OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, September 30 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Amidst
the mixed response to the Israeli army’s lifting of the 10-day siege
around the West Bank offices of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat on
Sunday, September 29, Israeli Infrastructure Minister Efi Eitam,
welcomed the move, saying a U.S. strike on Iraq was top priority.
“The
Americans come up to us and say: ‘Friends, you surrounding the
Muqataa with tanks is causing us a problem when we’re trying to
recruit the international support we need for a hit on Iraq,’” the
extreme right-winger told public radio.
Eitam
is a member of Israel’s security cabinet and heads the
ultra-nationalist National Religious Party,
“It
is right that Israel should respect these interests and pull back its
tanks,” he said, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Trade
and Industry Minister Dalia Itzik, a member of the dovish Labor Party,
said “the decision to pull out from the Muqataa so suddenly raises a
lot of questions” while Tourism Minister Yitzak Levy said the siege
should have ended much earlier.
“It
should have ended much sooner, I’m sorry we put so much pressure on
the Americans,” the right-wing minister said, adding he believed
those who were holed up inside should be exiled abroad and not to
Gaza.
“I
would have reservations about exiling them to Gaza. I think that in
Gaza they will continue to operate. I prefer abroad, as far away as
possible,” he said. “It would be even better, if possible, to
throw out another few thousand.”
Major-General
Amos Gilad, coordinator of army operations in the territories, said
both the government’s decision to surround Arafat’s office and the
decision to pull out, were right because it was necessary to send the
Palestinians a message that “terror shouldn't exist.”
As
a result of the operation, “Israel’s defensive ability was
increased because it created real fear among the Palestinians that
Arafat would be banished,” the radio quoted him as saying.
Former
Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu criticized the decision to
call off the siege, saying Israel should have removed Arafat.
“The
only right thing to do is to get rid of Arafat, whether that is to
Tehran or to Paris, which would be even better,” he told army radio.
“Halfway steps won’t help any more.”
Egypt
and the Arab League said on Sunday the end of Israel’s 10-day
blockade of Arafat’s compound did not go far enough and demanded
that Israel lift its siege of the Palestinian people.
“The
siege that must be lifted is the siege imposed on the Palestinian
people,” said Egypt’s Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher.
The
pullout of Israeli troops from Arafat’s compound “is a first step.
It is proof that international efforts in and outside the framework of
the U.N. Security Council can force Israel to stop its attack,” he
said.
He
called on Israel to comply with international resolutions, to “stop
its aggression against the Palestinian people” and commit to a
peaceful settlement to the Middle East conflict.
Maher
said U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell told him in a phone call of
the Israeli troop withdrawal from Arafat’s offices.
For
its part, the Arab League called the Israeli withdrawal from
Arafat’s offices “insufficient” and said Israel should withdraw
to its positions before the eruption of the intifada in September
2000, stressing that U.N. Security Council resolution 1435, passed
last week, demanded such a pullout.
Egypt
was the first Arab country to sign a peace deal with Israel in 1979
and serves as a mediator between Israel and the Arab world.
Meanwhile,
the U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan on Sunday welcomed Israel’s
decision to end its siege and urged both sides to return to
negotiations.
“The
best path away from violence and stalemate is through ... a complete
end of violence, the early establishment of a Palestinian state with
provisional borders and a just and comprehensive settlement to the
conflict,” Annan’s spokesman said in a statement.
Annan
said that once the Security Council resolution demanding a complete
cessation of violence and a withdrawal of Israeli occupying forces
from Palestinian cities to September 2000-era positions, they should
“return to the negotiating table,” the spokesman said.
It
also calls on the Palestinian Authority to ensure that those
responsible for terrorist acts are brought to justice.