MIFTAH
Tuesday, 2 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert met in Jerusalem Sunday, March 11, ostensibly to move closer to agreeing on several outstanding issues between the two sides; unfortunately, the meeting fell extremely short of that goal.

The two leaders, reportedly nudged on by the United States to continue to hold bilateral meetings, came out of yesterday’s meeting more or less they way they went in.

According to chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat in a press conference in Ramallah held that afternoon, the meeting between Abbas and Olmert was “positive and straightforward” while security chief Mohammed Dahlan, also present, called it “difficult.”

The two leaders reportedly talked about a number of pressing issues, including the release of captive Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, taken by Palestinian activists in Gaza last June. According to a report on Israeli television hours after the meeting, Abbas told Olmert that Shalit would be released by the end of next week. No other details on a possible exchange with Palestinian political prisoners were discussed.

The two sides also agreed to work on solidifying the truce in the Gaza Strip, each leader demanding from the other guarantees that would keep the ceasefire intact. Abbas called on Olmert to halt Israeli army incursions into Palestinian areas and stop the assassination of Palestinian leaders while Olmert reminded Abbas that the truce could only stick if no homemade rockets were fired into Israel. Ababs also demanded that Olmert extend the promise of a ceasefire to the West Bank in an attempt to bring further calm on the ground. No confirmation of such an agreement has been reported, however.

While Olmert and Abbas failed to agree on some of the stickier subjects such as measures in and around Jerusalem, restrictions on Palestinian movement, settlement activities in the West Bank and the seized Palestinian revenue taxes, Olmert did give Israel’s consent to open the Mintar [Karni] Crossing for longer periods of time. According to press reports, the commercial crossing between the Gaza Strip and Israel will be open until 11:00 pm as of next month.

Although the meeting did not result in any tangible guarantees in regards to core issues in the conflict, Olmert did show a slight change of heart regarding to Saudi Initiative, first put forth in the Beirut Summit of 2002. The Israeli premier opened the Israeli government’s weekly cabinet meeting by saying that if a “few changes were made” to the initiative, it could serve as the basis for a renewed political process with the Palestinians. The statement comes in the wake of US talks with both Saudi Arabia and Israel separately ahead of the Arab League Summit in Riyadh later this month.

Israeli officials have said that although the initiative, which offers Israel full normalization with Arab countries in exchange for an Israeli withdrawal to the pre-1967 borders has positive points, it still contains segments unacceptable to Israel, namely the clause on the return of return for Palestinian refugees, which Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni called “problematic.”

Israel is most likely viewing the Saudi initiative as a possible gateway for gaining further acceptance in the Arab world through settling its conflict with the Palestinians.

 
 
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