US President George W. Bush said
he is confident that an Israeli-Palestinian agreement could be reached before January
next year, when his tenure ends. Ten months is a long time,
he said. It may seem short to you, but there is plenty of time to get a deal
done.
After the
meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan at the White House on March
4, President Bush told reporters that both Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas are committed to achieve peace.
I am absolutely
convinced that Prime Minister Olmert and President Abbas understand that this
is now a key moment in achieving peace, said President Bush.
The peace talks
between Israel
and the Palestinians were suspended after more than 100 Palestinians were
killed by Israeli military strikes in Gaza Strip.
This is a process that, you
know, always has two steps forward and one step back. We've just got to make
sure that it's only one step back, Bush said.
Bush, who intends to return to
the region in May, expressed his commitment to help the two leaders reach a
peace deal.
We can't impose peace. We can
help leaders come to agreement and come to the table and make hard decisions.
We can help facilitate the bridging of gaps, if there are gaps, he said.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is in the region to determine
the two sides to continue the peace negotiations. She enhanced the fact that
the rocket attacks have to stop. The US accused Hamas of generating
violence at the Israeli border. Rice has openly accused Iran for providing munitions to Hamas group,
which is deemed by the US
to be a terrorist organization. Hamas took control of Gaza Strip last July.
BBC News reports
that Rice also seemed optimistic as regards the achievement of a peace
agreement this year.
However, President
Abbas reiterated his call on the Israeli government to cease fire, stating that
this is the only way to solve the conflict.
I call on the
Israeli government to halt its aggression so the necessary environment can be
created to make negotiations succeed, for us and for them, to reach the shores
of peace in 2008, he told reporters in Ramallah.
President Bush
praised King Abdullah, saying The United States has no stronger friend
in the Middle East than Jordan, the Associated Press quotes him as saying.