RAMALLAH,
West Bank, July 14 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Locked up by
Israeli forces occupying their towns, assassinating them, and
destroying their homes, with no prospect of serious peace talks in
sight and the international community largely silent, Palestinians
feel increasingly isolated on the world stage.
"Everybody
agrees with the U.S. administration [on its pro-Israel policy] even if
some disagree on the means to carry it out, particularly the
Europeans," a senior Palestinian official told Agence France
Presse (AFP), on condition of anonymity.
Palestinians
expect nothing from this week's meeting in New York, some even fear
the quartet of the United States, the European Union, Russia and the
United Nations will endorse the U.S. pro-Israel vision for the Middle
East by demanding more pressure on the Palestinian leadership.
For
his part, Ziad Abu Amr, a member of the National Legislative Council,
or Parliament, from Gaza, said the Palestinian leadership is caught
between a rock and a hard place.
"I
believe that the pressure will grow on the Palestinians and if
President Yasser Arafat shows he is little inclined to make new
concessions, he will be exposed to new U.S. threats to remove
him," he said.
Amr,
heading the Council's political committee, said he was skeptical about
the ability of Arab Foreign Ministers to influence the U.S. position
at the meeting of the quartet.
"It
would be naive to believe the Arab representatives will have the
possibility to weigh on the decisions of the quartet in a way that
helps the Palestinians," he said.
"On
the contrary, they will be asked to add to the pressure exerted on the
Palestinians to accept the American ideas," he added.
Foreign
Ministers Ahmed Maher of Egypt, Marwan Moasher of Jordan, and Prince
Saud al-Faisal of Saudi Arabia will meet with the quartet in New York.
The three top diplomats are to hold talks later with U.S. President
George W. Bush in Washington.
"It
is clear that the position of the Arabs is weak, that the Europeans
are increasingly tempted to align themselves with the United States
which defends Israeli policy," Amr said.
On
Saturday, Palestinian Minister of international cooperation Nabil
Shaath, said without conviction that the Palestinian leadership would
try to persuade the United States to recognize it as a negotiating
partner.
"The
Palestinians hope to cooperate with the United States by way of
convincing it, and convincing the whole world, that the Palestinian
leadership is responsible and it is the only one that can achieve real
peace," Shaath said in Cairo.
But
prospects were not bright for Arafat after U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell declared the Palestinian leader persona non grata and
shot down a dramatic appeal from him for an end to Israel's
three-week-old reoccupation of West Bank areas.
In
revealing his vision for peace in the Middle East, Bush urged the
Palestinians to change leaders and replace Arafat in return for U.S.
support for the creation of a Palestinian state in three years.
The
diplomatic isolation of the Palestinian leadership has been accented
even further by the almost four-week reoccupation of most of the West
Bank by the Israeli army, triggered by a flare-up of resistance
bombing operations.
Arafat,
once again penned up in his Ramallah headquarters, rarely has access
to foreign delegations or officials.
The
undersecretary for international cooperation, Samih al Abed, stressed
the occupation was limiting his Ministry's ability to fulfill its
duties, and said the world appeared not to be interested in the plight
of Palestinians living under prolonged reoccupation.
"We
are trying to inform the world of the reality of what is going on in
the territories but the world seems indifferent," he said.
On
the ground, a Palestinian man was shot dead Sunday as he tried to stab
an Israeli soldier in an army jeep in the Balata refugee camp in the
northern West Bank town of Nablus, Palestinian medics and witnesses
said.
Ghazi
Abu Ebejah, a 24-year-old father of two, tried to open the door of the
jeep and stab one of the soldiers inside, witnesses said. The Israeli
soldier shot him dead, they added.
Meanwhile,
Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer again condemned Sunday
the closure of the Al-Quds university offices of leading Palestinian
moderate Sari Nusseibeh, AFP reported.
Speaking
at the weekly cabinet meeting Sunday morning, Ben Eliezer said Public
Security Minister Uzi Landau made a "strategic mistake" in
targeting one of the leading Palestinian moderates.
Israeli
police Wednesday closed the administrative offices of the Al-Quds
university in occupied East Jerusalem on orders from Landau, who
argued they were illegally used as the Jerusalem offices of the
Palestinian Authority.
The
closure provoked international outcry, notably from the White House,
which rebuked the move as unproductive in helping to end the 21-month
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Immediately
following the closure, Ben Eliezer criticized the move and demanded an
explanation from Landau.
"I
don't understand why we target someone who supports a demilitarized
state, the renunciation of applying the right of return [for
Palestinian refugees] and a dialogue with Israel," the Labor
Party leader said on public television.
Nusseibeh
is a main force among Palestinians who signed a petition against
bombing operations, and said Palestinians must abandon their claim to
a right of return to Palestinian lands.