From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
US Visit Boosts Olmert's Unilateral Plan: Experts
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, May25 , 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – US President George Bush and Israeli Premier Ehud Olmert's talk about giving diplomacy a chance before unilateral measures to fix Israel's final borders was seen in Israel as neither particularly unexpected nor meaningful.
"Nobody takes this seriously, neither Americans nor Israelis," political analyst Gerald Steinberg told Reuters.
"It's a charade. They're going to go through the motions of talking to (Palestinian President Mahmoud) Abbas and certainly Olmert knows that is not going to produce anything."
"The president removed the only obstacle remaining in Olmert's path. He made it clear that Olmert's alignment plan does not contradict Bush's vision," commented the Haaretz daily.
"These ideas could lead to a two-state solution if a pathway to progress on the road map is not opened in the period ahead," Bush told a joint press conference with Olmert on Tuesday, May23 .
Olmert vowed to fix Israel's final borders by 2010 which include annexing large Jewish settlement blocks in the occupied West Bank, dividing Palestinian areas and making it almost impossible to create a contiguous and viable Palestinian state.
The United States had consistently opposed any Israeli go-it-alone steps on final status negotiations with the Palestinians.
Dangerous
The Israeli unilateral plan has drawn fire from many Palestinians, not only the government.
"Olmert's plan is the most dangerous plan proposed in 10 years," Mohammad Dahlan, an Abbas ally, told Reuters.
Dalhan was largely responsible for on the ground military and civil coordination with the Israeli side in the Fatah government that lost elections to Hamas.
Olmert is expected to meet Abbas in coming weeks, but any talks would be far from amounting to negotiations for Palestinian statehood.
His plan would result in taking in swathes of territory the Palestinians seek for a state in the entire West Bank and Gaza Strip.
A delay to give talks a chance means that the Americans do not have to rush to back an Israeli project treated with much greater suspicion by European and Arab countries, said Reuters.
Tuliameni Kalomoh, the UN assistant secretary general for political affairs, told the UN Security Council on Thursday, March30 , that Israel's unilateral plan would undermine efforts to establish peace in the Middle East.
Arab governments believe more unilateral steps by Israel to retain control over occupied Palestinian territories would kill stone dead any peace chances.
The delay suits Olmert too while he is still getting his feet under the table following his election in March.
Meanwhile, Israel's West Bank separation wall, a key component of unilateral separation, is growing steadily longer and will probably be finished next year.
Rapport
Perhaps even more important than any words of support that Olmert won in Washington was the rapport he appeared to build with Bush.
Easy smiles and body contact showed how comfortably he had taken the place of Bush's old friend Ariel Sharon, whose collapse into a coma nearly five months ago pushed Olmert to centre stage.
"Chemistry has a substantial effect on how decisions are made," wrote Orly Azulai in the Yedioth Ahronoth daily.
"Olmert passed the first impression test with flying colors."
The visit was unanimously judged a success by Israeli media.
The only dispute was over exactly how many rounds of applause Olmert got in his speech to Congress on Wednesday. It was about40 .
"It may be the best speech I've ever heard," Congressman Eliot Engel of New York told Haaretz.
http://islamonline.net/English/News/2006-05/25/article04.shtml
"It's a charade. They're going to go through the motions of talking to (Palestinian President Mahmoud) Abbas and certainly Olmert knows that is not going to produce anything."
"The president removed the only obstacle remaining in Olmert's path. He made it clear that Olmert's alignment plan does not contradict Bush's vision," commented the Haaretz daily.
"These ideas could lead to a two-state solution if a pathway to progress on the road map is not opened in the period ahead," Bush told a joint press conference with Olmert on Tuesday, May23 .
Olmert vowed to fix Israel's final borders by 2010 which include annexing large Jewish settlement blocks in the occupied West Bank, dividing Palestinian areas and making it almost impossible to create a contiguous and viable Palestinian state.
The United States had consistently opposed any Israeli go-it-alone steps on final status negotiations with the Palestinians.
Dangerous
The Israeli unilateral plan has drawn fire from many Palestinians, not only the government.
"Olmert's plan is the most dangerous plan proposed in 10 years," Mohammad Dahlan, an Abbas ally, told Reuters.
Dalhan was largely responsible for on the ground military and civil coordination with the Israeli side in the Fatah government that lost elections to Hamas.
Olmert is expected to meet Abbas in coming weeks, but any talks would be far from amounting to negotiations for Palestinian statehood.
His plan would result in taking in swathes of territory the Palestinians seek for a state in the entire West Bank and Gaza Strip.
A delay to give talks a chance means that the Americans do not have to rush to back an Israeli project treated with much greater suspicion by European and Arab countries, said Reuters.
Tuliameni Kalomoh, the UN assistant secretary general for political affairs, told the UN Security Council on Thursday, March30 , that Israel's unilateral plan would undermine efforts to establish peace in the Middle East.
Arab governments believe more unilateral steps by Israel to retain control over occupied Palestinian territories would kill stone dead any peace chances.
The delay suits Olmert too while he is still getting his feet under the table following his election in March.
Meanwhile, Israel's West Bank separation wall, a key component of unilateral separation, is growing steadily longer and will probably be finished next year.
Rapport
Perhaps even more important than any words of support that Olmert won in Washington was the rapport he appeared to build with Bush.
Easy smiles and body contact showed how comfortably he had taken the place of Bush's old friend Ariel Sharon, whose collapse into a coma nearly five months ago pushed Olmert to centre stage.
"Chemistry has a substantial effect on how decisions are made," wrote Orly Azulai in the Yedioth Ahronoth daily.
"Olmert passed the first impression test with flying colors."
The visit was unanimously judged a success by Israeli media.
The only dispute was over exactly how many rounds of applause Olmert got in his speech to Congress on Wednesday. It was about40 .
"It may be the best speech I've ever heard," Congressman Eliot Engel of New York told Haaretz.
http://islamonline.net/English/News/2006-05/25/article04.shtml
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network
Heavy
http://dc.indymedia.org/newswire/display/133949/index.php