Israel should drop its preconditions and immediately resume peace talks
with Syria, Labor MK Danny Yatom said Saturday.
In an interview with Israel Radio, Yatom added that it would be easier
to reach a deal with Syria than with the Palestinians, and that
progress with Syria could accelerate Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.
It was not immediately clear whether Yatom was speaking on behalf of
Defense Minister Ehud Barak, or if was expressing his personal view.
Israel Radio said Yatom was briefed by Barak after the defense minister
returned from the Annapolis conference.
The conference focused on the Israeli-Palestinian track, but Syria also
attended, raising hopes that it could be persuaded to break its
alliance with Iran if talks with Israel resume.
An Annapolis follow-up conference, tentatively scheduled for Moscow in
the spring, may address the Israeli-Syrian conflict directly.
Yatom, a former chief of the Mossad, said the government should drop a
series of preconditions and start talks with Syria immediately.
In the past, Israel has demanded that the Syrian government withdraw
support for terrorist groups, including Hamas, Islamic Jihad and
Hizbullah.
In exchange for peace, Syria wants Israel to return the entire Golan
Heights. Yatom said that in March 2000, then-US President Bill Clinton
proposed to Syria, with Israel's backing, that Israel withdraw to the
1967 borders, "except for a very slight modification in the
northeastern part of the Sea of Galilee."
Barak was prime minister at the time, and Yatom a senior negotiator
with Syria.
Yatom suggested that negotiations with Syria and the Palestinians be
conducted simultaneously, but said it would be easier to reach a deal
with Damascus.
"Between us and Syria, there's only the issue of a border, and we were
very close in March 2000," he said. "The negotiations with Syria, if
resumed, will also accelerate the negotiations with the Palestinians."
Palestinian officials fear that talks with Israel would stall if the
Israeli-Syrian track was revived.
"Israel is manipulating the negotiations by talking about tracks," said
Nimr Hamad, an adviser to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas. "The Syrian-Israeli path is the easiest excuse, and an old one."
He said the Palestinians would not oppose parallel negotiations on both
tracks.
Original
Source
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'We must talk to Syria unconditionally'
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