Dfat told of jerusalem consideration day before announcement. Dfat said his own decision on the matter was “the result of a yCDC 철도청 카지노ear-long political dialogue about the issue.” Dfat noted that the day’s decision was taken in the absence of a compromise.
This isn’t the first time that Israel has taken this route. And although Dfat has gone public to express his displeasure with the policy, he refused to offer an apology. So what’s the problem?
One possible answer is that Israel is not going to back down on its policies of expansion. It will probably hold out for as long as possible. But that would likely involve a change in Israeli public opinion. As noted, most Israelis (but not all) believe their country should have borders drawn to protect them from any eventual atta슬롯 머신cks that are being prepared on them. The result of this opinion-set will be a general apathy towards the Israeli government, which will, for various reasons, remain at the forefront of the country’s political life, and the prime minister himself might find himself at a disadvantage. There are also the practical consequences, for example, of a policy that will probably discourage other countries, such as Russia or China, from building on the territory of the State of Israel. This means that the Israeli people will find it more difficult to한게임 포커 trust that Israel will stay in the post-war arrangement.
In other words, the process could be long and bitter, with a very short sighted public coming to see the need for an independent Palestinian state and its future in peace. (The result of such a public opinion, however, would hardly be likely to produce an agreement between Arabs and Israelis on the future status of the Israeli-occupied territories, even if the Israeli government did recognize Palestinian unity. Israel has long been known to have preferred to have such negotiations as the province of Arab states. Indeed, Prime Minister Netanyahu once said in a closed cabinet meeting: “I don’t even want to think about the Arab idea for peace. And I want to be part of it.”)
So, if Israel is to stay in the post-war Israeli-Palestinian arrangement, it will likely have to move quickly on the most basic issues, at the same time as the government does its best to assure the public that the government is focused on all three basic issues: a two-state solution, with Palestinians a part of Israel, and a solution that also includes the Arab state. But that would entail a huge, major commitment of the state’s budget (the state budget now is about 2.9 percent o