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Poll: Even hopeful Israelis expect little from peace talks

According to an Israel Democracy Institute survey, an overwhelming majority of Israelis support a meeting between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, but paradoxically don’t believe it would lead anywhere.
Left-wing Israelis and Palestinians demonstrators hold placards during a demonstration calling for a better future for both people, at the West Bank near Jerusalem January 15, 2016. REUTERS/Amir Cohen - RTX22JI8
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While it was becoming apparent that the latest intifada was refusing to die down, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met face to face with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Nov. 30, after five long years. This rare meeting took place at the climate conference in Paris, which both leaders attended. They met by chance and exchanged a handshake, while camera flashes went off all around them.

When journalists later asked Netanyahu if anything would follow this handshake, Netanyahu was quick to put a damper on their enthusiasm. “It’s important for the world to see that we were ready to talk,” he said, but continued, “We have no illusions about Abbas.” Yet that was not enough for Netanyahu. He wanted to make it perfectly clear that he doesn’t consider Abbas to be a partner for peace. To emphasize this point, he told his listeners that when he met US President Barack Obama in the corridor at that conference, he said, “Abbas has to stop his incendiary rhetoric and all the lies he is spreading about our policies on the Temple Mount. President Obama then told me that he plans to talk to Abbas and tell him that he agrees with me that this must stop.”

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