Friday, August 13, 2010

Palestinian roadblock

The views of "right" and "left" in Israel are of course not very similar; but this nation is always desperate for peace and some territorial concessions by Israel during 1990s' are the best examples to prove it. Israel often face terrible threats from his neighborhoods. East is Iran, where the President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wants to eradicate Israel anyhow. North is Lebanon which has strengthened its military power with huge amount of Russian-made rockets supplied by Iran and Syria. South is Hamas, whose ruthlessness was evident when they drove Fatah their political opponents, out of the Gaza strip from which Israel had withdrawn as part of a peace deal which Hamas has systematically breached. The intentions of the Israel's neighborhoods are clear enough. So the veteran leader Mr Yossi Sarid's belief that the giving up land would bring peace sounds so ridiculous despite he knows and has already experienced the truth of Oslo experiment. Expecting the Arabs would sit calm after the geographical sacrifice by the Israel would give the latter nothing. The division of Jerusalem into two cities -Jerusalem and Al-Quads (which would serve as the capital of a new Palestinian Arab State) would not change the mindset of Islamic regions. The solution of this crisis does not lie in the creation of a separate Palestinian state. But still, the majority of innocent Jeweish Israelis support territorial compromise in Jerusalem if it would bring a true and lasting peace. In fact, the separation would lead to more hatred. If this separation occurs then conflict of area's distribution would come forward. Old city contains the holiest site in Judaism, the Temple Mount, and the third holiest site in Islam. Still it is premature to say anything about these issues. The UN demands racist division of Jerusalem and says that it needs to be sorted out impartially for the overall benefit of all the three parties satisfaction. All we want that this issue needs immediate solution as it had been dragged too long for nothing. I truly hope that some sort of an equitable solution can be worked out between the adversaries with the guidance of neutral parties.