Why Israeli officials are chuckling: The 'stable' West Bank dilemma
By Ramzy Baroud
April 17, 2014
Israel's deputy foreign minister, Ze'ev Elkin, is a member of Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party and his predominantly right-wing cabinet.
In a recent interview with The Economist, Elkin used the familiar tone of being conceited and oblivious to such notions as international or human rights, and reaffirmed his rejection of a Palestinian state.
Instead, Elkin wants Israel to annex a chunk of the West Bank. There is nothing new here, as such language is now official Israeli discourse. But one statement stood out, one that many Palestinians would find bewildering and exasperating.
These days, said Elkin with a chuckle, the West Bank is "the most stable part of the Middle East."
The bewilderment would stem from the fact that the West Bank is an occupied Palestinian territory. Its population is held at gunpoint; they have no freedom, and enjoy no rights.
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