephen Hawking confirms his refusal to attend an Israeli government conference is in protest against its policies towards the Palestinians. (New York Times/AP)
 
Hawking's critics say if he wants to boycott Israel he should stop using Israeli technology in his communications equipment. (The Guardian)
 
An Israeli human rights group says half the Palestinians killed in Israel's last Gaza operationwere civilians. (Ha'aretz)
 
Israel launches its first automated drone. (Xinhua)
 
Doha-based Islamist cleric Qaradawi visits Gaza, which Fatah condemns. (AFP/Jerusalem Post)
 
A parliamentary delegation from Bahrain is also visiting Gaza. (Ma'an)
 
Jordanian prisoners are hunger-striking against the peace treaty with Israel. (The Media Line)
 
Hamas says it's trying to root out Israeli spy networks in Gaza. (Reuters)
 
China and Israel set up a task force to increase trade. (South China Morning Post)
 
 
Palestinians report there are growing indications of oil in the occupied West Bank, which Israel may be quietly exploiting. (UPI)
 
Egypt summons the Israeli ambassador over alleged mistreatment of Egyptian staff at the embassy in Tel Aviv. (Xinhua)
 
The Israeli state may be considering closer ties with J Street. (YNet)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
Lara Friedman says it's completely wrong to think Netanyahu has frozen settlement construction or expansion. (Daily Beast/Open Zion) 
 
The CSM profiles Palestinian activist turned scholar Mohammed Dajani. (Christian Science Monitor)
 
Ha'aretz says proposed new legislation in Israel would undemocratically stifle criticism of Israeli military actions. (Ha'aretz)
 
Chemi Shalev says Hawking is now the "unlikely poster child" of the boycott movement. (Ha'aretz)
 
Carlo Strenger accuses Hawking of hypocrisy. (Ha'aretz)
 
Ben White says Hawking should be commended for his boycott. (Al Jazeera)
 
Gershon Baskin says there is nothing "united" about Jerusalem under Israeli rule. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Gil Troy calls Israeli "price tag" vigilantes "morally bankrupt, politically foolish criminals." (Jerusalem Post)
 
Xinhua asks why Syria isn't responding to Israel's airstrike. (Xinhua)
 
Aaron David Miller says Kerry is right to try to get Arab states involved in the peace process, but is unlikely to succeed, and only the Israelis and the Palestinians can really make it happen. (Foreign Policy)
 
Brent Sasley says an Israeli law mandating a referendum on any peace agreement is a bad idea. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)
 
George Hishmeh says Israel's airstrike in Syria was designed to undermine the prospects of new peace talks. (Gulf News)
 
Abdullah Iskandar says Israel had no right to attack Syria. (Al Hayat)
 
Nassif Hitti says the Arab League can help Israelis and Palestinians negotiate. (Al Monitor)
 
Douglas Bloomfield says the Arab League has to get involved in a meaningful way. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Ron Kampeas says Qatar is trying to make its name as a Middle East peacemaker. (JTA)
 
Badar Salem looks at the myriad challenges faced by gay Palestinians. (Al Bawaba)

May 6th

NEWS:
 
Pres. Abbas is visiting China and seeking diplomatic support there. (New York Times/Ma'an)
 
PM Netanyahu is also visiting China, focusing on economic issues, but is joined by the head of Israel's military intelligence. (AP/Ha'aretz)
 
China's hosting of the two leaders indicates a desire for a larger Middle East role. (AP)
 
Syria blames Israel for an air raid against targets near Damascus. (New York Times)
 
The attack prompts anger and threats in Syria, which says "all options are open." (AP/Washington Post)
 
Syria accuses Israel of using depleted uranium shells during the attack, and of aiding Al Qaeda. (Jerusalem Post/Asharq Al-Awsat)
 
Israeli reaction focuses on growing tensions with Syria. (AP)
 
Israel cancels civil air flights in its northern regions due to growing tensions along the frontiers with Syria and Lebanon. (Xinhua)
 
Many see a message in the action to Iran. (New York Times)
 
The airstrike highlights conundrums faced by the Arab League. (AP)
 
Tensions grow in the West Bank as 1000 Israeli right-wingers and troops visit a holy site. (Ma'an)
 
Israel allows the children of prisoners from Gaza to visit them. (Xinhua)
 
Hamas says two of its senior officials were denied entry into Egypt. (Ma'an)
 
The EU contributes €20 million to the PA to help pay April public sector employee salaries. (PNN)
 
