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Palestinian Leadership To Master Its Own Fate

The Palestinian leadership needs to have higher aspirations if it is to master its own fate in its own state, writes Geoffrey Aronson.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a news conference with U.S. President Barack Obama in Jerusalem, March 20, 2013. Obama said at the start of his first official visit to Israel on Wednesday that the U.S. commitment to the security of the Jewish state was rock solid and that peace must come to the Holy Land.   REUTERS/Jason Reed   (JERUSALEM - Tags: POLITICS) - RTR3F8S7

Last year, for the first time in recent memory, not one Israeli was killed as a consequence of Palestinian violence or terror in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, an extraordinary testament to the “security calm” that Israel and the Palestinian Authority (PA) have achieved in the years following the second intifada. Already in September 2010, the World Bank declared that the PA, under the leadership of president Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, “because of its current performance in institution-building and delivery of public services … is well-positioned for the establishment of a state at any point in the near future.”

Yet, notwithstanding the Palestinians' impressive achievements in institution-building and security performance, and indeed in some measure because of them, the prospect of an end to Israel's occupation enabling Palestinians to be “masters of their own fate” in “their own sovereign state” — appear as distant as ever, at least in the West Bank where the PA has followed American and international prescriptions for decades.

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