Posted on 03/31/2003 10:57:38 AM PST by ejdrapes
Rice Says Blueprint for Israel-Palestinian Settlement Is Not Negotiable Washington (AP) - The White House said Monday its road map for setting up a Palestinian state by the end of 2005 is not negotiable and that Israel must "play its part" to pave the way. In a speech to a pro-Israel lobby group, Condoleezza Rice, who is President Bush's national security adviser, also called on all Arab governments to recognize Israel's right to exist and said democratic reforms within the Palestinian Authority were "extremely important." The road map, prepared jointly with the European Union, the United Nations and Russia, is designed to reopen negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians once Mahmoud Abbas is confirmed as the Palestinian prime minister. Rice's call for a quick start - one that would prevent attempts by either side to revise the terms of the so-called road map - follows complaints by European and Arab governments that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon would try to arrange more favorable terms. They registered their objections after President Bush had said "we will expect and welcome contributions from Israel and the Palestinians to this document." But first Secretary of State Colin Powell, and now Rice, in responding to questions at the 44th annual policy meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, tried to discourage delay. Rice, who had asked that her remarks to thousands of members of the pro-Israel lobby be off-the-record to the news media, said of Israel and the Palestinians: "We expect their comments; it is not a matter of renegotiation. It can be commented on by the parties." Bush envisions two states, democratic Israel and democratic Palestine, living side by side in peace. On the war with Iraq, Bush's assistant said the most effective way to deal with Iraqi weapons of mass destruction was to try to eliminate them before they could be used. On the war itself, she said "we are confident of the outcome." And on Iran, which Bush has included with Iraq and North Korea in an "axis of evil," Rice said the International Atomic Energy Agency "needs to do a more thorough investigation" of its nuclear weapons program. On Sunday, Powell said Iran must stop its drive for weapons of mass destruction and Syria must end its support for terrorism. In a strongly worded speech to the pro-Israel lobby, Powell bracketed Iran and Syria with Iraq as promoters of terrorism and suggested they faced grave consequences. His tough words matched those last week of Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and served to signal unity within the Bush administration on the anti-terror front. Both Iran and Syria have shown no inclination to bend to the Bush administration's growing rhetorical campaign against them. Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa said Sunday that "Syria has a national interest in the expulsion of the invaders from Iraq." Rumsfeld on Friday accused Syria of supplying military technology to Iraq, a charge Syria denied. He also said the United States would hold Iran responsible for the entrance of Iran-sponsored forces into Iraq. Carrying the threat a step forward, Powell on Sunday demanded that Iran "stop its support for terrorism against Israel" and said Tehran also "must stop its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and the ability to produce them." Turning to the regime in Damascus, Powell said "Syria now faces a critical choice" of whether to "continue its direct support for terrorism in the dying days" of President Saddam Hussein's government in Iraq. "Syria bears responsibility for its choices and consequences," Powell said sternly at the 44th annual policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. And Powell said, to wide applause from the heavily Jewish audience, "we will keep his weapons of mass destruction from the Middle East." Stepping into a growing debate, Powell, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Persian Gulf War in 1991, endorsed the Bush administration's current war plan, which has encountered some criticism as the drive against Saddam has slowed. "I have total confidence in the plan and total confidence in General (Tommy) Franks and those carrying out the plan," he said. Powell renewed the Bush administration's support for establishment of a Palestinian state by the end of 2005, and said the drive would be stepped up once Mahmoud Abbas was confirmed as prime minister. The longtime lieutenant of Yasser Arafat has at times spoken in support of all measures against Israel and at other times appeared critical of attacks on civilians. On Sunday, Powell urged Israel to make peace with the Palestinian Authority, saying "Israel's security requires peace with its neighbors." He also renewed President Bush's call for a halt to Jewish home-building on the West Bank and Gaza, which drew a mixed response of mild applause and a few boos. Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom followed Powell's speech with his own condemnation of Iran as a sponsor of terrorism. He said Iran was behind the bloody attacks in 1992 on the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires and in 1994 on a Jewish center in capital of Argentina. "We will work closely with the United States to oppose terror," the minister said. On the conflict with the Palestinians, Shalom was cautious. "We need a true Palestinian partner, one who will stop the violence once and for all," he said.
Living together in peace maybe?