The PLO denies Al Qaeda is operating in the Ain Al-Hilweh refugee camp in south Lebanon. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
AP examines why Israel would attack Syria now. (AP)
 
The National says the Israeli airstrike complicates an already messy situation. (The National)
 
Barak Ravid says Netanyahu is making clear to Pres. Assad that Israel's only interest is in preventing weapons transfers to Hezbollah. (Ha'aretz)
 
Ben Caspit says, among other things, Israel is sending a message to Iran. (Al Monitor)
 
Kais Firro says the attack may actually play into Assad's hands. (Al Monitor)
 
Linda Gradstein asks Hezbollah is likely to retaliate against Israel. (The Media Line)
 
Chemi Shalev says the combination of Israeli action and American inaction in Syria has put growing pressure on Pres. Obama. (Ha'aretz)
 
Amir Oren recounts a conversation between Golda Meir and Henry Kissinger in 1974. (Ha'aretz)
 
Ian Black says a new, post-Oslo model for peace is required. (The Guardian)
 
Adnan Abu Amer interviews Hamas leader Mishaal, who says US peace efforts will fail. (Al Monitor)
 
Adel Safty asks why, if Netanyahu is really interested in peace, he continues to build settlements. (Gulf News)
 
The Daily Star says the Arab League should pay more attention to what the Palestinians want. (The Daily Star)
 
Musa Keilani says Netanyahu doesn't want to relinquish any occupied territories and wants Palestinians to accept that. (Jordan Times)
 
Rami Khouri says the revival of the old peace process will yield the same failed results. (The Daily Star)

May 3rd

 

NEWS:
 
Israel's chief negotiator Livni meets Sec. Kerry in Washington. (Ha'aretz)
 
Palestinian officials say they expect the United States to pressure Pres. Abbas to resume talks with Israel. (Xinhua)
 
Fatah officials say it's too early to speak concretely about land swaps with Israel. (Ma'an)
 
Hamas rejects the recent Arab League statement endorsing land swaps between Israel and the Palestinians. (Xinhua)
 
China offers to broker a meeting between Abbas and PM Netanyahu. (JTA)
 
Sec. Hagel reportedly suggests to Israeli officials that a military option against Iran might be considered after that country's presidential election. (Ha'aretz)
 
The US has reportedly upgraded a bunker buster bomb within eye to action in Iran. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Five Palestinian refugees are injured in an explosion in Lebanon. (Xinhua)
 
Dozens of Palestinian journalists protest Israeli restrictions in the occupied West Bank. (PNN)
 
The relatives of prisoners criticize a PA decision to stop paying Israeli court imposed fines. (Ma'an)
 
Settlers protest the raising of a new outpost in the occupied West Bank. (Jerusalem Post)
 
The father of a Palestinian man accused of stabbing an Israeli settler says he's proud of his son. (Jerusalem Post)
 
The PA is working to include the word Palestine in Internet lists and domains. (Xinhua)
 
 
Netanyahu is visiting China with an emphasis on economic ties. (AP)
 
A disabled baby from Gaza is living in an Israeli hospital. (AP)
 
An alleged beating by PA police may have cost a man his ability to speak. (Al Monitor)
 
A new Church of Scotland report on Israel's biblical claims angers many. (Ha'aretz)
 
The National profiles a Palestinian singer from Gaza from the Arab Idol TV show. (The National)
 
Al Quds University in occupied East Jerusalem is looking for official recognition from Israel's educational authorities. (Al Monitor)
 
A paralyzed photographer's story highlights the challenges facing disabled Palestinians. (Al Monitor)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
The New York Times says the recent Arab League statement on land swaps is a welcome move. (New York Times)
 
The Jordan Times says Israel needs to respond to the overture. (Jordan Times)
 
Akiva Eldar says Netanyahu's ideology will prevent him from responding positively to the Arab League statement. (Al Monitor)
 
Brent Sasley says, despite conventional wisdom, this is an opportune time for new peace talks. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)
 
Shlomi Eldar looks at Qatar's bewildering multiple policies, including on Israeli-Palestinian peace. (Al Monitor)
 
Yaakov Lappin says Iran and Egypt are locked in a power struggle over influence in Gaza. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Anshel Pfeffer says the BDS campaign is doing harm to Israel by strengthening the settler movement. (Ha'aretz)
 
The Economist says Jewish settlements are driving away Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. (The Economist)
 
