Abbas: Peace Deal Possible By May
Palestinian
president says Israel, Palestinians could sign peace agreement within six
months of international peace conference scheduled for November, which
'should define the principles settling the questions over the final status
of the Palestinian territories'
Israel and the Palestinians could sign a peace deal within six
months of an international peace conference scheduled for November,
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas told AFP on Friday.
The meeting in November should define the principles
settling the questions over the final status (of the Palestinian
territories)," Abbas said in an interview in New York, where he is
attending the UN General Assembly.
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story |
| | | "Then
we will begin negotiations on the details under a timeframe, which ought
not to exceed six months, to reach a peace treaty," he added.
The leader of the Palestinian Authority, who has met with several
foreign leaders during his stay in New York, said that the US-sponsored
talks would open in Washington on November 15.
The leader of the Palestinian Authority, who has met with several key
foreign leaders during his stay in New York, said that the US-sponsored
talks would open in Washington on November 15.
"We have noted that the whole world is interested in this meeting and
attaches great hopes to its success," he added.
Abbas said that Palestinian and Israeli negotiators would start to
tackle preparations for the gathering in the coming days.
"We want to prepare a framework agreement defining clear principles and
without equivocation that will serve as a basis for the settlement.
Immediately after the meeting we will hold negotiations on the basis of
this document."
Key stumbling blocks in previous talks between Israel and the
Palestinians have included the borders of a future Palestinian state, the
fate of the Jewish settlements, the status of Jerusalem and the question
of Palestinian refugees.
"We, the Israelis and the Arabs, must make this meeting succeed," he
said.
He said the members of the Middle East quartet, the permanent members
of the UN Security Council, the follow up committee of the Arab League and
certain countries from G8 and the non-aligned movement should take part in
the talks.
The international quartet, which groups the United States, United
Nations, European Union and Russia, issued a "roadmap" for
Israeli-Palestinian peace in 2003 originally envisioning the creation of a
Palestinian state by 2005.
"We hope that Syria and Lebanon will also participate in the meeting," he added. The
United States announced this week that it would invite Syria to the talks,
but Damascus has expressed reservations about taking part.
Asked whether an agreement could be applied in the Gaza Strip, where Hamas took power by force in June, Abbas called on the Islamist
movement to "place the interests of the Palestinian people above all other
considerations."
"If the situation in the Gaza Strip returns to how it was (before Hamas
seized power) we will be ready to talk," he said.
But a recent flare-up in violence in the Gaza Strip, declared by Israel
as a "hostile entity" and where 13 Palestinians were killed this week by
Israeli attacks in response to militant rocket fire, has complicated the
task.
However, Abbas remained optimistic, saying: "Any attempt at sabotage is
doomed to fail."
US President George W. Bush, who is organizing November's summit, met
with Abbas on Monday, but made no reference to the gathering after the
talks.
The United States' somewhat grudging offer to invite diplomatic
adversary Syria to its Middle East peace conference is largely to provide
political cover for other Arab states to take part, US officials said.
The Bush administration's most high-profile attempt to promote
Israeli-Palestinian peace is expected to take place in November and the
United States on Sunday signaled its willingness to invite Syria.
However, US officials suggested they did so with little enthusiasm
because of their disagreements with Damascus over Iraq, Lebanon and its
support for Hamas, the terrorist group and political party that rules the
Gaza Strip.
The United States has long criticized Syrian influence in Lebanon,
which US officials believe has continued despite the 2005 withdrawal of
Syrian troops from its southern neighbor.
The United States also accuses Syria of fomenting violence in
neighboring Iraq by allowing arms and fighters to cross its border and
criticizes Damascus for supporting Hamas, the Palestinian militant group
and political party that seized control of the Gaza Strip and has rejected
the conference.
A senior US official, who spoke on condition that he not be named, said
Washington had signaled its willingness to invite Syria chiefly out of a
desire to get other Arab states to come. To exclude Syria would provide
"an easy excuse" for other Arab states to stay away, he said.
"Others have to have them there or they would feel at risk that they
didn't have the appropriate cover for their own participation," he added,
saying the United States would not exclude Syria but "we don't cherish
their participation."
"You balance the discomfort of their presence, because of these
problems that we have with them, against the value of the presence of
others," he said.
The United States disclosed its plan to include Syria indirectly,
saying it would invite the members of an Arab League panel following up
the group's 2002 peace initiative.
In addition to the Palestinian Authority, the group includes Syria,
Lebanon, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt. Only the last two have
full relations with Israel, while Syria and Lebanon are deeply estranged
from the Jewish state.
The Arab League peace peace initiative calls on Israel to withdraw from
all Arab land occupied in the 1967 Middle East war; to reach an "agreed,
just" solution for Palestinian refugees; and to accept a Palestinian state
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip with east Jerusalem as its capital.
In return, Arab states would consider the conflict over and enter a
peace treaty with Israel; achieve comprehensive peace for all the states
of the region; and establish normal relations with Israel.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the Arab initiative would
be a cornerstone of the conference, which the United States hopes will
provide broader Arab backing for an eventual Israeli-Palestinian peace
deal.
"So we faced a choice: Did you try and exclude a member of this
committee, causing untold difficulty for others in trying to figure out
whether or not they could then come ... or did you just say the entire
committee is invited?" Rice told Fox News in an interview on Monday. "We
decided on the latter, not one of the easier decisions we've ever had to
make."
Rice on Sunday stressed that countries that attend should renounce
violence and support Israeli-Palestinian peace.
The official who asked not to be named said he did not expect Syria to
change policy on Lebanon, Iraq or Hamas.
"If they did something different that would be great but I think we are
assuming that they will continue to misbehave," he said.
He also said the United States reserved the right not to formally
invite Syria but did not expect that to happen.
Israeli and Palestinian officials said asking Syria to the conference
could test its willingness to break with Palestinian militants including
Hamas, which seized the Gaza Strip in June and has rejected the
U.S.-sponsored conference.
"That could occur. I'm not sanguine it will," the official said.
Reuters contributed to
this report
Original article: ynetnews.com/
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