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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group

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To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (250553)12/4/2007 10:43:17 PM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (3) of 281500
 
White House Announces Bush Will Visit Middle East in Attempt to Restart Peace Talks

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

WASHINGTON — President George W. Bush will visit the Middle East in early January as he presses the Israelis and Palestinians to restart moribund peace talks, the White House said Tuesday.

White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe would not release details of Bush's itinerary, but an Israeli television station said the president would visit Israel.

Last week, Bush hosted a high-profile Middle East conference in Annapolis, Maryland, where Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas told international backers and skeptical Arab neighbors that they were ready to resume bargaining toward achieving an independent Palestinian homeland.

Bush has held Mideast peacemaking at arms' length for most of his nearly seven years in office, but he argues that conditions in Israel and the Palestinian territories now are right for a more energetic role. He said Israeli and Palestinian leaders are ready to make peace, there is a wider and unifying fight against extremism fed by the Palestinian conflict, and the world understands the urgency of acting now.

Fundamental differences have led to the collapse of previous peace efforts: the borders of a Palestinian state, the status of disputed Jerusalem and the rights of Palestinian refugees and their descendants.

Israel said Tuesday it is seeking bids to build more than 300 new homes in a disputed east Jerusalem neighborhood, drawing Palestinian condemnations that the move is undermining the newly revived peace talks. Eastern Jerusalem is considered the Arab sector, and the Arabs want that part of Jerusalem in any agreement to divide the city.

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat sent an urgent message to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, asking her to block the project from moving forward. "This is undermining Annapolis," he said.

Negotiating teams were to hold their first session in the region in just two weeks, on Dec. 12, and Olmert and Abbas plan to continue one-on-one discussions they began earlier this year. Many of the same nations and organizations attending the meeting in Annapolis were scheduled to gather on Dec. 17 in Paris to raise money for the cash-strapped Palestinians.
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