Arab
leaders relaunch Mideast peace plan
AFP/Hassan
Ammar

Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz addresses the closing session of
the Arab Summit in Riyadh. Washington was surprised by comments from
Saudi King Abdullah criticizing the US presence in Iraq and was seeking
clarification, US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said Thursday.
By
Lydia Georgi
AFP
RIYADH
Petroleumworld.com 03 29 07
Arab leaders on Thursday wrapped up a summit where they relaunched
a five-year-old blueprint for peace in the Middle East, although Israel
has rejected the plan as it stands.
The 22-member Arab League gathering was declared over after Secretary
General Amr Mussa read out a "Riyadh Declaration" reaffirming
the leaders' commitment to the Arab initiative first endorsed at a
2002 summit.
The proposal offers Israel peace and normal ties if it withdraws from
all land seized in the 1967 war, allows the creation of a Palestinian
state and the return of Palestinian refugees.
The leaders reaffirmed the "commitment of all Arab states to
the Arab peace initiative as approved at the Beirut summit in 2002
in all its elements."
They also reaffirmed "their call to the government of Israel
and all Israelis to accept the Arab peace initiative and seize the
opportunity to resume the process of direct and serious negotiations
on all tracks."
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas urged Israel "not to miss
another chance" to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
to accept the revived plan.
The peace offer "must be turned into a practical and comprehensive
plan... applicable without any change in its clauses or even its text,"
Abbas said in a speech to the Arab summit.
"From
here, I confirm the Palestinians' will to extend a hand of peace to
the Israeli people," he said.
Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres rejected the initiative
as is and said negotiations were needed.
"There is only one way to overcome our differences, and that
is negotiation," Peres told Israeli public radio. "It's
impossible to say: you must take what we offer you as is."
"With a diktat neither the Palestinians, nor the Arabs nor us
will achieve a solution."
Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal accused Israel of consistently
rejecting Arab peace offers.
"Such a position from Israel is not surprising. This has always
been its approach. Whenever the Arabs come up with resolutions ...
(offering) peace, they reject them categorically," he told reporters
after the summit.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abdul Gheit, whose country was the
first Arab state to sign a peace treaty with Israel, also voiced disappointment
at Israel's negative response, saying he hoped it would accept the
plan in order to kickstart serious negotiations.
Israel
had rejected the proposal when it was first floated, but its leaders
have recently spoken of it as a starting point for talks.
One obstacle is the insistence on the right of return of those Palestinians
who fled or were driven from their homes during the violence that
surrounded the creation of Israel in 1948, and of their descendants.
According to the United Nations, there are now more than four million
Palestinian refugees, living mostly in the Palestinian territories,
Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Libya.
Israel
fiercely opposes allowing their return, arguing that the influx would
effectively erase the Jewish character of the state.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had appealed to Arab states
to "begin reaching out to Israel" by building on the 2002
plan.
While the Middle East peace plan has been the main focus of discussions,
the crisis in Iraq was also highlighted at the summit, with Saudi
King Abdullah making a strident attack on what he called the "illegitimate
foreign occupation" of the country.
A White House spokesman responded with a rare rebuff of Saudi Arabia,
the regional political and oil powerhouse and close US ally.
"The United States is in Iraq at the request of the Iraqis and
under a United Nations mandate. Any suggestion to the contrary is
wrong," said National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns said on Thursday "We
were a little surprised" by the comments, adding: "Obviously,
we will seek clarification" from Riyadh.
Despite strong criticism from Iraq's Kurdish Foreign Minister Hoshyar
Zebari of what he called "Arab diktat", the heads of state
agreed to call for amendments to the Iraqi constitution to give more
power to the ousted Sunni Arab elite.
The Saudi monarch also appealed for an end to the "crippling"
political crisis in Lebanon, where divisions were highlighted by the
presence at the summit of rival pro- and anti-Syrian delegations.
Syria dominated Lebanon politically and militarily for nearly three
decades until it was forced to withdraw its troops two years ago after
the murder of former premier Rafiq Hariri.
AFP
29 1716 GMT 03 07
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