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What is to blame for the stalled peace talks?

Israeli officials blame a Palestinian Authority diplomatic campaign orchestrated "to coerce Israel into accepting statehood."

The US State Department blames the Goldstone report.

Meanwhile:

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will seek cabinet approval on Sunday for a new map of national priority zones that will grant 110,000 settlers – most of whom live outside the major settlement blocs – the economic benefits conferred on residents of these zones. . .

Designation as a national priority zone entitles a town to additional state funding, which can be spent on programs ranging from professional retraining courses to extra classroom hours and cultural activities. Netanyahu’s proposal allots a budget of about NIS 1,000 per person for these benefits, meaning his government will be earmarking an additional NIS 110 million for the settlements.

The proposal the cabinet will be asked to approve on Sunday states that its main purpose is "to encourage population dispersal in the State of Israel and increase the population of the periphery and of areas near the border." Another goal is to "preserve and bolster Israel’s national security stamina."

Some settlement freeze. The best comment on the proposed new "priority zones" comes from Israeli Knesset member and National Union Party member Michael Ben-Ari:

"The message from here is very clear. . .The Jews have been exiled enough. If there is a people that has to be evacuated and should not be here, it is not the Jewish people."

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