Rice arrives in Jordan for talks with the King

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrives for a meeting with
Jordanian King Abdullah II in Amman 20 February 2007. -AFP
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U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived in Jordan for talks
with its king and other Arab countries' envoys Tuesday, a day after
hosting an inconclusive Israeli-Palestinian summit.
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas was also expected to
arrive in Jordan for talks with the king, after failing to persuade
Israel and Rice that the incoming Palestinian government would fulfill
conditions for the restoration of foreign aid.
Abbas also was headed to Germany along with stops in Britain and
France in a campaign to convince skeptical Western leaders that the deal
he forged earlier this month with the ruling Islamic Hamas reflects his
moderate stand stake is about $1 billion in foreign aid for the
Palestinian government cut off after the militant Hamas won legislative
elections and took power nearly a year ago.
Israel, the U.S. and the European Union label Hamas, which is
committed to Israel's destruction and has killed hundreds of people in
suicide attacks, a terror group. Monday's summit in Jerusalem with Rice
and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert foundered on the issue of the
terms of the government, to be made up of Hamas, Abbas' Fatah and
carefully chosen independents.
The U.S. and European Union insist that any Palestinian government
must recognize Israel, renounce violence and accept past peace accords.
Hamas has rejected those conditions. The unity accord, hammered out
in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, pledges only to respect past agreements.
Monday's gathering came after a six-year lull in such U.S.-brokered
sit-downs, but ended with no new agreements. The Israeli and Palestinian
leaders, however, did agree to meet again, and Rice said she expected to
return to the region soon to revive an internationally backed peace plan
known as the road map.
"I hope that the Arab states also understand that they have a role to
play in this," Rice told reporters in Jerusalem. "This isn't just what
the United States can talk about with the Israelis and the Palestinians.
How about some of the ideas that were there in the Arab initiative? Why
can't we get some of that going, too?"
Rice was referring to a dormant 2002 Arab peace proposal that would
have offered wide Arab diplomatic recognition of Israel in exchange for
Israel's retreat to its borders before the 1967 Mideast War, when Israel
captured the West Bank and east Jerusalem."
I don't want others to stand on the sideline and say, you know, the
United States needs to deliver the completion of the roadmap.
Everybody's got obligations.
And one thing that I'll be talking to the Arabs about is what can you
to do make this happen."
The Jordanian king is one of the U.S. allies with public misgivings
about the possibility of civil war among the Palestinians, as well as in
Iraq. Jordan has taken in hundreds of thousands of refugees from Middle
East conflicts.
Abdullah and other Sunni Arab allies have strongly urged the Bush
administration to energize peace efforts between Israel and the
Palestinians, partly to improve the Palestinians' lot, partly to tamp
down Islamic extremism that those government see as a threat and partly
to counter the influence of Shiite Iran.
Monday's three-way meeting was initially meant to offer weary
Palestinians an opportunity to open discussions on the contours of an
eventual independent state alongside Israel.
It also was a way to strengthen Abbas in his power struggle with
Hamas, which surprised the Bush administration by defeating Abbas'
secular Fatah Party in elections 13 months ago.
But the meeting was overshadowed by Abbas' unity deal with Hamas.
Abbas, a moderate, has said the unity deal is the best he can get
from Hamas and goes a long way toward stabilizing the region. The
power-sharing deal is seen as crucial to halting internal Palestinian
fighting that has killed more than 130 since May.
Olmert said he and Abbas agreed to maintain an open channel of
communication, focused both on improving the lives of Palestinians and
stopping Palestinian violence.
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