By BARRY SCHWEID
WASHINGTON (AP) — Five former State Department and Pentagon officials
are proposing Israeli and Palestinian capitals in Jerusalem and
excluding Arab refugees from returning to Israel as part of an Middle
East accord.
In a six-page policy statement submitted to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, they also suggested a series of peace conferences
following the one she hopes to convene next month, probably in
Annapolis, Md.
The militant Hamas group, which controls Gaza and about one-third of
Palestinian-held land, has not met U.S. terms for attending. Those
conditions are recognizing Israel's right to exist and abandoning
violence against the Jewish state.
But the ex-officials suggested Hamas might be drawn to attend a second
conference, which implicitly would accept the first one and Israel's
existence. They called the role of Hamas the most difficult issue in
peacemaking.
Jerusalem's future and that of Palestinian refugees have snarled past
U.S. peace efforts. Former President Clinton's mediation efforts
between the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and then-Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Barak envisioned sharing of Jerusalem.
Clinton ruled out requiring Israel to take in most Palestinians or
their families who claimed to have been forced out of Israel during
creation of the Jewish state in 1947-8.
It will be very difficult, "but not impossible," said Robert
Pelletreau, a former U.S. ambassador to Egypt and ex-assistant
secretary of state for the region.
"There is a little bit of momentum starting to build" with talks
between Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian leader
Mahmoud Abbas, and with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair as a
mediator, he said in a telephone interview.
Along with announcement of the conference, he said, "you have several
things that can reinforce each other if they are framed properly."
"The refugee issue is the most difficult," he said. "And Jerusalem is
right up with it."
Edward S. Walker, a former ambassador to Israel and Egypt, said Hamas
was the most difficult issue. "Unless Hamas changes its stripes there
is no way to deal with them on the current situation," he said in an
interview.
But, Walker added, "a lot of things that appear to be impossible now
might well become possible if there is hope that a true and real peace
can be established."
The policy paper was prepared by Israel Policy Forum, a nonpartisan
American group that promotes sustained U.S. diplomacy to end the
conflict between Israel and its neighbors.
Next month's conference should reaffirm that the goal is two
independent and sovereign states, with borders roughly along the lines
that separated Israel from the Arabs before the 1967 Middle East war,
the statement said.
It also called for a "just solution' to refugee questions that
recognizes "the suffering and the plight of the Palestinian refugees."
They would be permitted to move only to the new Palestinian state, with
compensation from Israel, the Palestinian state and other nations.
Besides Pelletreau and Walker, the former U.S. diplomats included
Thomas Pickering, an ex-undersecretary of state and ambassador to
Israel and Jordan; Samuel Lewis, former ambassador to Israel; and
Frederic C. Hof, Mideast official in the Pentagon.
The report was written and coordinated primarily by Steven L. Spiegel,
political science professor at the University of California, Los
Angeles.
Rice has been meeting with former U.S. negotiators and ex-American
diplomats, and has not replied to the policy paper, State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack said Wednesday.
In a separate message to Rice, 79 senators lined up by the pro-Israel
lobby, the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, said friendly Arab
countries should participate in the conference as full partners of the
United States.
The Arab countries should stop support for terrorist groups and cease
all anti-Israel and anti-Jewish incitement while pressing Hamas to
recognize Israel and to reject terror, AIPAC said.
The senators praised Rice, Israel and the Palestinian government for
working hard to advance the cause of peace in the Middle East but said
peace will remain elusive "without a sincere commitment from our
allies."
Original
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