by Shlomo Cesana and Daniel Siryoti
Despite President Shimon Peres' praise of the Palestinian Authority leader's peacemaking credentials, leaked documents show he took pains to ignore generous Israeli peace plan and instructed people "not to offer a response that couldn't be walked back."
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Despite the accepted  narrative, then-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's resignation was not the  reason why Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas held back on responding  to his peace offer. Photo credit: GPO  | 
This week President Shimon Peres urged the  Israeli government to embrace Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud  Abbas, calling him a "partner for peace." But a renewed look at the  so-called Palestine Papers that were leaked about a year ago paints a  completely different picture of the Palestinian leader. 
The documents, which detail the  behind-the-scenes deliberations on the Palestinian side between 1999 and  2010 over the peace process, were obtained by the pan-Arab news channel  Al Jazeera last January, although their content was partially exposed  by WikiLeaks before that. Through these documents, one can also learn  how far the Israeli leaders were willing to go in the negotiations and  how their peace proposals were received by the other party. In light of  Peres' comments, Israel Hayom has revisited the controversial aspects of  the Palestine Papers .
The documents show that when then-Prime  Minister Ehud Olmert put on the table what was then the most  far-reaching peace offer [somewhere between 2006 and 2008], Abbas told  his negotiating team "not to commit to any counteroffer lest the  Palestinians be bound to it."
The papers suggest that the two parties ironed  out numerous details of a would-be permanent status agreement until  Olmert handed Abbas a comprehensive peace proposal. While the accepted  narrative is that Abbas had no time to respond because Olmert was forced  to resign in the wake of corruption allegations in 2008, the papers  tell a different story: Abbas had no intention of responding to the  offer in the first place. 
In September 2008, the Palestinians' chief  negotiator Saeb Erekat met with his team and reviewed three possible  responses. The first was a counter offer that included a map. It would  be presented to the Israeli counterparts but they would not be allowed  to hold on to it. The second option was to provide an evasive answer or  to equivocate. The final option was a flat-out rejection. Shortly after  the documents were leaked, Erekat announced his departure, although his  resignation has yet to take effect. 
Erekat, the papers show, told his colleagues  to consider a fourth response. They were to formulate it in such a way  that would ensure the Palestinians would not be blamed for rejecting a  possible deal. In addition, the response was to include a call for  further negotiations on unresolved issues. And above all, the response  was to be easily walked back should the need arose. 
The Israeli plan promised the Palestinians 98%  of the so-called occupied territories. Its language did not declare an  end to the conflict and it had no provisions guaranteeing that no  further claims would be made by either side. Contrary to the many media  reports, Olmert's plan did not envision an international entity that  would govern the Temple Mount area in Jerusalem, what is known as the  Holy Basin (including the Western Wall, Mount of Olives and Jewish  Quarter). Instead, Olmert wanted to have the issue left out of an  agreement. It was to be resolved through further negotiations that would  involve Palestinian, Israeli, U.S., Saudi and Egyptian teams, but any  compromise would have to be accepted by Israel and the Palestinian  Authority and would not be imposed by third parties. 
Officials in Ramallah declined to comment  Monday on the Palestine Papers. However, a senior official at Abbas'  bureau told Israel Hayom that they were nothing more than internal  correspondence of various low-level officials and cannot be considered  authoritative, particularly when it comes to the specific diplomatic  strategy pursued by the Palestine Liberation Organization and the  Palestinian Authority. 
"We are convinced that the mentioned documents are now  suddenly revisited just before the elections [in Israel] because of  President Peres' comments, in which he leveled harsh criticism on the  Israeli leadership's handling of the peace process, including that of  the prime minister," he said. "As was the case in the past when such  documents were exposed, we believe this is another example of a  conspiracy concocted by Israel, top Al Jazeera officials and WikiLeaks."  He also suggested that some of the documents could have been forged. He  further raised the possibility that some of the text might have been  "fudged or edited" to corroborate claims made by the Israeli radical  Right."
Shlomo Cesana and Daniel Siryoti
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=6922
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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