"We're
not ready to lay down a specific calendar except for the fact we need
to get started quickly, soon, so that we can seize the moment,"
Bush said at a joint press conference with Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak at Camp David, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Mubarak,
on the other hand, focused during the press conference, on the
importance of speeding the timetable for creating a Palestinian state.
"Here's
the timetable I have in mind: we need to start immediately in building
the institutions necessary for the emergence of a Palestinian
state," Bush said.
The
Egyptian leader -- apparently disappointed in his efforts to win
Bush's support for accelerating steps leading to the declaration of a
Palestinian state -- insisted that such a declaration was the only way
that will restore hope among the Palestinians and is the only way to
halt anti-Israeli violence.
"I
don't think that violence will come to an end unless the people feel
that there is hope for peace and there is something to show that peace
is coming. If they didn't feel that, they will not stop violence. It
will continue forever," Mubarak warned.
Mubarak
also called for a total Israeli withdrawal from Palestinian-held
territories as well as a halt to all Israeli settlement activity
there, AFP said.
"Israel
must end the siege imposed on the Palestinian people ... and halt
assassinations and the repeated incursions in the territories under
the control of the Palestinian Authority and immediately halt all
settlement activities in the occupied territories," Mubarak said.
While
Bush sharply criticized Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, Mubarak
called for giving Arafat "a chance" to show he can reform
his Palestinian Authority, with an eye on creating a state in the
future. "We should give this man a chance," Mubarak said.
Bush
countered that Arafat "must do everything in his power to stop
the violence, to stop the attacks on Israel. I mean everything,"
he said. "I am disappointed in his leadership. I think he has let
the Palestinian people down."
Bush,
who is set to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on Monday,
said he and Mubarak agreed that the pursuit of what Washington says
are crucial Palestinian reforms should go hand-in-hand with "a
political dialogue."
"Part
of the consultation process that we are having is to determine what's
feasible in terms of that political dialogue, what's feasible in terms
of the timetable that a lot of people are anxious to talk about,"
Bush said.
Bush
also said that that Israel, too, "must work to create the
conditions necessary to achieve peace."
Bush
has said that he will make a fresh statement of U.S. policy on the
Middle East after talks starting Monday with Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, but gave no details on what or when he would say it, AFP
reported.
Mubarak
had arrived in Washington late Wednesday bearing what one senior Arab
official in Cairo said were the outlines of a new peace plan calling
for the creation of a Palestinian state with temporary borders by
early 2003.
Mubarak’s
peace initiative aimed at breaking the Arab-Israeli deadlock through a
proclamation of a Palestinian mini-state next year.
Absent
public support from Bush on that initiative, the Egyptian president
called for "strong" U.S. engagement "in the context of
an agreed timeframe" for creating a such a state.
It
is still too early to consider Mubarak’s mission a failure, said
Hassan Nafaa, head of the political science department at Cairo
University to Qatar-based Al-Jazeera satellite channel.
A
more accurate judgment should wait till Sharon meets with Bush, so one
can see the impact of Mubarak’s visit, he added