Abbas ‘absolutely’ still our partner, Peres tells ‘Post’
If world recognizes Palestinian state without addressing Israel’s security, it will "mean continuation of the conflict," Peres says.
By DAVID HOROVITZ, GREER FAY CASHMAN
PA President Mahmoud Abbas is “absolutely” still a peace partner for Israel, despite his signing of a reconciliation agreement with Hamas, President Shimon Peres has told The Jerusalem Post.In an interview conducted to mark Israel’s 63rd Independence Day, the president described the Fatah-Hamas accord signed last week as “a temporary bridge.”RELATED:PM to US: Send clear message to PA not to join HamasHamas's Mashaal urges West to back Palestinian dealPeres said he “criticized” Abbas over it, but “that doesn’t free me of the need to talk with him.... I have no intention of turning my back on the Palestinian peace camp, even if I criticize it.”Abbas was and remains a partner, said the president, “because he wants to hold negotiations for peace with Israel.... He opposes violence and he wants peace.”In dealing with the new Palestinian leadership, Peres urged the international community to hold firm to the preconditions it had set for legitimizing Hamas – that the Islamists recognize Israel, accept previous agreements and renounce terrorism.Peres said Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu should make that demand a centerpiece of his speeches and meetings in the US later this month.The president also highlighted the need for the international community to take heed of Israel’s security needs when considering Palestinian calls for recognition of a unilateral declaration of statehood.“Going to the UN solely with a declaration of statehood, without giving an answer to Israel’s security concerns, that will mean a continuation of the conflict, not an end to the conflict,” he said.Asked whether Israel should itself recognize Palestinian statehood, the president replied, “I’m in favor of recognizing them provided they recognize Israel’s security needs.
“There are two components: a Palestinian state and Israel’s security needs. If we only talk about Israel’s security needs, that’s only half of it. If they only talk about a Palestinian state, that would only be half of it. And if only half the work is done, that will mean a continuation of the conflict.“I’ve also said this to the UN secretary-general [Ban Kimoon],” he continued. “I said to him, ‘Sir, you want to take a decision for a Palestinian state? Can you stop the terrorism? Can you stop the gunfire? Can you stop the incitement? So there’ll be a Palestinian state and all of that will continue? And that will be peace? Is that what you want?’”Peres gave an emphatic “yes” when asked whether he would state unequivocally that US President Barack Obama is a true friend of Israel.He recalled the president telling him, and others, on several occasions that “as long as I’m the president, the security of Israel will be at the top of my agenda.”Peres also noted that Obama had vetoed February’s anti-settlement resolution in the UN Security Council, even though the veto “went against his own opinion [on settlements]. The Security Council wanted to issue a condemnation, and he opposed it.”Strongly backing the push for democracy in the Arab world, Peres said the current turmoil could end in one of only two ways: “Either [the Arab world] will return to tribalism and poverty, or the Arab world will enter the 21st century. There’s no middle option.”Israel’s interest, he declared, was that “they should enter the 21st century, of course. We’re not idiots. All of Judaism is built on the basis that all men are created in the image of God. Our values must be stronger even than our policies.”Asked whether he envisaged the revolutionary upheaval reaching Iran, he replied dryly: “Iran is a good candidate. They certainly deserve it.”