Israel's response to road map: No 'independent' Palestinian state

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Well-Known Member
By Aluf Benn

All mention of an "independent" Palestinian state has been eliminated in Israel's response to the "road map" prepared by the Quartet - the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia.

An "independent" Palestinian state, which would be initially established along temporary borders, is replaced with "certain attributes of sovereignty" and any such state is required to be "credible" and "law abiding."

According to Israeli officials the term "independent" requires clarification and they point out that it was also omitted from George Bush's June 24, 2002 speech upon which the road map is based.

Israel is also presenting stiff terms for moving beyond the first stage of the plan, which concentrates on a cease-fire, Palestinian reforms and gradual withdrawal from territories occupied by the IDF since the intifada began, to the second stage in which a Palestinian state will eventually be formed within temporary borders.

According to the Israeli document, progress will be "conditioned upon the complete cessation of violence and terrorism, full disarmament of terrorist organizations, their capabilities and infrastructure, the complete collection of illegal weapons and the emergence of a new and different [Palestinian] leadership."

The Israeli document demands that the Palestinian state that will emerge in an agreement with Israel and will do so following direct negotiations between the two sides and not through dialogue and understandings as the road map states.

Israel also rejects the demand of immediate removal of all illegal outposts set up in the territories during the government of Ariel Sharon. According to the Israeli version, the government will "enforce the law in relation to the outposts."

For the first time, in this document, Israel delineates the terms under which it will agree to a freeze in settlement activity: "following a continuous and comprehensive security calm."

Israel rejects the notion that the freeze will also include the natural growth of settlements.

The document rejects a further withdrawal in the West Bank, according to the Oslo Accords, and the removal of settlements in order to grant territorial continuity to a Palestinian state - even during the stage of the temporary borders.

The Israeli document says the future of the settlements will be determined only by a final agreement and therefore Israel is only willing to grant territorial continuity to the Palestinians only where "this is possible."

President George Bush announced on Friday that the U.S. would present the two sides with the road map immediately after the appointment of a Palestinian prime minister with "genuine responsibilities."

According to official sources in Jerusalem, the version that will be presented to the two sides will be the updated one from December 20, which was given to the two sides unofficially. Only after the road map is officially presented will the U.S. receive the comments from the two sides and will encourage them to begin direct dialogue on the plan.

The Israeli response was formulated by an inter-ministerial team comprising Dov Weisglass, the director of the Prime Minister's Office, and representatives from the Defense and Foreign ministries.

The comments added to the Israeli version repeatedly note that promises and declarations by the Palestinians must not be trusted nor should room for Palestinian withdrawal from their commitments on issues of security be allowed.

http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/p...ontrassID=2&subContrassID=1&sbSubContrassID=0
 
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