I guess here is another opinion from a man that will no doubt be branded "anti-semetic"...
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    It's now clear: the Oslo peace accords were wrecked by Netanyahu's bad faith
Avi Shlaim
The Guardian, 				            Thursday 12 September 2013 22.11 BST	                 
I thought the peace accords 20 years ago could work, but Israel used them as cover for its colonial project in Palestine
                             
 
Shimon Peres, the  Israeli foreign minister, signs the Oslo accords at the White House on  13 September 1993. Onlookers include Israel's PM, Yitzhak Rabin; Bill  Clinton; and the PLO's Yasser Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas. Photograph: J  David AKE/AFP
                     
 Exactly 20 years have passed since the Oslo accords were signed  on the White House lawn. For all their shortcomings and ambiguities, the  accords constituted a historic breakthrough in the century-old conflict  between Jews and Arabs in Palestine. It was the first peace agreement  between the two principal parties to the conflict: Israelis and  Palestinians.
The accords represented real progress on three  fronts: the Palestine Liberation Organisation recognised the state of  Israel; Israel recognised the PLO as the representative of the  Palestinian people; and both sides agreed to resolve their outstanding  differences by peaceful means. Mutual recognition replaced mutual  rejection. In short, this promised at least the beginning of a  reconciliation between two bitterly antagonistic national movements. And  the hesitant handshake between Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat clinched the historic compromise.
Critical  to the architecture of Oslo was the notion of gradualism. The text did  not address any of the key issues in this dispute: Jerusalem; the right  of return of 1948 refugees; the status of Jewish settlements built on  occupied Palestinian land; or the borders of the Palestinian entity. All  these "permanent status" issues were deferred for negotiations towards  the end of the five-year transition period. Basically, this was a modest  experiment in Palestinian self-government, starting with the Gaza Strip  and the West Bank town of Jericho.
The text did not promise or  even mention an independent Palestinian state at the end of the  transition period. The Palestinians believed that in return for giving  up their claim to 78% of historic Palestine, they would gain an  independent state in the remaining 22%, with a capital city in  Jerusalem. They were to be bitterly disappointed.
Controversy  surrounded Oslo from the moment it saw the light of day. The 21 October  1993 issue of the London Review of Books ran two articles; Edward Said  put the case against in the first. He called the agreement "an instrument of Palestinian surrender, a Palestinian Versailles",  arguing that it set aside international legality and compromised the  fundamental national rights of the Palestinian people. It could not  advance genuine Palestinian self-determination because that meant  freedom, sovereignty, and equality, rather than perpetual subservience  to Israel.
In my own article I put the case for Oslo.  I believed that it would set in motion a gradual but irreversible  process of Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories and that it  would pave the way to Palestinian statehood. From today's perspective,  20 years on, it is clear that Said was right in his analysis and I was  wrong.
In 2000 the Oslo peace process broke down following the failure of the Camp David summit  and the outbreak of the second intifada. Why? Israelis claim that the  Palestinians made a strategic choice to return to violence and  consequently there was no Palestinian partner for peace. As I see it,  Palestinian violence was a contributory factor, but not the main cause.  The fundamental reason was that Israel reneged on its side of the deal.
Sadly, the Jewish fanatic who assassinated Rabin in 1995  achieved his broader aim of derailing the peace train. In 1996 the  rightwing Likud returned to power under the leadership of Binyamin  Netanyahu. He made no effort to conceal his deep antagonism to Oslo,  denouncing it as incompatible with Israel's right to security and with  the historic right of the Jewish people to the whole land of Israel. And  he spent his first three years as PM in a largely successful attempt to  arrest, undermine, and subvert the accords concluded by his Labour  predecessors.
Particularly destructive of the peace project was  the policy of expanding Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian  territory. These settlements are illegal under international law and  constitute a huge obstacle to peace. Building civilian settlements  beyond the Green Line  does not violate the letter of the Oslo accords but it most decidedly  violates its spirit. As a result of settlement expansion the area  available for a Palestinian state has been steadily shrinking to the  point where a two-state solution is barely conceivable.
The  so-called security barrier that Israel has been building on the West  Bank since 2002 further encroaches on Palestinian land. Land-grabbing  and peace-making do not go together: it is one or the other. Oslo is  essentially a land-for-peace deal. By expanding settlements all Israeli  governments, Labour as well as Likud, contributed massively to its  breakdown.
The rate of settlement growth in the West Bank and Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem is staggering. At the end of 1993 there were 115,700 Israeli settlers in the occupied territories. Their number doubled during the following decade.
Today the number of Israeli settlers on the West Bank exceeds 350,000.  There are an additional 300,000 Jews living in settlements across the  pre-1967 border in East Jerusalem. Thousands more settlement homes are  planned or under construction. Despite his best efforts, John Kerry, the  US secretary of state, failed to get the Netanyahu government to accept  a settlement freeze as a precondition for renewing the peace talks  suspended in 2010. As long as Netanyahu remains in power, it is a safe  bet that no breakthrough will be achieved in the new round of talks. He  is the procrastinator par excellence, the double-faced prime minister  who pretends to negotiate the partition of the pizza while continuing to  gobble it up.
The Oslo accords had many faults, chief of which  was the failure to proscribe settlement expansion while peace talks were  in progress. But the agreement was not doomed to failure from the  start, as its critics allege. Oslo faltered and eventually broke down  because Likud-led governments negotiated in bad faith. This turned the  much-vaunted peace process into a charade. In fact, it was worse than a  charade: it provided Israel with just the cover it was looking for to  continue to pursue with impunity its illegal and aggressive colonial  project on the West Bank.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/sep/12/oslo-israel-reneged-colonial-palestine