Bibtex export
@book{ Asseburg2014, title = {Middle East peace talks at the end of the road? One-state reality consolidating}, author = {Asseburg, Muriel}, year = {2014}, series = {SWP Comment}, pages = {8}, volume = {21/2014}, address = {Berlin}, publisher = {Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik -SWP- Deutsches Institut für Internationale Politik und Sicherheit}, issn = {1861-1761}, urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-391898}, abstract = {The nine months of negotiations agreed last summer by the US mediators and the two parties ended on 29 April 2014. US Secretary of State John Kerry has since announced a pause in US facilitation activities. Yet, a definitive breakdown or failure of the Middle East peace talks bears far-reaching risks. Even if the mediators were to succeed in effecting a restart of talks, there is scant hope of bridging the rifts within the year envisaged – at least if the previous approach were to be maintained. That will lead to a further consolidation of the one-state reality that has long since emerged between the Mediterranean and River Jordan. Germany and its partners in the European Union must face up to the alternatives: either a much more robust approach to propel the talks to a two-state solution, or insistence on equal political, economic and cultural rights for all in the territories controlled by Israel. (author's abstract)}, keywords = {Israel; Israel; Palästinensische Gebiete; Palestinian territories; Nahost-Konflikt; Middle East conflict; palästinensisch-israelischer Konflikt; Palestinian-Israeli conflict; Friedensprozess; peace process; Friedensverhandlung; peace negotiation; Siedlungspolitik; settlement policy; Konfliktregelung; conflict management; USA; United States of America; EU; EU; Bundesrepublik Deutschland; Federal Republic of Germany; Sicherheitspolitik; security policy}}