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June 6, 2003/Sivan 6 5763, Vol. 55, No. 41
Leaders present bold vision for peace
LESLIE SUSSER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
JERUSALEM - If their dramatic statements at the Aqaba summit are anything to go by, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas have taken a giant step toward Middle East peace.
Skeptical onlookers ask if the parties can back up their brave words with action, but the statements themselves were remarkable.
Abbas, the Palestinian Authority prime minister, boldly called for the end of the intifada, the armed Palestinian uprising that began 32 months ago.
"We will spare no effort, using all our resources, to end the militarization of the intifada, and we will succeed," he declared at the summit, June 4. "The armed intifada must end and we must resort to peaceful means in our quest to end the occupation."
Abbas has been trying to convince Hamas and Islamic Jihad fundamentalists to declare a temporary cease-fire on attacks against Israelis, even though Israel is demanding - and Abbas has promised - that the groups be disarmed and dismantled.
In his quiet, understated way, Abbas on June 4 had strong words for the rejectionists.
As "full partners in the international war against terrorism," he said, the Palestinians "would call upon our partners to prevent financial assistance to those who oppose this position," code words urging Arab states to stop financing Hamas or Islamic Jihad.
Abbas issued a stern warning to the fundamen-talists - "Our national future is at stake and no one will be allowed to jeopardize it" - a statement that could presage a Palestinian civil war.
Abbas also made the strongest possible com-mitment to stop terror against Israelis "wherever they are," whether in Israel proper or in West Bank and Gaza Strip settlements. That goes beyond previous Palestinian proposals to limit terror attacks to the West Bank and Gaza Strip, a distinction Israel has rejected.
Abbas also promised to end incitement against Israel in Palestinians schools, media and mos-ques.
Israel's prime minister was equally outspoken in his commitment to a Palestinian state.
"A democratic Palestinian state, fully at peace with Israel, will promote the long-term security and well-being of Israel as a Jewish state," Sharon said.
In his brief address, Sharon made a number of major commitments: to help normalize Palestinian life; improve the Palestinians' humanitarian situation; not to make unilateral moves that could prejudge the outcome of negotiations, i.e., not to build new settlements; to remove "unauthorized" settlement outposts; and to ensure territorial contiguity in the West Bank for a Palestinian state, presumably by dismantling several bona fide settlements.
Leslie Susser is the diplomatic correspondent for the Jerusalem Report.
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