Originally posted by Sandwich
No, I did mean that Sharon (or any Prime Minister of Israel) is answerable to the Knesset (parliment), at any point in time. When Sharon proposed his pulling the settlers out of the Gaza Strip, he had 3 no-confidence votes that just barely did not pass in one afternoon.
He got 3 non-confidence votes, becuase he was percieved as being to soft and giving to the Palestinians. Thats what I make of it atleast. If he is answerable to the Knesset, it is then the exact opposite of the type of accountability that would bring peace. He can do what he likes to the Occupied Territories, and never hear a peep out of the Knesset. Or is there some non-confidence initiates in the past that I am not aware of? But the moment he looks like he's going to compromise a little bit - wham - they try to kill the effort. And being accountable to the Knesset is not really enough I mean, in Israel as in America, you're never going to get any really dissenting voices by the elected representatives. Answerable to the will of the people is what he's supposed to be.
Originally posted by Sandwich
I agree with the second half of this statement, but the first is utter bollocks. Pretty much the ONLY thing Ehud Barak is seen as having done while he was PM was to prove to the world that Arafat and the PLO was not interested in land. Barak offered Arafat East Jerusalem as their capitol, 3 quarters of the Old City, and 98% (IIRC... it was above 95%) of Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) as a Palestinian state.
I'll have to look up some info on this. I wasn't really old enough to have a keen interest in politics at the time when Barak was PM, so will have to do some research on him and his policies regarding Palestinians.
Originally posted by Sandwich
What "ceasefire" would you be referring to? Something involving Israel??
"Agree to truce after truce after truce." Mind explaining this one to me? I seem to be stupid in thinking that all their Arabic-language rally speeches are just fluff, and what they REALLY mean is what they tell the English-speaking world.
I'm not going to check the others - for one, I don't have time, but mainly because I want to see if you know what a "hudna" really, truly is.
Alright, I'm not going to bull**** and say I knew what a hudna was all along. I Yahoo'ed it, there.
From what I can gather, it is a form of time-limited ceasefire that is rooted in Mulsim tradition, and has been applied to the Israel-Palestine conflict at times.
So, mind telling me why the term is relevant? I'm at a bit of a disadvantage here, not having lived in the area, so I am unfamiliar with the local practices.
As I said before, I'm trying to find a comprehensive database of peaceoffers and whether the various factions followed up, who broke the peace and so forth. The Guardian has a nice timeline thing, which relates to the latest truce and who did what t whom, but someting a bit more comprehensive would be what I'm looking for.