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Sunday, May 18, 2008
Bush ‘confident’ over ME peace deal
SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt/OCCUPIED-AL-QUDS: US President George W Bush said on Saturday he was confident about a Middle East peace deal being reached before his term ends, amid growing Arab criticism that he is biased towards Israel.
“In my speech tomorrow (Sunday), I’ll make it clear that I believe we can get a state defined by the end of my presidency, and we’ll work hard to achieve that objective,” Bush told reporters in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.”
The US leader, who is to deliver a speech on the opening day of the Middle East World Economic Forum, said he had spoken again with Israeli leaders about his goal and would do so with the Palestinians on Saturday and Sunday.
“Everyone of these meetings helps us inch toward the goal of getting a state defined with borders and the refugee issue as well as security concerns defined by the end of my presidency,” Bush said.
“And I believe we can do that, and I know it’s going to be important for the peace in the Middle East,” he said in response to questions about accusations in the Arab press of his bias towards Israel.
Bush arrived in Egypt Saturday from regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia and went straight into talks with President Hosni Mubarak before meeting with Palstinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
The president began his tour in Israel where he addressed parliament as the Jewish nation marked the 60th anniversary of its founding, sparking the ire of Egypt’s press.
“Bush has forgotten his role as the just mediator (of the Arab-Israeli conflict) and exposed his real self,” said the editorial in Egypt’s state-owned Al-Gomhuria.
Israel and the Palestinians resumed peace talks at a US-hosted meeting in November, committing themselves to a target of reaching a deal by the time Bush leaves office. So far, there has been virtually no visible progress in those talks.
Bush must “pressure Israel to accelerate negotiations and not to waste time, in order to reach an agreement by the end of the year,” Abbas spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina told AFP shortly before the two leaders met.
“We feel that the region is boiling and that it will see major problems if a peace deal is not concluded.”
Bush also met Afghan President Hamid Karzai and is also to meet Jordan’s King Abdullah II as well as Iraqi leaders ahead of his address to the WEF.
A Saudi official told AFP that talks between Bush and Saudi King Abdullah on Friday focused on the Palestinian issue and Middle East peace.
‘King Abdullah “underlined the need for the United States to exert more efforts to prompt Israel to reach results in the negotiations with the Palestinians conducive to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state,” the official said, asking not to be named.
Bush’s regional tour, his second since January, follows efforts at last year’s Annapolis conference aimed at restarting the stalled Middle East peace process, but hopes of a deal by the end of his term in January are dwindling.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had been mooted to attend the economic forum but with little Middle East peace progress to justify a three-way summit, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and President Shimon Peres will lead the Israeli delegation instead.
A meeting with Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora was dropped from Bush’s agenda after the opening in Qatar on Friday of talks among Lebanese leaders aimed at ending a long-running feud that drove their country to the brink of a new civil war.
Meanwhile, Israel’s outgoing air force chief says the army’s fight against Hamas will not end anytime soon.
Maj. Gen. Eliezer Shkedi says that Israel is ``going to continue to fight Hamas terror over a long time.’’
The general says Israel will have to learn to live with ``uncompromising and difficult combat and sometimes very aggressive operations by us.’’ He spoke with Channel 2 TV Saturday.
Hamas seized the Gaza Strip from forces allied with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas last year. Israeli army raids and air strikes on Gaza have done little to stop rocket attacks on Israel.
The chief of military intelligence, Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin, saidthis week that Hamas could take control of the West Bank if the peace talks with Abbas’ administration fail.
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