Hillel Halkin says Israel was right not to return the occupied Golan Heights to Syria, given the chaos in that country now. (The Forward)
 
Mohammed Suliman says most Palestinian factions in Gaza want to maintain the cease-fire with Israel in spite of a recent assassination. (Al Monitor)
 
Alan Dershowitz says it's disgraceful that some Jews would boo efforts to make peace with Palestinians. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Adam Simpson says narratives, not money, determine the influence of the pro-Israel lobby in the United States. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)

May 2nd

 

NEWS:
 
PM Fayyad says he remains generally optimistic but that the Palestinian leadership has to stay relevant and engaged. (Al Monitor)
 
 
PM Netanyahu endorses the idea that any peace agreement should be backed up by a popular referendum. (AP)
 
Netanyahu and his key allies are reportedly worried that Sec. Kerry is inching towards the Arab League stance on the two-state solution. (Ha'aretz)
 
Israel's response to the apparent Arab League endorsement of land swaps is cool, andPalestinian reaction is also mixed. (Washington Post/VOA)
 
Former PM Olmert calls the Arab League statement "historic" and a great opportunity for Israel. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Hamas leader Mishaal rejects the notion of a land swap with Israel. (Ma'an)
 
For all the diplomatic activity, renewed peace talks are nowhere in sight. (Ha'aretz)
 
Critics of the occupation say apparent relative calm is always an illusion. (New York Times)
 
An Israeli citizen is arrested by Lebanese authorities after allegedly crossing the border illegally. (Xinhua)
 
A Palestinian fisherman from Gaza describes his ordeals at the hands of the Israeli military. (PNN)
 
Settlers begin constructing a new outpost near Nablus. (Ma'an)
 
Israeli settlers attack another Palestinian village in the occupied territories. (Jerusalem Post)
 
PA security forces arrest five Hamas activists in the West Bank. (Ma'an)
 
Palestinians are dealing with water shortages in the occupied West Bank with as much equanimity as they can muster. (CSM)
 
The Israeli Knesset is reportedly adopting a new law that prevents citizens of "enemy states"from suing Israel. (Xinhua)
 
Netanyahu is visiting China in a bid to strengthen ties. (Xinhua)
 
A new Pew poll of Muslim opinion shows a substantial minority of Palestinians think suicide bombing is sometimes justifiable, among other mixed and complex results. (Pew Research Center/Daily Telegraph/CNN/)
 
Google's search engine now recognizes Palestine rather than "the Palestinian territories." (PNN)
 
Cooperation may be growing between Bedouin tribesmen and Muslim extremists in Sinai. (The Media Line)
 
 
COMMENTARY:
 
Ari Shavit says better security and the diplomatic impasse don't make Israel's crisis with the occupied Palestinian population go away. (Ha'aretz)
 
Raphael Ahren looks at the range of Israeli reactions to the Arab League statement on land swaps. (Times of Israel)
 
Shimon Shiffer says there is a solid majority in the Netanyahu coalition against a two-state solution. (YNet)
 
Herb Keinon says the best basis for Israeli-Arab reconciliation is shared concerns about Syria and Iran. (Jerusalem Post)
 
Israel Harel says a referendum on a peace agreement is essential for its legitimacy. (Ha'aretz)
 
Husam Itani says the dysfunctionality of Palestinian politics is what's giving hunger striking prisoners and others so much importance. (Al Hayat)
 
The Gulf News says Israel's apparent disinterest in the recent Arab League statement on land swaps shows peace cannot be a one-way street. (Gulf News)
 
Dalia Hatuqa says some Palestinians feel the Arab League statement was presumptuous and unauthorized by them. (Al Monitor)
 
Asmaa al-Ghoul says Gaza's agricultural and green spaces are under constant threat. (Al Monitor)
 
Brandon Davis looks at the campaign to delegitimize pro-Palestinian queer voices. (Daily Beast/Open Zion)
 
Daniel Kurtzer says the US must begin to articulate a clear framework for new negotiations. (Deutsche Welle)

'Quiet man' Kerry's strategy for Middle East peace
Media Mention of Hussein Ibish In Ma'an News Agency - May 1, 2013 - 12:00am

WASHINGTON (AFP) -- US Secretary of State John Kerry is moving cautiously and smartly towards fresh Middle East peace talks, but deep distrust between all sides means success is far from guaranteed, analysts say.



American Task Force on Palestine - 1634 Eye St. NW, Suite 725, Washington DC 20006 - Telephone: 202-262-0017