Limit search to available items
E-book
Author Dunne, Michele Durocher.

Title A two-state solution requires Palestinian politics / Michele Dunne
Published Washington, DC : Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2010

Copies

Description 19 pages : digital, PDF file
Series Carnegie papers ; no. 113
Working papers (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) ; no. 113.
Contents Summary -- Ignoring the need to build institutions : the legacy of the 1990s -- Manipulating Palestinian politics : 2000 to 2008 -- 2009 onward : the Fayyad plan and aborted reconciliation efforts -- A new approach
Summary Successful Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, whether the indirect talks begun in May 2010 or direct talks, will require a Palestinian leadership that enjoys adequate support in the West Bank and Gaza. Building the institutions of a Palestinian state is also crucial and long overdue. Prime Minister Salam Fayyad's two-year plan for institution building, announced in August 2009, is laudable but has significant limitations. That plan, and Palestinian decision making, suffer from a common problem: the suspension of normal political life since the 2007 rift with Hamas and Gaza coup. Without a presidential election, legitimacy is draining away from President Mahmoud Abbas; without a functioning Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) and its ability to make laws, institution building is severely limited. The United States should move beyond the short-term thinking-- that inconvenient Palestinian politics can and should be delayed because a negotiating breakthrough is just around the corner-- that has afflicted its policies for decades. This does not mean that the United States should engage Hamas directly, which would have the unfortunate effect of validating the group's violent and rejectionist tactics. Instead, the United States should develop a strategy that patiently supports Palestinian institution building and tolerates the internal Palestinian political competition and bargaining that must accompany it; seeks breakthroughs in negotiations with Israel; and holds the Palestinian Authority to a commitment to prevent violence against Israel
Notes Title from PDF title page (viewed on June 7, 2010)
"June 2010."
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 17-18)
Notes Mode of access: Internet from Carnegie Endowment for International Peace web site. Adobe Acrobat Reader required
Subject Arab-Israeli conflict.
Nation-building -- Palestine
Arab-Israeli conflict.
Diplomatic relations.
Nation-building.
Politics and government
SUBJECT Palestine -- Politics and government. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85097180
Palestine -- Foreign relations -- Israel
Israel -- Foreign relations -- Palestine
United States -- Foreign relations -- Palestine
Palestine -- Foreign relations -- United States
United States -- Foreign relations -- Israel
Israel -- Foreign relations -- United States
Subject Israel.
Middle East -- Palestine.
United States.
Form Electronic book
Author Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Middle East Program.