Saturday 17 January 2009

Israel trying to appear as peacemaker

It seems the devilish plan coming out of Tel Aviv is for Israel to call a unilateral ceasefire but at the same time for Israeli forces to remain in their current places. In other words, Gaza gets a little smaller.

So the Jews get to decide when to start the war, they get to decide when it ends.
Of course any further action by Hamas will then be described as breaking the ceasefire, failing to mention at the same time it's only the Israeli's ceasefire.

In doing this the Jews are hoping international uproar, although a total lack of inaction, will slowly subside and the genocide will be forgotten again.

Give it two years and they will go for the same scam again, no doubt with their eyes on the gas and oil reserves in Palestinian waters.

MICHAEL


Israeli Cabinet prepares for cease-fire vote


THE REAL TRUTH.

Hamas Offers One Year Gaza Truce if Israel Leaves
Ban "Reasonably Optimistic" Israel Will Accept Ceasefire

Hamas has reportedly told the Egyptian government that it will agree to a year-long, renewable ceasefire in the Gaza Strip if Israel withdraws its forces from the strip in the next week and reopens the border crossings which have long remained closed.

The offer falls well short of the “durable” ceasefire that the Israel has been calling for, but with a soaring number of civilian deaths as Israeli troops move deeper into the strip’s most densely populated regions, Israel is under growing international pressure to at least make some gesture in favor of the peace process, and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon says he is “reasonably optimistic” that Israel will ultimately accept the ceasefire.

Yesterday Israel insisted that it would never agree to a temporary ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, http://wire.antiwar.com/2009/01/14/israel-rebuffs-temporary-gaza-truce/ but growing furor over the Israeli attack on the United Nations headquarters in Gaza and the announcement that for the second time in a week the United Nations will halt its aid operations until Israel agrees to stop attacking their employees are likely to add pressure to get the deal done.

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