http://www.nationalreview.com/blogs/print/309931
STOP TWIDDLING YOUR THUMBS…..LET THE SO -CALLED PROCESS DIE OUT…ENCOURAGE WIDESPREAD SETTLEMENT OF JUDEA AND SAMARIA AND CURB THE ILLEGAL ARAB BUILDING AND IMMIGRATION THERE….WHEN IT IS STABLE AND IRREVERSIBLE….ANNEX IT …THE ARABS WHO FIND IT TOO ONEROUS TO LIVE UNDER ISRAELI RULES WHICH ARE COMPATIBLE WITH SECURITY AS WELL AS RIGHTS OF ASSEMBLY, SPEECH AND PRESS SHOULD BE FREE TO MOVE NEXT DOOR TO EASTERN PALESTINE AKA JORDAN…..RSK
Let us start with a rare activity in that twilight zone that is called the Middle East peace process: talking about things we agree upon.
Regional leaders and experts on all sides of the discussion have declared the peace process to be dormant, if not dead. No meaningful negotiations have taken place in almost three years. The Obama administration is hiding its head in the sand. Rumors have replaced ideas and action.
Alas, that reality remains a taboo topic in Washington. So, for that reason, we and others have arrived on Capitol Hill to lay out the realpolitik of the peace process, to strip away the fig leaf, and to force us to see and act.
The time has come, 20 years after Oslo, to reevaluate our thinking and try a new approach. It is the only hope of moving toward a lasting peace. This Thursday in Washington, we are converging with leaders, experts, and journalists from all sides to go back to the drawing board and rethink our basic assumptions about peace in the Middle East. We must. If no path forward can be found, the region is doomed; the sentiment that “it can’t get any worse” will be disproved and mocked.
The two of us come together as Zionists. We do not yield in our determination that Israel shall thrive and grow and be a beacon of democracy, perhaps even a role model for our neighbors in the Arab world, who are now probing new possibilities and lurching toward possible democracy — or theocracy — in their homelands. That said, we do not always agree with each other about the appropriate way to achieve this all-important goal.
In 1992, one of us, Yossi Beilin, initiated top-secret negotiations with the Palestinians, including now–Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas, resulting in the Oslo agreement in 1993, and then, in 1995, a list of guidelines for a permanent solution to the conflict. He further participated in the 2001 joint talks in Taba and the later signing of the Geneva Accords, which were designed to be a model permanent-status agreement.