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    State of Palestine name change shows limitations

    RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — With U.N. recognition of a Palestinian state in his pocket, President Mahmoud Abbas wants official documents to carry a new emblem: "State of Palestine."

    But scrapping the old "Palestinian Authority" logo is as far as Abbas is willing to go in provoking Israel. He is not rushing to change passports and ID cards Palestinians need to pass through Israeli crossings.

    The very modesty of Abbas' move to change official stationery underscores his limited options so long as Israel remains in charge of territories the world says should one day make up that state.

    "At the end of the day, the Palestinian Authority won't cause trouble for its people," Nour Odeh, a spokeswoman for Abbas' self-rule government, said of the need for caution.

    Abbas won overwhelming U.N. General Assembly recognition for a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in late November, a rare diplomatic victory over a sidelined Israel. The U.N. nod was important to the Palestinians because it affirmed the borders of their future state in lands Israel captured in 1967.

    Recognition, however, has not transformed the day-to-day lives of Palestinians, and some argue that it made things worse. In apparent retaliation for the U.N. bid, Israel in December withheld its monthly $100 million transfer of tax rebates it collects on behalf of the Palestinian Authority, further deepening the Abbas government's financial crisis.

    Since the U.N. recognition, Abbas has maneuvered between avoiding confrontation with Israel and finding small ways to change the situation on the ground.

    Last week, his government press office urged journalists to refer to a state of Palestine, instead of the Palestinian Authority, the autonomy government set up two decades ago as part of interim peace deals with Israel.

    Palestinian diplomatic missions around the world have been told to use the new names, including those in countries that did not vote "yes" at the General Assembly, said Omar Awadallah, a Palestinian Foreign Ministry official.

    Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev dismissed the name change as pointless but declined comment on whether Israel would retaliate in any way. "Instead of looking for gimmicks, Palestinians should negotiate with Israel to bring about the end of the conflict," he said. "That will lead to a situation of two states for two peoples."

    Israel objected to Abbas' U.N. bid, accusing him of trying to bypass negotiations with Israel on the terms of statehood. Such talks have been frozen for more than four years because Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu disagree on their parameters. Netanyahu says he is willing to cede land to a Palestinian state but will not withdraw to the 1967 lines or give up any part of east Jerusalem, the Palestinians' desired capital.

    Abbas has said negotiations remain his preferred choice, and that U.N. recognition was meant to improve his leverage with a far more powerful Israel once talks resume.

    Since the U.N. vote, Abbas has shied away from measures that could close the door to talks by upsetting Israel or the U.S., which also objected to his U.N. bid.

    Abbas has not taken practical steps toward seeking membership for Palestine in U.N. agencies, something made possible by the November vote, and his security forces continue to coordinate with Israeli troops in tracking Islamic militants in the West Bank.

    In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland expressed U.S. opposition to using the term "State of Palestine."

    "You can't create a state by rhetoric and with labels and names," she told reporters. "You can only create a state, in this context, through bilateral negotiations." Nuland called Abbas' decision "provocative, without changing the condition for the Palestinian people."

    She said the U.S. peace envoy for the Mideast, David Hale, was headed to the region and would meet the Palestinian leader on Tuesday.

    Some countries, such as Brazil, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras, have adopted the new name. Others, like Norway, Sweden and Spain, stick to the Palestinian Authority term even though they supported U.N. recognition.

    Analysts said Abbas holds out hope that President Barack Obama will get more involved in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in his second term and — freed from the restraints of seeking re-election — take a tougher stance toward Israel.

    "He still hopes to resume peace talks in line with U.S. efforts," Palestinian analyst Hani al-Masri said of Abbas.

    "Therefore, he is making these slight changes because people expect him to make changes after the U.N. recognition."

    Still, the gap between the symbolic U.N. nod and the reality on the ground remains wide.

    The Palestinian Authority administers some 38 percent of the West Bank, but Israel maintains overall control over the territory. Abbas has no say in east Jerusalem, annexed by Israel in 1967, or in Gaza, seized by his political rival, the Islamic militant group Hamas, in 2007.

    The documents and stationery with the new emblem will be ready within two months, said Hassan Alawi, a deputy interior minister in the Palestinian Authority.

    Israeli officials declined comment Monday on whether Israel would refuse to deal with documents bearing the "State of Palestine" logo. However, Alawi said his office was informed by Israeli officials after Abbas' decree that "they will not deal with any new form of passport or ID."

    Saeb Erekat, a senior Abbas aide, said the new emblem will be used in correspondence with countries that have recognized a state of Palestine.

