Tuesday 17 February 2009

Netanyahu: We Must Strengthen PA Security Forces


Netanyahu: We Must Strengthen PA Security Forces

17/02/2009 Israel needs to strengthen so-called “Palestinian moderates” by bolstering PA security forces with the help of the international community, along with rapid economic development of their economy, Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu said Monday.

The remarks by Netanyahu, who is expected to be tasked with forming the next Israeli government, were the first indication that he is inching to the center as he seeks to bring the ruling Kadima Party into his coalition. "We need to strengthen the Palestinian moderates and weaken the radicals by pursuing rapid economic growth and bolstering the security apparatus of the Palestinian security authority," Netanyahu told a gathering of American Jewish leaders in occupied Jerusalem.

"If the Palestinian Authority is willing to work with us, together with the US administration and perhaps other governments, we can move very rapidly to change reality on the ground, which is worth one thousand peace conferences," he said.

The Likud leader pointed to the success of the recent American training of Palestinian security forces in Jenin, noting that the Fatah-run Palestinian areas in the occupied West Bank remained relatively calm during the recent bruising 22-day military offensive against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

"A combination of political talk and rapid economic development is the best way to create a new reality in the PA," Netanyahu said in his address to the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, who are holding their annual Israel event.

Netanyahu has repeatedly said that he aims to focus on improving the economic situation in the occupied West Bank since no peace agreement is possible with the divided Palestinians in the foreseeable future, but has previously stopped short of advocating propping up the Fatah-run Palestinian government in the West Bank.

In his remarks, Netanyahu reiterated his opposition to further unilateral withdrawals but, in a new twist, added that "doing nothing also has its consequences."

The conservative leader restated his goal of forming a national unity government, over and beyond "the national camp," but said that a new direction was needed for the county.

Netanyahu also said that Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons could torpedo any movement with the so-called “Palestinian moderates”.

Earlier Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni urged the US government and the West to boycott the upcoming UN conference on racism, known as "Durban II" and due to be held in Geneva in April, amid Israeli concerns that it will turn into an anti-Israel bash. "There is no need to see where Durban II is going; it is a continuation of Durban I. This is something that Israel and the international community cannot afford," she said.

No comments: