在线英语听力室

VOA标准英语2009年-A Year of Stalemate, Dashed Hopes in I

时间:2010-01-14 05:15:28

搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。

(单词翻译)

Israelis, Palestinians Look For New Approaches to Peace

Luis Ramirez | Jerusalem 14 December 2009

 
2009 will end with no resumption of the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians

2009 saw no resumption of the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians.  Both sides are beginning the New Year at a stalemate over Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, and rising tensions over the status of Jerusalem. 

2009 began with bombs and rockets as Israel launched a massive assault, Operation Cast Lead, aimed at stopping militants2 from firing rockets at Israel.

During the assault, militants from Gaza continued to fire homemade missiles over the border, exploding in communities of southern Israel.

The toll3: more than 1,000 dead - all but 13 of them Palestinians, many of them civilians4.  

Early in the year, rightist former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a comeback.  He took office again with a promise to bring peace by boosting the Palestinian economy, not necessarily through negotiation5.

The United States, under the new Obama administration, began a new push for peace.  Washington sent U.S. special envoy6 George Mitchell to try to bring both sides back to the negotiations7 table.  He made several trips during the year, each time returning to Washington with no deal in hand.

There were meetings on camera, including one in September when Mr. Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas shook hands on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York.  But there was no tangible8 progress, and no commitment from either side to return to talks.

Palestinian leaders said no talks can take place as long as Israelis continue to build on settlements in the West Bank and in East Jerusalem. 

Palestinian Prime Minister Salaam9 Fayyad spoke10 in a VOA interview.  "We want a political process to be launched, one that is credible11 enough, one that is strong enough, capable of delivering what we want the most, which is to bring about an end to this occupation," he said.

The Palestinian leadership is divided between the moderate Fatah faction12 that rules the West Bank and the Islamist militant1 group Hamas that controls the Gaza Strip.  Fatah is losing support among a population impatient over the continued Israeli occupation.

President Obama raised hopes among many Palestinians when, in a speech from Cairo in June, he called for an end to Israeli settlement building.  "The situation for the Palestinian people is intolerable.  And America will not turn our backs on the legitimate13 Palestinian aspiration14 for dignity, opportunity, and a state of their own," Mr. Obama said. 

Hope turned into disappointment among many Palestinians.  Many were angered when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton - on a visit to Jerusalem - praised Israel's behavior. "What the prime minister has offered in specifics of a restraint on the policy of settlements, which he has just described, no new starts for example, is unprecedented15 in the context of prior-to negotiations," Mrs. Clinton said.

In November, an Israeli overture16 was made when Prime Minister Netanyahu offered a temporary settlement freeze. "Today, my Cabinet authorized17 a policy of restraint regarding settlements, which will include a suspension of new permits and new construction in Judea and Samaria for a period of 10 months," he said.

But Jewish settlers were a part of the voting bloc18 that brought Mr. Netanyahu to power.  They have defied the ban and staged demonstrations19 against him, signaling a potential for more political turmoil20 in the coming year.

A senior political columnist21 for Haaretz newspaper in Tel Aviv, Akiva Eldar, says any Israeli overture has to be seen as genuine if it is to break the stalemate.

"I can not expect the Arabs to make any move that I do not expect or I do not demand the Israelis to do.  It has to be reciprocal and symmetric," Eldar stated.

Israel continued its policy of encouraging economic growth in the West Bank by removing checkpoints and facilitating the flow of people and goods, triggering an economic boom.  But the Palestinians want a state of their own, without Jewish settlements, and sooner than Israel seems willing to deliver.  In 2009, they threatened to declare statehood unilaterally.

The year ends with the gap between Israelis and Palestinians as wide as ever.
 


分享到:

Error Warning!

出错了

Error page: /mobile/?aid=89612&mid=3
Error infos: Got error 28 from storage engine
Error sql: select `l`.`tag`,`l`.`index`,`l`.`level_id`,`b`.`id`,`b`.`word`,`b`.`spell`,`b`.`explain`,`b`.`sentence`,`b`.`src` from `new_wordtaglist` `l` left join `new_word_base` `b` on `l`.`tag`=`b`.`word` where `l`.`arc_id`='89612' and `l`.`level_id`>='' group by `b`.`word` order by `l`.`index` asc

本文本内容来源于互联网抓取和网友提交,仅供参考,部分栏目没有内容,如果您有更合适的内容,欢迎 点击提交 分享给大家。