The reality is that peacemaking is a long, difficult, frustrating business. To give up negotiations in favor of walls and fences, or an endless war of attrition, would be both irresponsible and tragic.
LA Times Editorial
It's hard to imagine now, but there was a time when a comprehensive rapprochement between Israelis
and Palestinians seemed not just possible but inevitable. In the
mid-1990s, the two-state solution was gaining support on both sides. Hamas and Islamic Jihad were losing influence. Israel was handing over West Bank cities to Palestinian control. The 50-year-old conflict seemed to be nearing a resolution.Of course, that never came to pass. Peace fizzled in the wake of the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the terrorist bombs of the Palestinian militants, among other things. But does that mean it can't be revived, or that the two-state solution can never work? The reality is that peacemaking is a long, difficult, frustrating business, conducted between enemies who have, by definition, little trust for each other. To give up negotiations in favor of walls and fences, or an endless war of attrition, would be both irresponsible and tragic....READ MORE
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