    He suggested that there would be no change in passports or other documents Palestinians need for movement through Israeli crossings.

    "As far as the Israelis are concerned, we are not going to overload the wagon of our people by putting state of Palestine on passports," he said. "They (Israelis) will not allow them to travel."

    Palestinians must pass through Israeli-run crossings to leave the West Bank and also carry an ID card at all times or risk arrest if stopped at an Israeli military checkpoint inside the territory.

    The name change has even less meaning for Palestinians in Hamas-ruled Gaza. Israel withdrew from the coastal strip in 2005 but continues to control access by air, sea and land, with the exception of one Gaza border crossing with Egypt.

    "For me, it's just ink on paper," said Sharif Hamda, a 44-year-old pharmacist in Gaza City. "I wished they would save the money they will spend on this and use it for helping needy families."

    ___

    Laub reported from Jericho, West Bank. Associated Press writers Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip and Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed reporting.

     

    264 comments

    • Tom  •  1 day 9 hrs ago
      Abbas won overwhelming U.N. General Assembly recognition for a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in late November, a rare diplomatic victory over a sidelined Israel. The U.N. nod was important to the Palestinians because it affirmed the borders of their future state in lands Israel captured in 1967......None of this actually happened it was simply a general assembly vote to give the so-called Palestinians 'observer status' where they can watch the UN at so-called work and say and do nothing....why do the authors of this dribble still have jobs????
      • Chuck 22 hrs ago
        For Tom: Some 40 nations withheld their vote. Also; that positive vote did not necessarily mean they were voting for "recognition" of another Palestinian state. Some of those positive votes were made to avoid charges of being anti-Islamic or anti-Arab. As far as the vote itself it will have no bearing on Israel's borders or on Israel's capital. Today's Israeli borders were determined less by the UN and more by the Islamic politicans and generals. The UN nod was not important to the Lebanese, Syrian, Jordanian, Egyptian, Arabian, or Israeli Palestinians; it was only important to Abbas' and those in his Fatah faction that want to keep their jobs. It was certainly not appreciated by the Hamas leadership.
    • Chloe  •  2 days 3 hrs ago
      congrats!
      now as it's own state, Israel should stop providing water and electricity to them. you're on your own. good luck
    • NT  •  2 days 4 hrs ago
      More like altered states.
    • ImanYercrotch  •  2 days 2 hrs ago
      They should call it Tatooine, they are our version of Tusken Raiders.

      "Tusken Radiers were a culture of nomadic, primitive sentients indigenous to Tatooine, where they were often hostile to local settlers."

      So are the palestinians.

      "In the culture of the Tuskens, to expose any part of the flesh was forbidden and seen as a disgrace. "

      Well those crazy moose limbs sure want their women covered up...

      "Occasionaly the different clans would go to war over territory and would even unite under a powerful warlord"

      Fatah-Hamas

      "any creatures, particularly offworlders, were subject to their savage attacks."

      Nothing says savage like a random suicide bomber.

      "Due to their lack of advanced technology, their primitive society and viciousness, they were considered barbaric monsters by most of the galactic populace. "

      Yup... they should call it Tatooine.
    • VietVet 1968  •  2 days 4 hrs ago
      They can call themselves whatever they want. Until the Fatah and Hamas movements can come together, there is NO Palestinian State or anything close!
    • Jeffrey  •  2 days 1 hr ago
      Another wasted headline care of the palis. Make sure you dont do anything substantive. Have another parade or two. Throw some more candy. Commemorate another stadium to whoever blew up the most israelis. But do NOT sit down and negotiate. Just ask the world for more money as you travel the globe patting yourself on the back for more meaningless UN resolutions.
    • Veritas Anon  •  21 hrs ago
      How can the U.N. make a state of Palestine? There already is a two state solution in place - Jordan and Israel, respectively 75 percent and remaining 25 percent. Obviously the filthy murderous Arab Muslims want a three state solution temporarily until they can wipe out Israel.

      SAY NOT TO FAKESTINE
      SAY NO TO ARAB MUSLIM TREACHERY
    • David Rosenthal  •  1 day 12 hrs ago
      Islam is the only system in the world to have achieved becoming simultaneously essentially evil and fatally boring.
    • Val  •  2 days 2 hrs ago
      Have any body notice the Gaza strip population 50% are under 18 years old and unemployment more than 60%? They need to stop making babes and start looking for jobs..
    • Jen  •  2 days 3 hrs ago
      Israels tolerance with the newborn palestinian state claims displays much civility. Any other country would of ensured a different ending to the deception.
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