U.S. Secretary of State seeks to boost Mideast peace ahead of Bush visit

May 4, 2008 - 0:0

BEIT-UL-MOQADDAS (AFP) – U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice returns to the region on Saturday in a bid to breath new air into the sluggish Middle East peace process ahead of a visit by President George W. Bush.

On her 15th visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories in under two years, Rice is expected to push the sides to stick to their goal of clinching a peace deal by the end of 2008.
The talks will be held alongside Egyptian-led efforts to broker a truce between Israel and Gaza resistance fighters that would ease an Israeli blockade on the Hamas-ruled territory, which has been sidelined in the current peace talks.
The top U.S. diplomat was to dine with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in Beit-ul-Moqaddas upon her arrival in Israel on Saturday evening and meet Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in the West Bank town of Ramallah on today.
She will then host a three-way meeting with top peace negotiators Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and former Palestinian prime minister Ahmed Qorei, who have been holding closed-door talks for several months.
""Israelis have waited too long for the security they desire and they deserve. Palestinians quite frankly have waited too long for the dignity of an independent state,"" Rice said in Washington on Tuesday.
She said that the U.S. ""unwavering"" support for Israel should give it the courage to make ""difficult and painful compromises.""
A senior Israeli official told AFP that Rice might seek a public Israeli-Palestinian document outlining the progress made so far in their peace talks.
""But there is little chance of seeing such a document since both sides wish to keep the talks secret until an agreement is reached on all issues,"" he told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Efforts to advance the peace talks have been mired by violence in Gaza and Israel's continued settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem, which Palestinians wish to make the capital of their future state.
The Mideast Quartet -- the United Nations, the United States, Russia and the European Union -- on Friday called on Israel to halt all settlement expansion, a measure to which it committed itself under the 2003 roadmap peace blueprint.
Bush, who hosted a conference that formally restarted Middle East peace negotiations in November after a seven-year freeze, will visit Israel, Saudi Arabia and Egypt from May 13 to 18.
Earlier this week he acknowledged that achieving peace was an uphill task but said he was ""still hopeful we will get an agreement by the end of my presidency"" in January 2009.
But he has no plans at present for a joint peace summit with Israeli and Palestinian leaders in May.
Rice will also hold joint talks with Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad that are expected to focus on efforts to improve living conditions for West Bank Palestinians.
Meanwhile, hundreds of Palestinian forces were being deployed to the West Bank town of Jenin on Saturday in the latest expansion of a security crackdown in the north of the territory aimed at building confidence with Israel.