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Experts: Israeli-Palestinian Security Cooperation Stronger Than Ever
[Ynet] Upcoming prisoner release won't affect security, will reinforce Abbas, says National Security Studies Institute researcher. 'Paleostinians no Zionists, but terror on decline,' says expert

As Israel prepares to release another group of 26 Paleostinian prisoners later this week, Israeli security experts say security cooperation with the Paleostinian Authority remains solid despite three separate incidents in which Paleostinians killed Israelis. The security experts say they do not see the killings as evidence of a new intifada, or Paleostinian uprising.

"This is the best security cooperation we've had in years," Shlomo Brom, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies and a retired brigadier general in the Israeli army told The Media Line. "The Paleostinian security forces are much more professional than in the past and they are not political."

Brom said there has been a decision by Paleostinian President the ineffectual Mahmoud Abbas
... a graduate of the prestigious unaccredited Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow with a doctorate in Holocaust Denial...
to maintain security cooperation with Israel, despite growing anger in the Paleostinian street against Israel's continued construction in post-1967 areas.

Israeli press reported that last week, Paleostinian security forces placed in durance vile
Yez got nuttin' on me, coppers! Nuttin'!
three members of the Islamist Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, movement who planned to send drones carrying explosives into Israel. The reports quoted Paleostinian security officials that the men had already carried out test flights and were in advanced preparations to launch a miniature drone.

The planned attack came after three Israelis were killed recently in separate incidents. In the most recent one, a former army colonel was killed in his home in the Jordan Valley in an area that Israel acquired in 1967. Last month, an Israeli soldier was killed by a sniper in the West Bank city of Hebron. Also last month, an off-duty Israeli soldier was killed after he was lured to a Paleostinian village by a co-worker.

The three separate incidents, coming so close together, and after a long period of relative calm, shook up Israelis and raised fears that a new Paleostinian uprising could be on the way. However,
we can't all be heroes. Somebody has to sit on the curb and applaud when they go by...
security officials say, in the cases of the off-duty soldier and the army colonel, there may have been disputes over money that contributed to the murders.

At the same time, say Israeli experts, Paleostinians are angry about many Israeli policies.

"The ethos of the Paleostinian people has not changed, nobody became a Zionist or has any love of Israel," Ronni Shaked, an Israeli journalist who covered the Paleostinians for 20 years and is now a researcher at the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told The Media Line. "But most of the terrorist activity since 2008 was sporadic operations, like someone just deciding to take a construction tool in hand and kill a Jew. It is not organized Paleostinian terrorism like it was ten years ago."

Israeli security officials, including Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon have recently praised the Paleostinian Authority for their close cooperation with Israel. Abbas has paid a political price, as the Islamist Hamas movement, which controls the Gazoo Strip, has accused Abbas of "doing Israel's dirty work."

Israel is set to release an additional 26 Paleostinian prisoners, almost all of whom have been convicted of murdering Israelis, as a good-will gesture as part of the resumption of Israeli-Paleostinian peace talks. Shaked says that some 17 percent of Paleostinian prisoners return to terrorism, as compared with 66 percent of criminals who are recidivists. At the same time, he says an estimated 500,000 Paleostinians have spent at least one night in an Israeli jail.

The prisoner issue is a hot --button issue that cuts across political lines.

"We need to encourage the Paleostinian Authority to continue security cooperation," Shaked said. "And releasing prisoners will give Abbas the feeling that he achieved something from Israel."

That, Shaked and Brom agree, will only strengthen Abbas and the more moderate forces among the Paleostinians. If the current round of negotiations achieves a deal, it will put Abbas in a better position to win a Paleostinian referendum for a deal with Israel.
Posted by: trailing wife 2013-10-29
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=378520