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Politics : The Arab-Israeli Solution -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dennis O'Bell who wrote (1279)4/12/2002 12:53:13 PM
From: Frederick Langford  Respond to of 2279
 
Isn't it the responsibility of the Muslims to improve their own lives?
They need to observe how other areas have improved their standard of living and learn from that, not destroy anyone who has a better way of life.
Imagine how things might be if Arafat took the deal Barak offered.
I believe they would be a lot better off today.
However, they chose Arafat, chose suicide bombings, so now they will reap what they sew...

Fred



To: Dennis O'Bell who wrote (1279)4/12/2002 1:00:41 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2279
 
Israel Won't Commit to Withdrawal

Fri Apr 12,12:18 PM ET
By BARRY SCHWEID, AP Diplomatic Writer

JERUSALEM (AP) - His peacekeeping mission off to a rocky start, Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news - web sites) failed to reach agreement Friday on a timetable for withdrawing Israeli troops from Palestinian cities and towns.

Not long after their meeting, an explosion triggered by a suicide bomber went off near Jerusalem's outdoor market, killing at least six people and injuring 50.

Powell spoke to Sharon to express regrets and condemn the terrorist act, saying it illustrates the dangerous situation and the need for Israel and the Palestinians to find a solution to stop the spiraling violence.

Earlier in the day, after Powell and Sharon had talked for four hours, the secretary said: "I hope we can find a way to come to agreement on this point of the duration of the operations and get back to a track that will lead to a political settlement because that is uppermost in everyone's mind."

Sharon, for his part, gave no commitment on when the military operation would end.

"Israel is conducting a war against the Palestinian infrastructure of terror and hopes to end it as soon as possible," Sharon said at a news conference with Powell.

As the United States stepped up pressure on both sides to end the violence, an explosion triggered by another suicide bomber went off near Jerusalem's outdoor market Friday. News reports said six people were killed and at least 50 wounded.

President Bush (news - web sites) condemned the bombing, said spokesman Ari Fleischer (news - web sites). "There are people in the region who want to disrupt Secretary Powell's mission. The president will not be deterred from seeking peace," Fleischer said.

Powell said he will tell Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat (news - web sites) when they meet Saturday that the time has come for action against such terror.

"What is important now is not just rhetoric going on into the air with no effect but action, action that will bring this violence under control, action that will give a feeling of hope to the people in the region and that will be my message to Chairman Arafat and we will see what his reaction is," Powell said.

Powell's comments came after a separate meeting with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, who said Israel has no interest in remaining in the Palestinian areas for any length of time. "We are talking about a week or something a little bit more than that," Peres said.

President Bush last week called on Israel to pull back "without delay." Initially supportive of Israel's counterterror tactics, the administration has accelerated its demands that Israel ease up.

Powell did say he and Sharon had a "mutual commitment" to bring the two sides to negotiations toward a peace settlement that would eventually lead to a Palestinian state.

"We recognize that eventually to reach the kind of solution that is needed, the parties must talk," Powell said, "the parties must begin negotiations."

He said Sharon had offered "a commitment to peace, a commitment to finding a way forward ... so that these two peoples can live together side by side."

In what appeared to be a gesture ahead of Powell's arrival, Israeli forces withdrew from about two dozen small towns and villages. However, they briefly moved into a new one: Kalil near the northern city of Nablus, where troops made arrests before leaving, the military said in a statement Friday. Military activity continued in a number of other cities, including Jenin, Nablus, Ramallah, Bethlehem, Dura and Dahariyah, south of Hebron.

Israel's army says 4,185 Palestinians have been detained since the operation began two weeks ago.

Sharon cast the military operation as a prudent response to terrorist attacks.

"The suicide bombers' terrorism represents a danger for Israel and the entire free world," he said. "Israel is the only democracy in the world in which there are guards in every school and in every kindergarten in order to protect the children against Palestinian terrorism."

