In the wake of Israel's devastating and deadly 22-day Gaza Strip military offensive, is the West sending new signals that it might be willing to talk to Hamas?
In an intimate political profile of former UK PM Tony Blair in The Times of London, the Quartet's special Middle East envoy suggests that Hamas must be brought back into the political process.
"My predisposition is that in a situation like this you talk to everybody," Blair says in the story.
Though it doesn't seem to be in the on-line interview, The Times of London quotes Blair as stating that the current Israel/US-led strategy of building up the West Bank as a counter-balance to the Hamas-led Gaza Strip "was never going to work and never will work."
Blair doesn't stray too far from the official line. He tells the Times that there should be no official or unofficial talks with Hamas until the Islamist militant group renounces its stated pledge to destroy Israel.
But Blair makes it clear that he thinks it is time for a different strategy.
The central question is whether Blair is floating a political trial balloon for the Quartet.
Of the many problems in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, one of the most pressing ones to resolve is reuniting the West Bank and Gaza as a single Palestinian political entity.
That requires an agreement between PA President Mahoud Abbas, who doesn't accept Hamas rule of Gaza, and Hamas, which doesn't recognize Abbas as PA president since his term officially expired last month.
Abbas is heading to Cairo for hastily-arranged talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. That's been taken as a sign that there may be some progress on reaching a Fatah-Hamas deal.
One route might be a caretaker Hamas-Fatah unity government that agrees to new elections soon.
It's difficult to see Hamas giving up on its "destroy Israel" charter vow. But it might be possible for the US to take a page from its approach to Lebanon by accepting the unity government and talking only with those members that have embraced a two-state solution.
That's not an idea Israel is likely to embraced any time soon, especially if, as expected, Benjamin Netanyahu becomes the next prime minister.
And it could be that Blair's opaque comments are being given too much import.
Either way, it should be interesting to see how Blair's comments are received.
(Of course, one young Hamas hard-liner in Gaza quickly dismissed Blair's interview as "worthless and stupid.")

israel wants all of the jerusalem for themself.the aqsar mosque is not to be shared with muslim.they done this for the past 60 yrs.Its as simpe as that.But i think they have no choise but to share.
Posted by: zul | February 01, 2009 at 03:10 AM
israel will be peaceful if arab countries push hamas and fatah etc to behave- no dody but palestinian s are to blame .. israel have bloomed in 50+ years due to jews - what hae the arabs doen to make it a better palce ?
If hamas just sat down and said - wil our children have a better place if I stop rocket attacks and go to work today ? then they will advance to become a real nation.
Stop worrying about religion so much and start decidingto put food on their table and schools getting built . then arabs in gaza and west bank would be better off. No jew wants arabs dead ..
Jews do beleive in peace...
Posted by: jules | February 01, 2009 at 08:49 AM
To Jules: you're right when you say that no Jews wants Arabs dead. Jews only want all Palestinians to have their land because it is their dream to have a much bigger Israels.
Posted by: thebrain | February 01, 2009 at 02:06 PM
In practice Hamas have acknowledged many times that they would accept a Palestinian state based on the 1967 boundaries so this amounts to recognition of Israel on those terms. However have a look at the Likud charter, which claims all the land of Palestine and both theoretically and in practice denies the existence of Palestine seeking to wipe it off the map. They are committed in reality to expansion of settlements and continuing a policy of discrimination against Arabs whether they are Israeli or Palestinian.
Posted by: Kebz | February 01, 2009 at 04:11 PM
By MUAMMAR QADDAFI
Published: January 21, 2009
Tripoli, Libya
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THE shocking level of the last wave of Israeli-Palestinian violence, which ended with this weekend’s cease-fire, reminds us why a final resolution to the so-called Middle East crisis is so important. It is vital not just to break this cycle of destruction and injustice, but also to deny the religious extremists in the region who feed on the conflict an excuse to advance their own causes.
But everywhere one looks, among the speeches and the desperate diplomacy, there is no real way forward. A just and lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinians is possible, but it lies in the history of the people of this conflicted land, and not in the tired rhetoric of partition and two-state solutions.
