While it's great to see someone providing citations for their claims for once, I hate to say this Esna, but that Battle to Tel Hai page is in serious need of proper citation. It contradicts itself in its "Significance" subheadings and somewhere along the way I read "Zions mainstream historiography." Words like that almost immediately cause a knee jerk reaction of skepticism for me at least.
Fair enough; I was pulling examples to demonstrate that the conflict existed long before 1948.
In my opinion, here's a basic outline of what needs to happen for things to calm down:
Palestinians:
- Stop shooting rockets, mortars, etc. Just, stop. It hasn't helped, isn't helping, and won't help. So long as this keeps up, nothing is going to go anywhere.
- Similarly, crossborder raids and attacks on entry points need to end. Offensive activity is a nonstarter for any kind of peace process.
- Stop glamorizing, glorifying, and otherwise promoting acts of violence against a civilian population and those who perform them. Similarly, stop vilifying Israel and Israelis in education and media. If you continue to present those who commit such attacks as doing great and noble deeds against a universally vicious and bestial enemy - surprise, things will keep going.
- Form a joint co-operative committee to assist in the management of historical and religiously significant sites in the West Bank, including access for Israelis to these sites.
Israel:
- Get your hardliners under control. If you desire peace on an equal footing, you need to control those who would go out to stir up shit with the Palestinians. If that means deploying the police, do it. If that means relocating people, do it. Make an active and visible effort to prevent conflict.
- In response for a
complete and total cessation of artillery fire from Gaza, begin opening borders to increased traffic and transport. Lift travel limitations where reasonably possible.
- Get to work on that joint antiquities committee to provide a joint mutual force for management of religiously significant sites in both areas. This means continuing to provide open access to the al-Aqsa mosque (something they fortunately do already).
Finally, settlements. The big doozy. Here's the thing: I'm not actually against settlements. In fact, I think possibly the best hope for the region is in settlements. There are
plenty of examples of Israelis and Palestinians working together in the West Bank, and this kind of continued cooperation should be heavily promoted. In the future, settlements should be planned for both sides with an eye towards promoting cooperation and peaceful neighbors. If this means limiting settlement to those with a stated interest in that, then do it - on both sides.
Thoughts?
EDIT: Vince about summed up my thoughts on it.