Sunday, 10 March, 2002
Mubarak
Visit Points Up Dilemma in US Mideast Policy
Laurie
Kassman
Washington
7
Mar 2002 00:02 UTC

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Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak met with U.S. President George Bush and other
U.S. officials this week, in a bid to revive the battered Mideast peace
process. The effort comes amid a surge of violence that has left more
than 200 Israelis and Palestinians dead or wounded in the past two
weeks. There are few signs the bloodshed will end any time soon.
Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak reflected the level of concern among Arab
neighbors in a speech in Washington Tuesday. "The difficulty is
not in the vision of peace, but in achieving it," he said. "We
want an end to the cycle of violence and the climate of fear."
Egypt was the
first Arab state to sign a peace treaty with Israel in 1979 and
continues to play an active role in the peace process.
President
Mubarak was in Washington to urge the U.S. administration to take a more
active role in getting the Israeli and Palestinian leaders back to the
negotiating table. "We have to do whatever we can with the
administration here to bring the two parties together," he said. "They
should sit whether they like it or not. We have to find the solution. We
have to break the vicious circle and sit and change views with the help
of the U.S. and Egypt and other countries favoring that. There is no
other way."
The Bush
administration has been criticized for its hands-off policy. But
analysts say the dilemma of U.S. involvement is that it means
something different to Israelis and Palestinians.
Mark Heller is a
Research Associate at Tel Aviv's Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies.
He says Palestinians want Washington to pressure Israel to ends its
occupation of Palestinian-held territories.
But, according to Mr.
Heller, Israel is looking for something else. "I think what
Israel is looking for from the American administration is some kind of
coordination on policies and behavior that the Israeli government will
take in response to the situation," he said.
For now
President Bush echoes Israel's position that peace talks cannot resume
until the violence ends. And he calls for Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat to do more to stop the attacks against Israelis. But Secretary
of State Colin Powell also says Mr. Sharon should reconsider his
policy of waging war on the Palestinians.
Former U.S. State
Department official Joseph Sisco says Ariel Sharon's hardline policy
has backfired. Mr. Sisco has a long history of involvement in Mideast
peace efforts.
"The Israelis
and Sharon too understand that one of the things you would find in
Israel now is surprise at how much resistance there continues to be
and how costly the Palestinians are making it for the Israelis,"
he said.
President
Mubarak also warns that Israel's campaign to discredit Yasser Arafat
is a dangerous game. "If Arafat disappeared for one reason or
another, I tell you, it would be a state of disorder," he said.
With the peace
process in tatters, many diplomats have seized on Saudi Arabia's
land-for-peace initiative as a fresh way to get the peace process back
on track.
It envisions
normalizing relations with Israel if Israel withdraws from the West
Bank and Gaza, which it seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. Crown
Prince Abdullah is expected to present the proposal at the Arab summit
later this month. The plan also calls for the right of return for
millions of Palestinians forced to leave their homes in the 1948
Arab-Israeli war, something Israel has rejected in the past.
Former U.S.
diplomat Joseph Sisco says the Saudi proposal responds to one of
Israel's top priorities, security, and could represent a turning point
in Israel's relations with its Arab neighbors.
"The
initiative takes on much greater importance not only because of the
violence and counter-violence and no way to stop it but it is
significant in and of itself that Saudi Arabia has signaled it intends
to play an important role," said Mr. Sisco.
Mr. Mubarak has asked
Ariel Sharon and Yasser Arafat to meet and discuss the proposal but
they have not accepted his invitation. Since Mr. Sharon was elected
Prime Minister last year he has not met Mr. Arafat and refuses to talk
peace with the Palestinian leader as long as the violence continues.
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