In a speech to a pro-Israel lobby group, Condoleezza Rice, who is President Bush's national security adviser, also called on all Arab governments to recognize Israel's right to exist and said democratic reforms within the Palestinian Authority were "extremely important."
The road map, prepared jointly with the European Union, the United Nations and Russia, is designed to reopen negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians once Mahmoud Abbas is confirmed as the Palestinian prime minister. Rice, who had asked that her remarks to thousands of members of the pro-Israel lobby be off-the-record to the news media, said of Israel and the Palestinians: "We expect their comments; it is not a matter of renegotiation. It can be commented on by the parties."
Bush envisions two states, democratic Israel and democratic Palestine, living side by side in peace.
Unless the President envisions the River Jordan between the two states, he will not win the War on Terror.
The failure of the first Gulf War was twofold: Hussein was left in power, and the Oslo accords gave power to Yasser Arafat. The Administration is giving every indication of having only learned one of the lessons.
The road map is a dead end.
Because after we kick Saddam and Assad out of the region, the hope is that the Arabs will fall in line. We'll see what happens, but if the Arabs do not do their part, I don't see the state becoming a reality.
No. You know that. I know that. And Bush knows that. Yet he keep going about saying we will have a Palestinian state by 2005. That does not make any sense, especially because terrorism against Israel has been increasing.
Bush will not stab Israel in the back. You can be assured of that. He is a man of his word.
Maybe because the land Israel took through war included a population of Arabs who still live there?
YES. BUT WE HAVEN'T DONE THAT YET OR HAVE SEEN THAT YET. WHY RUSH TO SOME IDEA THAT IS BASED ON SOMETHING THAT HAS NOT HAPPENED YET?
Maybe he knows something we don't? (Like the overall war plan for the Arab region.)
Do you think that Saddam Hussein will be deposed by the USA? If so, why? After all, it hasn't happened yet.
Israel is building settlements on what is legitmately Israeli land. The palestinians are not a legitmate people, they have no legitimate national identity, they do noit recognize Israel's borders, and they've already had an artificial homeland created for them: Jordan. This is the reason for Jordan's existence. That is where the palestinians should go, the Hashmeite occupation notwithstanding.
It is time to stop rewarding Arab terrorism. The road map giving a second "palestinian" state to the Arabs will reward past terrorism, and encourage more of the same. This is indisuptable, there is no evidence to the contrary.
There will be war either way. Why are we trying so mightily to put one of our best friends and allies at a disadvantage before it breaks out?
Who is Condilezza Rice to tell Israel to commit national suicide?
The British Mandate for Palestine
... the Balfour Declaration applied. This has remained a grievance with the Zionist side,
but it should be remembered that the area to the east of the river Jordan ...
www.mideastweb.org/mandate.htm - 30k - Cached - Similar pagesThe British Mandate
... Mandate for Palestine" the area that is today Israel and Jordan became the ... of the
British Mandate incorporated the language of the Balfour Declaration and were ...
www.palestinefacts.org/pf_ww1_british_mandate.php - 11k - Cached - Similar pagesThe British Mandate: Overview
... In 1921, Britain took the 91,000 square kilometers of the Palestine Mandate east
of the Jordan River, and created Trans-Jordan (later the Arab country of Jordan ...
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[ More results from www.palestinefacts.org ]Ask Jeeves: Search Results for "British Mandate"
... 1. The British Mandate for Palestine The League of Nations Mandate for Palestine,
1922 ... israel.htm 8. Modern History Sourcebook: The Balfour Declaration (1917 ...
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... Israel after World War II (utilizing the Balfour Declaration and the League of Nations
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... This is why both the Balfour Declaration and the League of Nations Mandate charged
the Jews ... anger would have been directed as much against Jordan and Egypt ...
www.uiuc.edu/ro/tagar/History.htm - 14k - Cached - Similar pagesThe British Mandate With Arab help, the British took ...
... With the Balfour Declaration, Britain's aim was ... was incorporated into the League
of Nations mandate for Palestine ... armies of Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt and ...
members.tripod.com/~lenapedata/Background.htm - 10k - Cached - Similar pagesBritish Mandate of Palestine - Wikipedia
... In 1921 Britain separated its League of Nations mandate of Palestine and Transjordan
east of the Jordan River into a separate territory, Transjordan. ...
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... The Balfour Declaration of 1917, confirmed by the League of Nations Mandate, commited
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