Meridor: Israel May Rule Out Future Accords If Egypt Changes Treaty
If Cairo unilaterally decides to alter the peace treaty with Israel, Israel will ask why sign agreements with other neighbors if these accords are not kept, Intelligence Agencies Minister Dan Meridor said Monday.
Meridor, speaking at a press conference organized by The Israel Project, said that “objectively” there is no reason for either Israel or Egypt to change the peace agreement that has served both sides for more than 30 years.
“If people are rational and act for the good of their country, both Israel and Egypt should keep the agreement,” Meridor said. Meridor added that Israel has had no contact with Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, the party that won the recent parliamentary elections there.
Regarding Syria, Meridor came out strongly against the killing taking place there, saying the pictures coming out of that country needed to shock the world, and that it was impossible to remain silent in face of the atrocities.
But at the same time, he said, Israel had “no policy” in terms of trying to effect what was happening inside the country.
“We can’t do much to interfere inside Syria,” he said, adding that he had no way of telling who would come after Prime Minister Bashar Assad if he was toppled.
Meridor said Iran and Hezbollah were actively helping Assad try to put down the rebellion there, and that breaking up the Iran-Syrian- Hezbollah alliance would be a “positive” development.
“Can we affect it?” he asked. “No we can’t.”
Regarding the halted low-level talks with the Palestinians in Jordan, Meridor bemoaned the Palestinian Authority’s decision to sign a unity agreement with Hamas in Doha. He called on PA Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to demonstrate the “courage” to accept a demilitarized Palestinian state, and that if he did not, it would be “another missed opportunity that will be bad for us, but worse for them.”
Meridor repeated his position - which is not the government’s policy - that Israel should “harmonize” its settlement policy with the diplomatic process, meaning that it should build in the large settlement blocs that it hopes to retain in any future agreement, but not build everywhere else in Judea and Samaria.
{The Jerusalem Post/Matzav.com Newscenter}
3 Responses to “Meridor: Israel May Rule Out Future Accords If Egypt Changes Treaty”
2. Comment from Anonymous
Time February 22, 2012 at 10:34 AM
“He called on PA Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to demonstrate the ‘courage’ to accept a demilitarized Palestinian state, and that if he did not, it would be ‘another missed opportunity that will be bad for us, but worse for them.’”
When will the Isralis realize that saying that the Palestinians are missing opportunities just makes them look like victims instead of villans?
We need to portray them as who they are: An enemy who will do whatever they can to see the jews wiped off of the face of the earth.
Do wee describe the 9/11 suicide jihdists as missing on an opportunity to live their lives in peace? So why do wee do that with the Palestnians? (who by the way are doing alot better than many of their neighbors in other Arab lands)
3. Comment from Anonymous
Time February 22, 2012 at 10:35 AM
“He called on PA Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to demonstrate the ‘courage’ to accept a demilitarized Palestinian state, and that if he did not, it would be ‘another missed opportunity that will be bad for us, but worse for them.’”
When will the Isralis realize that saying that the Palestinians are missing opportunities just makes them look like victims instead of villans?
We need to portray them as who they are: An enemy who will do whatever they can to see the jews wiped off of the face of the earth.
Do we describe the 9/11 suicide jihadists as missing on an opportunity to live their lives in peace? So why do we do that with the Palestnians? (who by the way are doing alot better than many of their neighbors in other Arab lands)










1. Comment from mayim
Time February 22, 2012 at 8:10 AM
there is also an agreement that israel gave back oil fields in Sinai and we would get them back