Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Syrian President Bashar Assad (AP)
At the summit meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh two weeks ago, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced he "has no intention of delaying talks on the establishment of a Palestinian state." A few days later, "political sources in Jerusalem" pledged that Olmert "intends in the coming months to evacuate illegal outposts in the West Bank." Senior government spokesmen have liberally dispensed such declarations in recent years.
A short drive along West Bank roads demonstrates that talk is one thing, action another; while the government talks about "a political horizon," in the form of two states, Israel’s actions on the ground and its scandalous failings are pushing this solution off toward the horizon.
A new report from Peace Now, details of which appeared this past Friday in Haaretz, reveals the jurisdictions of 92 out of 164 settlements, outposts and industrial zones in the West Bank were expanded or redrawn after the Oslo Accords. Access the full article>>

