Abbas backs away from Yemeni agreement
posted at 11:15 am on March 24, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
Over the weekend, Fatah and Hamas signed an agreement hammered out in Sanaa to work together for Palestinian unity. That lasted less than 24 hours, as Mahmoud Abbas declared the agreement a “misunderstanding” and its signing by a Fatah representative a mistake. Fatah has insisted again that it will sign no agreements with Hamas until they surrender Gaza:
“Hamas is trying to lead us to endless talks without backing away from its military coup,” aide Yasser Abed Rabbo told the Voice of Palestine radio. “Hamas is giving no signs of doing so. On the contrary, it gives more signs of repression and taking over more Palestinian Authority institutions in Gaza.”
Abbas said in a statement Sunday that he didn’t consider the Yemeni plan a basis for negotiations with Hamas. Either it is implemented, as is, starting with Hamas stepping aside, or it is dropped, he said.
Hamas said the initiative by Yemeni President Abdullah Saleh was all about dialogue and could not be implemented immediately. “Not a single article of the Yemeni initiative can be implemented without coming to an understanding – there should be a dialogue since practically speaking (the immediate implementation) you demand cannot take place,” Abu Marzouk said at a press conference in San’a.
Israel is not taking the Hamas-Fatah talks too seriously, an Israeli official said Monday. But if Abbas actually agrees to share power with Hamas, that would mean the end of the peace talks, the official said.
Officially, the Palestinian Authority says its representative at the talks did not have the authority to sign the document. Azzam al-Ahmed, the former Deputy Prime Minister, tried to contact Mahmoud Abbas from the negotiations in the Yemeni capital, but could not contact Abbas. Abbas had gone into meetings with Dick Cheney, who later issued his own statements about the malignant nature of Hamas in the Middle East. Ahmed signed the document without instructions or authority to do so after Abbas didn’t return his calls.
Abbas only sent Ahmed to Sanaa to maintain public relations in the Arab world. He wants Gaza back, and he wants Hamas to surrender it without preconditions or any agreement to reshuffle the government. The Iranian involvement in Hamas makes everyone nervous, but Abbas has the better approach; why invite Hamas and its Iranian puppet-masters into the Palestinian Authority? Better to tap-dance around Sanaa than to invite the mullahcracy into the tent at home.
Hamas needs Abbas and the West Bank in order to alleviate the blockade in Gaza. They want to gain the sympathies of the Arab world and to pressure Abbas to bring them back into the government, but not at the cost of giving up Gaza. They have operational control of significant territory for the first time and won’t easily forego it. The reason the other Arab nations want a reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas is because that split makes it more difficult for them to exploit the Palestinian cause to their advantage. After all, if the Palestinians themselves can’t agree on their direction, then how can anyone expect them to participate in negotiations for status, even if they intend on using the talks as a sham?
And in the meantime, as always, the Palestinians themselves get used as pawns for the terrorists they have chosen to lead them.










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And the shuffle two step continues.
Grantman on March 24, 2008 at 10:34 AM
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
jukin on March 24, 2008 at 11:18 AM
More money, we need more American money….and guns, hey you guys got any rockets?
dmann on March 24, 2008 at 11:23 AM
May they fight one another to the death.
someguy on March 24, 2008 at 11:24 AM
Ed:
Another one? What, is this a hobby with them? I mean, if the Kiss-the-Kaaba agreement fell apart, who could expect this one to work?
irishspy on March 24, 2008 at 11:33 AM
Hamas won 76 of 132 seats in the Palestinian parliament last election.
I think America and Israel need a better Palestinian puppet than Abbas.
He’s starting to make Bush’s “spreadin’ Democracy!” meme look…insincere.
alphie on March 24, 2008 at 11:49 AM
Democracy? Aww, that’s cute. You really think that the elections in the Palestinian territories or whatever they call themselves now is a democracy? It never was and it never will be.
Abbas was no better than Yassar Arafat. Everyone knows that he’s a Holocaust denying, terrorist supporting thug.
This is just the endless circle-jerk of pretending that there are Palestinians interested in Peace and pretending that there is a peace process in the works. When we all know that’s pure crapola.
mjk on March 24, 2008 at 11:58 AM
I have a suggestion what Abbas and the rest of the Palestinian savages can do with a pen.
Hening on March 24, 2008 at 12:15 PM
It’s infuriating to me that our government continues to confiscate our property to support Fatah terrorists.
Bugler on March 24, 2008 at 12:37 PM
Now, now, mjk,
Israel was founded by terrorists, and it turned out okay.
alphie on March 24, 2008 at 12:43 PM
This makes me want to puke. Thanks George Bush!
Bugler on March 24, 2008 at 1:31 PM
All we can hope for is they all go extinct or even the Arab world doesn`t want anything to do with them. The Palestinians are a tragic, lost people.
ThePrez on March 24, 2008 at 4:48 PM