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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
July 7, 2007
Arab League plans first Israel mission
By STEVE WEIZMAN, Associated Press Writer
The 22-country Arab League will send envoys on a historic
first mission to Israel this week to discuss a sweeping Arab
peace initiative and how it might prop up embattled
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Israeli and Arab
diplomats said Sunday.
The announcement came the same day Israel's Cabinet
approved the release of 250 Palestinian prisoners, hoping to
bolster Abbas in his power struggle with the Islamic
militant Hamas.
An official League visit would be a diplomatic coup for
Israel. The League historically has been hostile toward the
Jewish state, but has grown increasingly conciliatory in
response to the expanding influence of Islamic extremists in
the region — a concern underscored by Hamas' violent
takeover of the Gaza Strip last month.
Jordan's foreign ministry said the Jordanian and Egyptian
foreign ministers would arrive in Jerusalem on Thursday for
talks with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and other Israeli
officials.
Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said the
foreign ministers would lead an Arab League mission to
Israel to discuss the Arab peace plan, which would trade
full Arab recognition of Israel for an Israeli withdrawal
from all lands captured in the 1967 Mideast war and the
creation of a Palestinian state.
"This is the first time the Arab League is coming to
Israel," Regev said. "From its inception the Arab League has
been hostile to Israel. It will be the first time we'll be
flying the Arab League flag."
Arab League Secretary Amr Moussa said Sunday, "The
upcoming visit of Egypt's and Jordan's foreign ministers to
Israel upon the request of the Arab committee of peace
initiative is to conduct necessary contacts with Israel."
The two foreign ministers, Abdul-Ilah al-Khatib of Jordan
and Ahmed Aboul Gheit of Egypt, whose countries have peace
agreements with Israel, have been designated as the League's
official point men for the Arab peace initiative.
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni met them in Cairo in
May for the first official, public talks between the two
sides, and the Arab peace initiative was the focus.
Israel rejected the plan outright when Saudi Arabia first
proposed it in 2002, at the height of the Palestinian
uprising. But it softened its resistance after moderate Arab
states endorsed the plan again in March, sharing their
concerns about Iran's growing influence.
Israel has welcomed aspects of the plan, while rejecting
its call for a return of all of the West Bank and an implied
demand to resettle within Israeli borders the Palestinian
families who became refugees from the 1948 war that followed
Israel's creation.
Moderate Arab countries and the West have been pushing
for renewed Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking since Gaza fell
to Hamas, a group that refuses to recognize Israel's right
to exist and has killed more than 250 Israelis in suicide
bombings. Abbas ejected Hamas from government after the Gaza
takeover and set up an emergency Cabinet of loyalists that
has Western and moderate Arab backing.
Regev said renewed relations with the Palestinian
government following the shakeup and the linkage to a
broader Middle East settlement would be at the heart of
discussions with the Arab League envoys.
"They will be talking about how the Arab peace proposal
can help energize the rapprochement between Israel and the
Palestinians," he said.
Last month, Egypt hosted a summit of the Israeli,
Palestinian and Jordanian leaders to show support for Abbas
and to discuss the resumption of peace talks.
At that meeting Olmert pledged to free 250 Palestinian
prisoners from Israeli jails in a goodwill gesture meant to
bolster Abbas.
On Sunday the Cabinet formally approved the prisoner
release. But the timing remained unclear, reflecting a
dispute between security officials, who want to free only
prisoners whose terms are almost up, and Olmert, who wants a
more significant gesture.
"We want to use every means that can strengthen the
moderates within the Palestinian Authority, to encourage
them to take the path that we believe can create conditions
for the start of meaningful discussions," Olmert said in a
televised statement at the opening of the Cabinet meeting on
Sunday.
Palestinians criticized Israel for not consulting with
them on who should be freed, and said the matter should be
referred to a joint committee on prisoners the two sides set
up two years ago.
"The prisoners issue must be dealt with through this
committee and should not happen in unilateral steps," said
Saeb Erekat, a top aide to Abbas.
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