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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (3755)4/25/2002 5:05:26 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Saudi Prince Makes Demands of Bush
Thu Apr 25, 3:39 PM ET

By SANDRA SOBIERAJ, Associated Press Writer

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - Amid the serenity of rustling
grasses, President Bush and Saudi
Crown Prince Abdullah confronted the rising tensions
over Israel, Iraq and Islamic terror that are straining
their nations' 70-year alliance.

The leaders met Thursday at
Bush's ranch home with a formality
he normally leaves at the Texas
state line.

The president, in a business suit,
watched out the breezeway window
for the Saudi leader whose five-car
motorcade rolled into the circular
driveway a bit late. Cowboy boots and an oversized
silver belt buckle were Bush's concession to the
laid-back style that usually prevails here.

He welcomed Abdullah, who wore a flowing brown
robe, with a long handshake and quiet exchange of
pleasantries before showing him inside for talks that
were expected to be less comfortable.

Against the backdrop of flaring anti-American anger
on Arab streets, the crown prince bore a warning to
Bush that U.S. backing of Israel - and seeming
tolerance of Israeli military offensives against
Palestinians - had damaged prospects for Mideast
peace.

"We believe the administration could have been
stronger on (Israeli Prime Minister Ariel) Sharon, made
it clearer to him that negotiations cannot be done
under the barrel of a gun," Nail Al-Jubeir, a
spokesman for the Saudi embassy, told reporters here.

Al-Jubeir said the crown prince brought a frank
message: "The message is, Sharon has been acting up,
and the U.S. government needs to rein him in. We
cannot maintain the peace process with this stuff
going on."

Images of Israeli-inflicted devastation in Palestinian
refugee camps "make it more difficult for friends of the
U.S. to stand up with the U.S.," he said.

More broadly, Arab leaders have warned of serious
damage to U.S.-Arab relations and to tenuous Arab
support for the U.S. anti-terrorism war, which Bush
wants to expand into Iraq.

Some oil prices surged Thursday on fears that
Abdullah would threaten to choke off Saudi oil to the
United States. Al-Jubeir denied that. "We've always
been a reliable source of oil, and we'll continue to be,"
he said.

The American side was there in force: Vice President
Dick Cheney , Secretary of State
Colin Powell , National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice and White
House chief of staff Andrew Card.

Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and
other top administration officials laid the groundwork
by meeting first with Abdullah on Wednesday in
Houston.

Despite the suit and tie, Bush aimed to inject warmth
into his first face-to-face meeting with Abdullah. A
small table in the breezeway was set for a cozy lunch,
and aides said Bush hoped to tap Abdullah's own love
of land - he owns an enormous farm in Saudi Arabia
- by showing him around some of Prairie Chapel
Ranch's wooded canyons, abloom with Texas
bluebonnets and wild pink poppies.

Saudi and other Arab leaders take strong issue with
Bush's support for Sharon, who has kept Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat under virtual
house arrest in the West Bank while Israeli forces, in
defiance of Bush's own April 4 demands, press forward
in a bloody hunt for Palestinian terrorists.

Further straining the U.S.-Saudi relationship - at a
time when Bush is trying to stick to a zero-tolerance
policy against terrorists - are recent displays of Saudi
support for Palestinian suicide bombings of Israeli
civilians.

Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Britain published a
poem praising such "martyrs" and the Saudi
government has sponsored a telethon that collected
$100 million to help the bombers' families. Powell
testified to the Senate this week that some of that
money may have gone to elements of the militant
Hamas organization.

Abdullah wants Bush to pressure Sharon to release
Arafat.

Bush hoped Thursday's meetings would advance the Mideast peace process.

It was Abdullah who gave momentum earlier this year to an initiative meant to
quell Mideast violence by offering peace and full recognition to Israel in
exchange for the territory Jordan and Syria lost in the 1967 war.


Abdullah's plan also includes the creation of a Palestinian state, an idea for
which Bush has voiced support. Also under review is an international
conference on Mideast peacemaking. Bush so far has been noncommittal and
Arafat's participation in any such conference remains in dispute.

story.news.yahoo.com