Although it’s hard to realize after the horrors we’ve just witnessed, the state of war between the Jews and Palestinians has not always existed. In fact, many of the divisions between Jews and Palestinians are recent ones. The very name “Palestine” was commonly used to describe the whole area, even by the Jews who lived there, until 1948, when the name “Israel” came into use.
Jews and Muslims are cousins descended from Abraham. Throughout the centuries both faced cruel persecution and often found refuge with one another. Arabs sheltered Jews and protected them after maltreatment at the hands of the Romans and their expulsion from Spain in the Middle Ages.
The history of Israel/Palestine is not remarkable by regional standards — a country inhabited by different peoples, with rule passing among many tribes, nations and ethnic groups; a country that has withstood many wars and waves of peoples from all directions. This is why it gets so complicated when members of either party claims the right to assert that it is their land.
The basis for the modern State of Israel is the persecution of the Jewish people, which is undeniable. The Jews have been held captive, massacred, disadvantaged in every possible fashion by the Egyptians, the Romans, the English, the Russians, the Babylonians, the Canaanites and, most recently, the Germans under Hitler. The Jewish people want and deserve their homeland.
But the Palestinians too have a history of persecution, and they view the coastal towns of Haifa, Acre, Jaffa and others as the land of their forefathers, passed from generation to generation, until only a short time ago.
Thus the Palestinians believe that what is now called Israel forms part of their nation, even were they to secure the West Bank and Gaza. And the Jews believe that the West Bank is Samaria and Judea, part of their homeland, even if a Palestinian state were established there. Now, as Gaza still smolders, calls for a two-state solution or partition persist. But neither will work.
A two-state solution will create an unacceptable security threat to Israel. An armed Arab state, presumably in the West Bank, would give Israel less than 10 miles of strategic depth at its narrowest point. Further, a Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip would do little to resolve the problem of refugees. Any situation that keeps the majority of Palestinians in refugee camps and does not offer a solution within the historical borders of Israel/Palestine is not a solution at all.
For the same reasons, the older idea of partition of the West Bank into Jewish and Arab areas, with buffer zones between them, won’t work. The Palestinian-held areas could not accommodate all of the refugees, and buffer zones symbolize exclusion and breed tension. Israelis and Palestinians have also become increasingly intertwined, economically and politically.
In absolute terms, the two movements must remain in perpetual war or a compromise must be reached. The compromise is one state for all, an “Isratine” that would allow the people in each party to feel that they live in all of the disputed land and they are not deprived of any one part of it.
A key prerequisite for peace is the right of return for Palestinian refugees to the homes their families left behind in 1948. It is an injustice that Jews who were not originally inhabitants of Palestine, nor were their ancestors, can move in from abroad while Palestinians who were displaced only a relatively short time ago should not be so permitted.
It is a fact that Palestinians inhabited the land and owned farms and homes there until recently, fleeing in fear of violence at the hands of Jews after 1948 — violence that did not occur, but rumors of which led to a mass exodus. It is important to note that the Jews did not forcibly expel Palestinians. They were never “un-welcomed.” Yet only the full territories of Isratine can accommodate all the refugees and bring about the justice that is key to peace.
Assimilation is already a fact of life in Israel. There are more than one million Muslim Arabs in Israel; they possess Israeli nationality and take part in political life with the Jews, forming political parties. On the other side, there are Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Israeli factories depend on Palestinian labor, and goods and services are exchanged. This successful assimilation can be a model for Isratine.
If the present interdependence and the historical fact of Jewish-Palestinian coexistence guide their leaders, and if they can see beyond the horizon of the recent violence and thirst for revenge toward a long-term solution, then these two peoples will come to realize, I hope sooner rather than later, that living under one roof is the only option for a lasting peace.
Muammar Qaddafi is the leader of Libya.
Posted by: ceze | February 02, 2009 at 10:46 AM
As I mentioned elsewhere, no US support of Israel until Israel ends its apartheid, which is the ONLY reason it has not formally annexed the territories it took and has occupied for force. Gaza is no more than a refugee camp, the Israeli equivalent of the US Indian reservation. And when Isreal blocks water, food, and medicine, and fuel, it has all the appearance of a camp intended for the eradication of the native population. I cannot get over the gall of it all.
Posted by: Sandy Seth | February 06, 2009 at 12:27 AM