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Blair
failed to convince Bush to deploy a U.S.-led monitoring force in
the occupied territories (AFP)
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LONDON,
March 28 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – U.S. President
George Bush has rebuffed a request from his closest ally British Prime
Minister Tony Blair to deploy a U.S.-led “monitoring force” to act
as a buffer between Israel and the Palestinians, The Times
revealed Saturday, March 27.
The
plea was at the heart of talks between the two sides at the highest
level over the past few months with London urging Washington to play
an active role in the Middle East to alley the growing “Islamic”
hatred towards the West, said the paper.
But
defiant wartime Bush was not even ready to think it over, it quoted a
Whitehall
official as saying.
The
Times said the reaction came to the resentment of Blair who
gambled on his political career by staunchly supporting
U.S.
policies in return for its backing of the moribund
Middle East
peace process.
The
foreign office and intelligence officials have succeeded in getting
Palestinian security services under one umbrella in the
West Bank
to revive the Palestinian-Israeli security coordination.
But
they were keen on taking a step further in the Gaza Strip by
convincing
Washington
to approve the dispatch of U.S.-led hundreds-strong security force to
head off any repercussions due to a planned Israeli pullout of the
Strip.
Israel
fears the conflict with the Palestinians would take an international
dimension if such a force was deployed.
American
concerns that a possible power vacuum in the Strip could be filled by
Hamas played into the hands of
London
, which has been pressing
Washington
to accept the proposal, but to no avail due to Israeli pressure.
Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has done everything in his power to
scupper British attempts to have a European role in the occupied
territories, hinting this could damage Bush’s reelection campaign.
He
has been rather trying to drum up American support for his unilateral
disengagement plan.
Annexation
Although
Bush has finally agreed to schedule a meeting with
Sharon
on April 14, he refused to cross the lines set by the American foreign
policy about an Israeli request to approve annexation of Gush Etzion
and Ma'aleh Adumim settlement blocs east and south of Al-Quds
(occupied
Jerusalem
) and Ariel in the northwest of the
West Bank
.
Sources
in the Bush administration said it would be difficult to endorse the
Israeli request, reported the Israeli Haaretz daily Sunday,
March 28.
Israel
Radio quoted the sources as saying the proposal was ill-timed
especially that Bush was trying to calm the Arab world in the
aftermath of Israeli's assassination of Hamas spiritual leader Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin last week.
The
66-year-old wheelchair-bound Yassin was
assassinated along with eight others in an Israeli missile
strike on his way home after performing the dawn prayers.
According
to the sources, Bush would be more willing to support
Sharon
's disengagement plan, arguing it could rekindle the peacemaking.
The
official announcement of the Bush-Sharon meeting date came at the
conclusion of talks last week between Israeli delegates Dov Weisglass
and Giora Eiland and U.S. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice.
U.S.
Assistant Secretary of State William Burns and National Security
Council representatives Steven Hadley and Elliot Abrams are to arrive
in
Israel
on Wednesday to finalize arrangements for
Sharon
's trip.
They
will also visit
Egypt
and
Jordan
to prepare upcoming visits of their leaders to
Washington
.
Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak would fly to
Washington
two days before
Sharon
while Jordanian King Abdullah II was due on April 21.