Subscribe to Print Edition | Sat., March 03, 2007 Adar 13, 5767 | | Israel Time: 01:19 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Print Edition
Diplomacy
Defense Opinion National Arts & Leisure Anglo File Sports Travel  
Magazine Week's End
Q&A
Business Underground Jewish World Real Estate Advertising  
Bookmark to del.icio.us
Israel pushing to improve Saudi peace initiative ahead of Riyadh summit
By Aluf Benn

Israel is expecting the Arab League to adopt an improved version of the Saudi peace plan at a summit meeting called for the end of this month in Riyadh, senior government sources told Haaretz yesterday.

"We understand that the intention is to improve the initiative and come up with a better offer," said one.

Advertisement

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni presented Israel's demands yesterday. First and foremost, she said, Israel objects to the document's section on the Palestinian refugees, which was not part of the initial Saudi draft, but was added at the 2002 Arab League summit in Beirut.

"A new summit is in the offing, and they ought to know which parts [of the plan] are acceptable to Israel and what seems to us like an absolute red line," she explained in an interview with Channel 10 television.

Livni said that the original draft presented by King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia "was, in my view, positive." That draft called for a full Israeli withdrawal to the pre-1967 borders in exchange for peace and normalization with the entire Arab world.

"Admittedly, the initiative spoke of the 1967 lines, but I only wish we were in a situation in which the conflict was just a border dispute," she added.

The new article inserted at the 2002 Beirut summit, however, demanded a "just solution to the Palestinian refugee problem, to be agreed upon in accordance with UN General Assembly Resolution 194," and that resolution calls for allowing the refugees to return to Israel. It therefore contradicts Israel's vision of a two-state solution, which, explained Livni, calls for a Jewish national homeland alongside a Palestinian national homeland, with the latter serving as the solution for the Palestinian refugees.

Livni said that she has presented this stance in conversations with Palestinian representatives with whom she met over the last month. She reiterated it in an interview that was published in the Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam yesterday, in which she said bluntly, "It is impossible for Israel to accept the Arab peace initiative in its current formulation."

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has said a few times over the last few months that the Saudi initiative contains "positive elements."

The Riyadh summit, which was called by King Abdullah, is slated to take place on March 28 and 29. The agenda includes the Arab peace initiative, the Iranian threat and the communal tensions in Lebanon. Over the last few weeks, Abdullah has tried to mediate on all of these issues, with the goal of promoting regional stability.

Olmert, meanwhile, will hold another meeting with Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas in two weeks, while Livni will travel to Europe next week to meet with European foreign ministers in the framework of Israel's Association Agreement with the European Union. During these meetings, she will urge her European counterparts not to deviate from the Quartet's demand that any Palestinian government recognize Israel, renounce terror and honor previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements. She will also present what she called "the Israeli peace initiative" for a two-state solution.

Bookmark to del.icio.us
Living with her
Ronit Yanitski, a painter, and Osnat Raziel, a surgeon, live in a rented Givatayim apartment.
The minimalist
Nahum Tevet's sculptures all begin with hundreds of hours of carpentry and painting.
 Today Online
Israel pushes for changes to Saudi peace initiative
Responses: 499
Peres: Internal PA splits thwarting U.S. mediation
Responses: 185
Eurovision may ban Israeli song due to lyrics on nuclear war
Responses: 328
Schiff: Better to have Assad in power than Muslim Brotherhood
Responses: 101
Western intelligence worried by jihadist upsurge in Lebanon
Responses: 177
Yoav Sivan: Leftists must urge integration of non-Jews
Responses: 101


More Headlines
22:48 Salah urges Muslim states to take steps to halt 'Judaization' of Jerusalem
22:35 Peres says U.S. mediation bid stymied by internal PA divisions
20:06 Hamas presents Haniyeh with list of ministerial nominees
00:15 Ahmadinejad arrives in Saudi Arabia on first official visit
21:33 Vandals desecrate Jewish cemetery in southern Germany
15:11 In AIPAC speech, Obama repeats support for Israel, peace talks
18:00 UN sources: Security Council likely to impose harsher sanctions on Iran
21:25 Teen killed in tractor accident, 4 killed in car accidents over weekend
19:39 Petah Tikva woman, 20, in serious condition after rape attempt
23:52 Ban, Itzik meet in New York, discuss kidnapped soldiers, PA government
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
Skin Care Products
Shop high-class skin care cosmetics with Dead Sea minerals. Coupon code "haaretz" for 10% off.
A Different Israel Experience
Unique programs for adults of all ages
JOIN FREE AT JDATE.COM
The most popular online Jewish dating community in the world! Explore the possibilities! Click Here!
CAMP KIMAMA ISRAEL
Israel's international summer camps!
Learn Hebrew Online
Learn Hebrew from the best teachers in Israel live over the Internet
Home| Print Edition| Diplomacy| Opinion| Arts & Leisure| Sports| Jewish World| Underground| Site rules|
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved