 by IMEMC News - 1 of International Middle East Media Center Editorial Group
 by IMEMC News - 1 of International Middle East Media Center Editorial Group  
  The Israeli daily newspaper Maariv today rubbished Israeli PM Netanyahu's statement he is ready to sit down with his Palestinian counterpart Mahmoud Abbas and make peace.
Columnist  Ben Caspit claims that Netanyahu's announcement on Sunday that he is  willing to discuss all core issues with Abbas conflicts with the reality  of the situation. "In the past weeks," Caspit writes, " Israeli  representatives, including Netanyahu, have repeatedly rejected official  documents that their Palestinian counterparts have tried to submit to  them, with details of the Palestinian positions on all the core issues.  The Israeli representatives are completely unwilling to discuss, read or  touch these documents, not to speak of submitting an equivalent Israeli  document with the Israeli positions."
 He points to two occasions recently when this has happened. According to  his sources the first took place a few weeks ago in a Washington  between Saeb Erekat , chief Palestinian negotiator, and Israeli  representative Yitzhak Molcho.
During the meeting, "Erekat surprised Molcho, took an official booklet  out of his briefcase bearing the logo of the Palestinian Authority and  tried to hand it to Molcho. When the Israeli inquired as to the content  of the booklet, Erekat said that this was, in effect, the detailed and  updated Palestinian peace plan, with the detailed Palestinian positions  on all the core issues. Molcho refused to take the booklet or examine  it. According to sources who are informed about what took place there,  he said to Erekat, and to the Americans, that he could not touch the  Palestinian booklet, read it or take it, because as soon as he would do  so, “the government will fall.”"
In the second instance it is claimed that during a recent meeting  between Abbas and Netanyahu in Jerusalem, Abbas presented a two-page  document to the Israeli PM which he refused to read or discuss. The  document contained the proposed Palestinian solution to the two issues  the sides were supposed to discuss at the first stage – security and  borders.
Israeli newspaper scorns Netanyahu's call for talks - International Middle East Media Center
