Former US President Carter defied US and Israeli warnings and met twice
this weekend with the exiled leader of Hamas and his deputy, two men
the US government has labeled terrorists and Israel accuses of
masterminding attacks that have killed hundreds of civilians.
Carter met Mashaal and his deputy, Moussa Abu Marzouk, again for about
an hour Saturday morning, after more than four hours of talks the night
before.
"Several subjects were discussed, including [Israeli-Palestinian]
crossing points, [captured Israeli soldier Gilad] Schalit, the siege on
the Palestinians and a cease-fire between Hamas and Israel," Abu
Marzouk said Saturday.
Another senior Hamas official in Damascus, speaking on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorized to represent the group
publicly, described the meetings as "warm."
However, he said Carter did not receive a response to either of the two
requests the former president made in the session: that Hamas halt its
rocket attacks against Israel, and agree to a meeting with Deputy Prime
Minister Eli Yishai to discuss a prisoner exchange.
Nazzal said Gaza-based Hamas leaders would travel to Syria on Saturday
to confer with Mashaal, and that Carter "will be informed of Hamas'
response in the coming days."
However, underscoring the impression that Carter did not win any
concessions, Hamas said Friday that captured Israeli soldier Gilad
Schalit will "not see the light" until Palestinian prisoners are also
released in an exchange.
Carter's convoy arrived at Mashaal's office for the meeting under tight
security, and reporters were prevented from getting near the site. The
meeting was closed to media, and Carter was not available for comment.
Carter, who brokered the 1978 Israeli-Egyptian peace and was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002, has defended what he calls his personal
peace mission. He says Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, must be
engaged in order to achieve peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
Echoing criticism from US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice before
the trip, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack suggested Friday
that Carter had opened himself up to "exploitation" by both Hamas and
the Syrian government.
"We find it very odd that one would encourage having a conversation
between the Israeli government and Hamas, which doesn't even recognize
the right of the Israeli government to exist," McCormack said. "Is that
really the basis of a conversation?"
Several members of Congress also urged Carter not to meet Hamas
leaders, saying it would confer legitimacy on the group behind dozens
of suicide bombings and other attacks that have killed some 250
Israelis.
"We have a policy in this country about Hamas. And he is just
deliberately undermining that policy, and it's wrong," Rep. Sue Myrick,
R-N.C., told Fox News on Friday, calling for the State Department to
revoke the former president's passport.
Friday's meeting, which followed a session between Carter and Syrian
President Bashar Assad, was the first public contact between a
prominent American figure and Hamas officials since the Rev. Jesse
Jackson met with Mashaal in Syria in 2006.
The US government has no contact with Hamas after designating it a
terrorist organization in 1995 - an official label that means any
financial or business transactions with the group are illegal. The
government has also blacklisted Mashaal and his deputy, Moussa Abu
Marzouk, making it illegal to conduct any transactions with them.
Marzouk, who attended Friday's meeting with Carter, has been accused of
organizing a network of Islamic charities to funnel money to Hamas. He
spent two years in prison in a New York jail after his name appeared on
a list of people suspected of terrorist activity. He was deported in
1997.
Daniel Kurtzer, a former US ambassador to Israel under President Bush,
called Carter's meetings with Hamas officials "a strategic and tactical
mistake."
"Palestinians believe they cannot implement a peace agreement without
Hamas, but they also understand that they can't reach such an agreement
with Hamas in power," Kurtzer said.
Martin Indyk, a US ambassador to Israel under President Clinton, said
"the problem with trying to bring Hamas into the negotiations is it
will force Israel out."
Israel brands Hamas a terrorist organization and has accused Mashaal of
masterminding the kidnapping of Schalit near Gaza two years ago. Israel
has also blamed Mashaal and the group's Damascus-based leadership of
directing suicide bombings such as the September 2004 attacks that
killed 16 Israelis in the southern city of Beersheba.
Deputy Prime Minister Yishai, was the only minister to meet Carter when
he visited Israel earlier this week. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said he
did not meet Carter during his visit to avoid creating the impression
that he was negotiating with Hamas.
Carter met senior Hamas officials from Gaza in Cairo on Thursday and
asked them to halt rocket attacks against Israel. In the West Bank on
Wednesday, he embraced a Hamas representative.
Though the government refuses to deal with Hamas, Carter said Thursday
he knows some Israeli government officials are "quite willing" to meet
the militant group.
Yishai said Friday he asked Carter this week to arrange a meeting with
Hamas to discuss a prisoner exchange. He said he wanted to try to win
the release of Schalit.
Hamas official Mushir Masri, in a fiery speech Friday to thousands of
Hamas supporters in Gaza, said the meetings with Carter were proof that
Hamas was not a terrorist group but a national liberation movement.
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Carter meets with Mashaal twice in Syria
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