Publication

Oct 2008

It is encouraging that - after some seven years of violence and unilateral steps - parties to the Middle East conflict have started to talk to each other again. Results of these talks, however, have so far been sobering, and prospects for conflict settlement in the Middle East are bleak. It is rather unlikely that the so-called Annapolis process will yield an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement, or even a substantial framework agreement, as envisioned before the end of 2008 - not only because the gaps between the parties remain too wide with regards to the core issues (Jerusalem, refugees, settlements), but also because questions of leadership will be dominating the domestic Israeli, Palestinian and US agendas in the weeks and months to come.

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Author Muriel Asseburg, Patrick Müller
Series SWP Comments
Issue 24
Publisher Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP)
Copyright © 2008 Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP)
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