Click
photo to download. Caption: Harvard University law professor Alan
Dershowitz on stage at the second annual Jerusalem Post Conference in
New York City. Dershowitz and Jerusalem Post columnist Caroline Glick
sharply disagreed on a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, and Dershowitz's comments were laughed at by the audience.
Dershowitz had
presented the audience with a plan under which peace negotiations would restart
if Israel halted construction in areas where there is “reasonable disagreement”
with the Palestinians, saying Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas personally
gave him a signed paper that stated Abbas would agree to that condition for
negotiations if Israel agreed to it.Glick, who during
the panel discussion said she needed to “catch my breath for a second” after Dershowitz’s
idea, told
JNS.org in an interview
after the panel that Israel should “apply Israeli law to Judea and
Samaria, just like we did in the Golan Heights.”
Judea and Samaria would, under this proposal, “just be
permanently incorporated into Israel,” she explained.
“The
Arabs of Judea and Samara would become permanent residents of Israel
just as they did in Jerusalem and the Golan Heights. And like them, they
would have the right to apply for Israeli citizenship,” Glick said. She
added that she was “willing to take a chance on the
demographic outcome rather than on a two-state solution.”Dershowitz, asked by
JNS.org about
Glick’s plan, responded, “Well, before long, Israel would cease to be a Jewish
state.
The demographics would ultimately turn Israel first, into a
multinational state, and ultimately, possibly, into an Islamic state. That
would not be an acceptable solution. It would be the end of Israel as we know
it. I don’t think that’s a viable solution.”During the panel
discussion, Dershowitz’s plan to restart peace talks was also criticized by
Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz and former Israeli national
security adviser Uzi Arad, with Arad saying that reciprocity in negotiations
with the Palestinians, not “unilateral
concessions” by Israel, is what is needed.On stage, Dershowitz recounted what he called his “serious exchange”
with Abbas about restarting peace talks.
The audience laughed at Dershowitz when
he described the following part of his conversation with Abbas: “[I asked Abbas] if this deal were made, would
you agree to not bring cases [against Israel] before the International Criminal
Court?’ His answer was: ‘That’s a serious question, and I’m going to give it
serious consideration.’” Dershowitz told
JNS.org that the audience’s response to
his comments was “not representative of the American Jewish community.”“The American Jewish
community is much more supportive of a two-state solution,” Dershowitz said. “And,
the Israeli Jewish community is much more supportive of a two-state solution. This
[reaction] was very skewed.”Also earning a negative audience reaction, much like he did at last year’s
Jerusalem Post Conference, was former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who
defended his government’s aborted attempts to secure a peace agreement with the
Palestinians. Olmert drew loud boos when he said Israel “must split the land in
order to have Israel continue as a democratic and Jewish state.”Olmert also
criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s approach to the Iranian
nuclear threat, telling the crowd, “Israelis disagree with those who say the
Iranians have arrived at the ‘red line’ drawn by Prime Minister Netanyahu
during his speech at the United Nations… When I was Prime Minister I never
overlooked this threat. Iranians do not have nuclear capacity because of their
failures.”Commenting on the
peace process, Olmert said a two-state solution “is the only way to go
forward.“We can’t eat the
cake and have it,” he said. Dershowitz told
JNS.org, “I don’t
think that people should boo the former Prime Minister of Israel or the
President of the United States on suggestions that they may disagree with. I
think you can have reasoned discussion without booing. I don’t think that’s a
legitimate part of a discussion.”“Booing ideas shows disrespect,” he added. “Booing is not a way of expressing
ideas.”When Israeli Ambassador to the United States Michael Oren also spoke about a
two-state solution at the conference, stating the Netanyahu government’s
support for that outcome, he was not booed.Oren, who accompanied U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel during his recent three-day
tour of Israel, said Hagel has made an “unequivocal commitment to maintaining
Israel’s QME (qualitative military edge)” by providing support for additional Iron
Dome missile defense system batteries as well as “new capabilities for the IDF
Air Force.” Israel is the first foreign country to receive the V-22 Osprey
aircraft and the F-35 fighter jet from the U.S.Download this story in Microsoft Word format
here.
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