DUBAI,
June 25 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Hours after his
long-awaited speech on his administration’s foreign policy toward
the Middle East, U.S. President George W. Bush’s vision was called
into question Tuesday, June 25, by analysts and newspapers across the
Arab world, as well as internationally.
Emirates
daily newspaper, Al-Bayan, said that Bush’s vision for the
Middle East “was blind and lacked balance, and is in fact,
completely Israeli as Bush placed strict conditions on the Palestinian
and Arab sides.”
Al-Bayan
also said that Bush “adopted the Israeli stance.”
Bush
also did not mention any details concerning “the borders of the
state that will emerge three years from now, the location of its
capital, or the future of millions of Palestinian refugees - all vital
concerns for the people of the West Bank and Gaza,” the paper said.
The
Guardian also said that Bush handed Sharon “additional
pretexts to delay a withdrawal from Palestinian lands, or the
reopening of negotiations with the Palestinians. As Mr Bush made
clear, Mr Sharon is now within his rights to demand not only an end to
Palestinian violence, but a total overhaul of the judiciary in the
West Bank or Gaza, before embarking on peace talks.”
An
Israeli analyst, Joseph Alpher, told the Guardian: “There is
no basis here for any pressure on Israel whatsoever. There is no
vision in terms of providing an incentive to the Palestinians of what
a state might look like. The only real vision is a democratic market
state of Palestine without Arafat. If this is supposed to provide an
incentive to Palestinians to get rid of Arafat, I don't see it.”
The
Guardian said that Alpher felt that Bush’s address “falls
short of a genuine re-engagement in Middle East peacemaking. By doing
so, it also promises precious little in the way of hope for an end to
nearly two years of blood and chaos.”
Alpher
commented that “This is either an incredibly naive approach or the
cover for an absence of any genuine energy to really deal with the
region. After all, Bush began his term by being very standoffish, and
this is an elegant way of getting out of the issues.”
“We
are dealing with two leaders, Sharon and Arafat, who are locked in
their respective positions, and an American leader, the only
conceivable person who can affect change, who does not want to truly
get involved. So we are stuck where we are, which means more of the
same, which means the situation will get worse: creeping Israeli
occupation, expanding settlements and continued terrorism.”
Egyptian
daily newspaper Al-Ahram’s Washington bureau chief, Mohammed
El-Sayed Said said, “The Arab world will not sleep tonight.”
“The
Palestinians have elected Arafat and they will elect him again. If the
Palestinians re-elect Arafat, are they going to be punished?”
U.K.
daily, the Independent, said that Bush’s speech was victory
for Sharon. “Game and set - if not match - to Ariel Sharon. Yasser
Arafat, long frozen out of the Bush White House, is no longer
perceived by the Americans as the legitimate leader of the Palestinian
people.”
The
Independent pointed out that Sharon had always aimed to draw a
link between Palestinian resistance and the “terror” that the U.S.
has declared war upon, and that in Bush’s speech, “he partly
achieved this.”