Jan Mikael (15
May 2009)
"Abdullah Tells Netanyahu in Amman: Accept PA State 'Immediately"
Abdullah Tells Netanyahu in Amman: Accept PA State ‘Immediately
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Jordan’s
King Abdullah II, hosting Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in a
previously unannounced visit Thursday morning, demanded that he
“immediately declare his commitment to a two-state solution, [decla
acceptance of the Arab peace initiative and to take necessary steps to
move forward toward a solution.”
He also said that Israel must
open all crossings into Gaza, which was taken over by the Hamas
terrorist organization two years ago. The royal palace released the
king’s remarks, and no response from Prime Minister Netanyahu was
reported. His office earlier stated that Jordan is a peace partner with
Israel and a key to regional peace.
Prime Minister Netanyahu’s
surprise visit came several days before he travels to Washington for
talks with U.S. President Barack Obama. The Prime Minister’s office
said he traveled to Jordan to coordinate policies in preparation for
his trip and added that the visit had been postponed because of
pressures involved in passing the proposed budget in the Cabinet.
After
King Abdullah’s discussions with President Obama in Washington last
month, the monarch warned that war will break out within the next 18
months if Israel does not accept the Saudi Arabian 2002 Peace Plan,
based on shrinking the size of Israel to that which existed in 1949.
The plan also calls for the right of approximately five million foreign
Arabs to immigrate to Israel on the basis of their families having once
lived there, prior to fleeing during the 1948 War of Independence.
While
Prime Minister Netanyahu was in Amman, Palestinian Authority Chairman
Mahmoud Abbas was on his way to Damascus to speak with Syrian President
Bashar Assad on "the elaboration of the common Arab position on
negotiations with Israel after an extreme right government took power
in Israel,” according to the PA.
Foreign media reported that
Assad and Abbas will come up with a proposal that Syrian-Israeli talks
be resumed as part of a regional peace agreement that would include the
establishment of a new PA state.
The tactic fits in well with
the strategy of advisors to President Obama who want a package accord
that also includes stopping Iran from becoming a nuclear power, which
Washington has suggested as a condition for Israel to agree to the
Saudi initiative.
Hamas, whose politburo chief Khaled Mashaal is
based in Damascus, said it will boycott Abbas’s visit, which comes two
days after Abbas announced he will form a new government headed by
incumbent Prime Minister Salam Fayyad.
Fayaad last month said
he would resign as a step to encourage progress in unity talks between
Hamas and Fatah, but the negotiations have failed.
Abbas’s visit
to Syria continues a four-year strategy that has succeeded in winning
support from the Arab world and its allies for the Saudi plan, without
conceding anything to Israel. Constant American and European Union
backing have provided momentum for his insistence on an all-or-nothing
agreement with Israel.
The election of President Obama, who was
heavily backed by dovish American Jews, has built a nearly universal
platform of support for PA demands.
Months of talks under Egyptian auspices have failed to produce an agreement on a unity government between the two parties.