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SLUG: 2-310568 Powell / Mideast Peace (L)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=12/5/03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=POWELL / MIDEAST PEACE (L)

NUMBER=2-310568

BYLINE=DAVID GOLLUST

DATELINE=STATE DEPARTMENT

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: Secretary of State Colin Powell met Friday with the Israeli and Palestinian authors of the unofficial "Geneva Accord" for Middle East peace. Former Israeli Justice Minister Yossi Beilin and former Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo say they're encouraged by the reception they received in Washington. V-O-A's David Gollust reports from the State Department.

TEXT: The Bush administration has made clear it does not see the Geneva initiative as a substitute for the international "road map" for Middle East peace.

But Mr. Powell and other officials, including White House Middle East policy chief Elliot Abrams, met for more than an hour-and-a-half with the co-authors of the peace plan in a gesture that, at the very least, underlined U-S interest in the project.

Emerging to talk to reporters, Mr. Abed Rabbo said he was encouraged by Mr. Powell's words and those of President Bush, who Thursday termed the unofficial peace-making exercise "constructive."

The former Palestinian Cabinet member, a close associate of Yasser Arafat, said the Geneva plan is "complementary" to the "road map," and aimed at strengthening its credibility in both societies.

He said, for the first time, Israelis and Palestinians are presenting the international community with ideas for resolving the Middle East conflict, and not the other way around:

/// ABED RABBO ACT ///

For the first time in our history, we do not receive initiatives from others in order to comment on them, but we are introducing a Palestinian-Israeli plan, and asking others to support them. And this change is very significant, and is appreciated by everybody, including the people we have met here in Washington and in New York and, of course, the meeting with Secretary Powell and his aides in the State Department.

/// END ACT ///

Unveiled last Monday, the Geneva initiative calls for creation of a demilitarized Palestinian state alongside Israel, and proposes solutions to the other final-status issues of the peace process.

It calls for a divided Jerusalem to be the capital of the two states, for an Israeli withdrawal from -- and the uprooting of Jewish settlements in -- Gaza and most of the West Bank, and would largely void the right of Palestinian refugees to return to areas remaining under Israeli jurisdiction.

The plan has been condemned by Israeli and Palestinian hard-liners, and been rejected by the government of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Mr. Beilin, a figure in former Israeli Labor governments, acknowledged the controversy, and said the initiative has succeeded in reviving debate after three years of violence and political stalemate on the most intractable issues of the peace process:

/// BEILIN ACT ///

Now, we have a debate, an internal debate, a very interesting one, intensive one, and quite painful in Israeli society about refugees, about the Temple Mount, about Jerusalem. And on the Palestinian side, you have the same debate about the same issues. And we are creating a coalition of sanity against the coalition of extremists who are rejecting any peace initiative. And we believe that this debate is the most helpful one, and healthy one, that we can envisage.

/// END ACT ///

State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said the meeting was constructive and a good opportunity for Mr. Powell and other U-S officials to listen to the ideas of the drafters of what he termed a "private plan."

He said the secretary reaffirmed the Bush administration's commitment to a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict, and explained that the "road map" provides the "appropriate path" for realizing that vision, and that there are "no short cuts along the way."

The "road map" -- a joint undertaking of the United States, Russia, the European Union and United Nations -- calls for reciprocal steps by both sides, leading to an overall settlement of the conflict by the end of 2005. Unlike the Geneva plan, it does not propose specific ways to resolve the question of Jerusalem, refugees and other final-status issues. (SIGNED)

NEB/DAG/KL/TW



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