Although Sharon offered no timetable for ending the two-week military thrust, Powell said the prime minister "is anxious to bring these operations to an end."

Powell said that while the United States recognizes the need of Israel to defend itself, "at the same time, as a friend of Israel, we have to take note of the long-term strategic consequences" of the violence.

Later Friday, Powell took a helicopter tour of the Lebanese border area, where Israeli warplanes have blasted suspected guerrilla hide-outs in southern Lebanon after Hezbollah fighters attacked Israeli outposts.

Powell touched down in Safed, headquarters of Israel's northern command with Lebanon and Syria in view off the horizon, where he was meeting with the commander, Maj. Gen. Gaby Ashkanazi.

A spokesman for the command, Maj. Dinor Shavit, said "the situation is very sensitive," at the border. "The place can get into escalation in a minute because of terror."

About 20 miles away, Hezbollah guerillas fired anti-aircraft missiles at Sheba Farms, an Israeli outpost that Lebanon continues to claim after Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon. The shelling, virtually a daily occurrence, could not be heard where Powell was being briefed by Israeli officials. There was no report of any injuries.

Powell called the briefing "sobering" and he urged all nations, especially Syria, with influence in Lebanon, to restrain Hezbollah attacks.

Powell will meet Saturday with Arafat in his devastated office in the West Bank city of Ramallah. Powell said this week that Israel must deal with Arafat as a partner in peacemaking.

___

On the Net:

State Department's Near East desk: state.gov



To: Dennis O'Bell who wrote (1279)4/12/2002 10:06:31 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 2279
 
Lebanon: It's the fuse for Armageddon
By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
Watch Lebanon. If you want to know where the Israeli-Palestinian war is going, watch Lebanon. If the war goes -- literally -- ballistic, the fuse will have been lit by the Iran-backed Hezbollah guerrillas now firing rockets into Israel from Lebanon.

But did Israel not withdraw from Lebanon almost two years ago? Why is there still a problem with Lebanon?

Indeed, Israel had been in Lebanon for about 20 years. It was a classic defensive occupation. Israel laid claim to not an inch of Lebanese soil. It was in there for one reason. To protect Israel's northern frontier from various guerrillas -- first Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization, then the Lebanese Shiite Party of God (Hezbollah) -- using south Lebanon to attack Israel.

Yet for two decades, Israel was hectored to comply with U.N. resolutions demanding Israel's withdrawal. In May 2000, it complied. To ensure that there could be no possible residual territorial dispute, Israel asked the United Nations to draw the line demarcating the true Israeli-Lebanese border -- the so-called Blue Line -- then pulled back behind it.

Israel's reward?

Hezbollah was not mollified. While its ostensible mission was the liberation of Lebanese territory, it did not disband. On the contrary. It occupied south Lebanon, imported huge new supplies of weapons from Iran, and began sporadic cross-border attacks on Israel.

Hezbollah has killed Israeli soldiers situated in Israeli territory. It kidnapped three soldiers who have never been seen since. And now, since the end of March, Hezbollah has embarked on a serious and deadly escalation, firing rockets into Israel.

Hezbollah is armed with 8,000 Katyusha rockets. They are ready for firing. Hezbollah spiritual leader Sheikh Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah threatened Monday to hit Haifa with Katyusha rockets if Israel dared to respond to Hezbollah attacks.

Were that to happen, the entire northern front would explode. Israel has been sending urgent messages through the United Nations and the United States that it would not tolerate such aggression. It would be forced to counterattack -- on Lebanon, on Syrian army positions in Lebanon and possibly even on Syria itself, Syria being Hezbollah's boss and patron.

Syria could not withstand such an Israeli attack conventionally. It might then launch its missiles equipped with chemical weapons into Israeli cities. And that could trigger Armageddon. Israel was established so that never again would the gassing of Jews be permitted.
Read the rest of his article @... Its GREAT...
chron.com