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Sharon cancels US trip after Gaza plan setback
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Sharon cancels US trip after Gaza plan setback
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, battling to overcome his party?s rejection of a US-endorsed Gaza pullout, announced yesterday he had cancelled a visit to Washington next week.
?The prime minister has decided not to go to Washington. He will be having consultations here in Israel regarding the disengagement plan,? his office said, referring to a proposed Gaza pullout voted down by the right-wing Likud a week ago.
Sharon had been scheduled to address a policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a pro-Israeli advocacy group on May 17, and aides said last week a meeting with US President George W. Bush was likely.
But with the fate of the Bush-endorsed Gaza plan still unclear and an Arab world seething over what it sees as his pro-Israeli slant and US abuse of prisoners in Iraq, the timing for talks with Sharon may not have been right.
Bush last met Sharon at the White House on April 14, voicing strong suport for the prime minister?s unilateral proposal to evacuate all Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and four of the 120 in the West Bank.
The president enraged the Arab world by announcing at a news conference with Sharon that Israel could not be expected to vacate all its large West Bank settlements or re-admit Palestinian refugees under any final treaty. Last week, in an effort to reassure Arab allies, he told Jordan?s King Abdullah that Washington would do nothing to prejudice final-status talks between the Middle East foes and said he would expand dialogue with Palestinians.
Sharon has vowed to press ahead with ?disengagement?, saying it would boost Israeli security after more than three years of violence with the Palestinians. Opponents of the move say leaving Gaza would only ?reward terror?.
Unrealistic target date
Palestinians fear Sharon?s plan is a ruse to annex large tracts of West Bank land they want for their state. Israel captured the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 Middle East war.
Sharon?s cabinet discussed the proposal at its weekly meeting yesterday but no vote was expected.
Bush further riled Palestinian leaders on Saturday by telling an Egyptian newspaper that a 2005 target date, set by an internationally-backed peace ?road map?, for the creation of a Palestinian state may no longer be realistic.
In an interview with Egypt?s al-Ahram daily, Bush said it ?may be hard? to achieve the 2005 target date for Palestinian statehood due to ongoing bloodshed and the collapse of Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas?s reformist government last year.
But he added the United States was committed to the road map and he would make this clear in a letter to Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qurie, who replaced Abbas late last year.
The road map charts reciprocal steps towards the establishment of a viable Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 2005, including demands the Palestinians halt militant violence and Israel freeze settlement construction.
Qurie is scheduled to meet Bush?s top security adviser Condoleezza Rice in Germany in mid-May for what would be his highest-level session with US officials since taking office in late 2003.
Rejecting Bush?s view, Palestinian President Yasser Arafat said the creation of a state by 2005 was ?more than realistic?, while Qurie called for stepped up peace negotiations with Israel to meet next year?s deadline.
<B>Jeffrey Heller</B>
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