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"If occupation were to continue, then the PA will be put in a very dangerous and embarrassing situation," Abbas
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WASHINGTON,
July 25 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Reiterating his
government's commitment to combat "terrorism," Palestinian
Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas called on Washington Thursday, July 24,
to press Israel to freeze settlement activities, stop the construction
of the separation wall and release Palestinian prisoners.
He
also asserted that the United States must play an "active"
role in monitoring the implementation of the roadmap peace plan,
Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
"While
we and the Israelis have progressed in rebuilding our bilateral
relations, trust remains fragile," Abbas told the Council on
Foreign Relations on the eve of his meeting with U.S. President George
Bush.
"Neutral
third-party monitoring and verification will be essential to rebuild
this confidence and to avoid misunderstandings and unnecessary
crises."
He
charged that to this point, the Israelis have shown a "pattern of
hesitant implementation" of the roadmap.
Abbas
urged Israel to complete its withdrawal from Palestinian-controlled
areas, release Palestinian prisoners, lift the siege imposed on
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and give the Palestinian people
greater freedom of movement.
He
stressed that continued Israeli settlement building in occupied
Palestinian areas "will make a sovereign, viable Palestinian
state impossible and will permanently destroy the prospects of
permanent peace and an end to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict."
The
Palestinian prime minister underlined that "nothing less than a
full settlement freeze will do because nothing less than a full
settlement freeze will succeed."
He
cautioned that unless Israel takes the required steps down the road to
peace, "then it is basically reaffirming and reinforcing the
occupation.
"If
occupation were to continue, then the Palestinian Authority will be
put in a very dangerous and embarrassing situation, a situation no one
would envy," Abbas said.
He
reaffirmed the commitment by the main Palestinian resistance groups to
the truce they recently declared, adding that "the minor breaches
are dealt with promptly and forcefully."
While
thanking the Bush administration for freeing up $20 million in aid to
the Palestinian government, Abbas said he would push for more
financial assistance.
"We
do ask from the United States, and do hope that the United States will
provide us, with additional assistance in order to rebuild the
institutions that have been destroyed in the past several years,"
he said.
In
an interview with CNN's Christiane Amanpour, the Palestinian
premier warned of "frustration" among Palestinians if he was
unable to coax Bush into pressing Israel to take more concrete steps
to implement the internationally-backed plan.
"They
expect us to bring these results," Abbas said.
"Everybody
is prepared to move forward with the peace process through the
roadmap. However, if they feel that there is no response or no
commitment on the American side -- and I hope this will not happen --
then the situation would be quite difficult. And I and my government
will be in a very difficult situation."
On
requests he would put forward during his meeting with Bush on Friday,
July 25, at the White House, Abbas said: "I would like him to
work on persuading Israel to freeze settlement activity and to stop
building the wall and ... to convince them to release the prisoners
because this is an issue of high sensitivity to us. These are the
issues that we want."
The
Palestinian premier was referring to a separation wall built by Israel
in the West Bank allegedly to stave off
Palestinian attacks against its interests.
Washington
sympathizes with Abbas on Jewish settlements and the separation wall.
"There's
not a lot of enthusiasm in this town for a fence... This is a real
issue, or it has the makings of becoming a real issue (between Israel
and the United States), were the fence to follow the route that many
people say it will," said a senior U.S. official, who asked not
to be named.
Admitting
this, Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said after a meeting in
Washington with Secretary of State Colin Powell that a "misunderstanding
is developing with the Americans on this fence."
So
far the United States has concentrated on persuading Israel to
dismantle small settler outposts in the West Bank but another official
said this could change.
"We
are also getting to the point of taking up the issue of settlements
per se and growth," the official said.
Palestine
Maps
In
order to give Bush a first hand knowledge of the situation on the
ground, Abbas said he would come to the White House with maps showing
the locations of the wall, as well as Israeli settlements and more
than 160 Israeli checkpoints situated in occupied Palestinians areas.
"These
things have to be concrete in front of the eyes of the president. We
don't want to talk about these things in a void," he said.
"It
is necessary for him to see the maps to reinforce what we are talking
about so he can see those issues that we are suffering from. I believe
this is beneficial to us and to the president."
Dahlan-Rice
Visiting
Palestinian Minister of State For Security Affairs Mohammed Dahlan met
Thursday with U.S. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice for
talks that focused on a program to buy back weapons from armed
Palestinian groups, reported AFP quoting Palestinian sources.
On
June 7, Dahlan categorically denied Israeli media reports that he was
to offer armed Palestinian groups six thousand dollars apiece for guns
they possess in a bid to rid the Palestinian territories of
“illegal” arms.
The
report suggested he received money from the U.S. and British
governments and from the European Union to fund the program.
The
Palestinian sources also said Dahlan urged Rice to put pressure on
Israel to ensure that Israeli weapons dealers do not sell arms to
Palestinians.
They
added that Dahlan was to meet CIA Director George Tenet later
Thursday.