It is difficult to think that President Obama — or leaders in Europe — want their names to go down in history as the fools who actually legitimized a rogue entity such as “Palestine” or enabled Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. But just as Neville Chamberlain is looked on as the biggest laughing stock in history for promising “peace” with Hitler, so can Obama’s legacy be that of an even bigger fool. Chamberlain, after all, did not have a Chamberlain to warn him.
On October 30, when the Swedish government recognized “the State of Palestine,” Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom said she thought that the decision “shows the way” to other European governments.
It seems she is right. Even earlier, on September 30, French President François Hollande declared that “France will soon recognize a Palestinian state.” French Socialist representatives are presently working on a text along those lines. And on October 13, the British Parliament voted overwhelmingly in favor of the official recognition of “Palestine”, even if the vote was non-binding.
But non-binding votes can easily lead to binding decisions.
Sure enough, true to Wallstrom’s prediction, on November 18, the Spanish parliament did the same thing — on the same day as a murderous terrorist attack on Israeli civilians praying at a synagogue in Jerusalem.
Wallstrom had added that the recognition of the “State of Palestine” by the Swedish government would help to facilitate renewed negotiations and strengthen the positions of the “moderates.”
In reality, however, all recent diplomatic statements of Mahmoud Abbas[1] and other “Palestinian” leaders show a willingness to reach a formal recognition of “Palestine” but without the negotiations to which they had agreed under international law in Oslo II, and without any peace agreement.