Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board

A R C H I V E S

Craziness

Madina Archives


Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board

Craziness
deenb4dunya
05/23/05 at 14:12:31
assalamu Alaikum,

All you Americans had better do something about this. Write. Complain. Kick and Scream.

- Mujahada

Gordon Smith, a Republican senator from Oregonn said:

``Obviously one of the greatest commitments that we have is to the Jewish people and the state of Israel, to try and manage the difficult process of the peace there and securing that nation, and doing so in a way that, if possible, is just to the Palestinians,'' Smith told a panel that included Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, top officials from Jordan, the Palestinian territories, Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as academics from Iran and Turkey.


FULL ARTICLE:

U.S. Senator Tells Arabs to Focus on Home

Saturday May 21, 2005 9:46 PM


AP Photo XAN115

By MARIAM FAM

Associated Press Writer (featured in the Guardian)

SOUTHERN SHUNEH, Jordan (AP) - While top Israeli and Palestinian officials discussed security at a Middle East forum Saturday, an American senator advised Arab leaders to focus on injustices in their own countries and reminded them that U.S. policy is security for Israel first and justice for Palestinians ``if possible.''

On the sidelines of a World Economic Forum conference on the Middle East, Israeli Vice Premier Shimon Peres and Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia discussed the recent flare-up of violence threatening their fragile truce as well as Israel's planned withdrawal from the Gaza Strip.

``There's an attempt to get the peace process back on track in a bid to make the withdrawal from Gaza, if it happens, a serious, real (and) practical step,'' Qureia told reporters as he headed into the meeting with Peres at a Dead Sea resort in Jordan.

But Gordon Smith, a Republican senator from Oregon, said the peace process - aimed at bringing about an independent Palestinian state - is unlikely to win serious backing from the Bush administration without a demonstration of commitment from both sides.

``Until we have someone on the other side who is willing to say 'Yes,' we're not going to continue to prostitute the American presidency to people who aren't serious,'' said Smith, one of six U.S. congressmen who attended the forum. ``It's a mystery to me why Arab countries can't work on their own countries before Palestine is fixed,'' he added.

``Obviously one of the greatest commitments that we have is to the Jewish people and the state of Israel, to try and manage the difficult process of the peace there and securing that nation, and doing so in a way that, if possible, is just to the Palestinians,'' Smith told a panel that included Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, top officials from Jordan, the Palestinian territories, Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as academics from Iran and Turkey.

They were among some 1,300 international business and political leaders at the three-day international conference sponsored by the Geneva-based World Economic Forum focused on Mideast problems. The Forum is best known for its glitzy annual meeting in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.

Peres said Palestinian authorities must do their best to end the recent violence that some fear could complicate the pullout.

``We think that terrorist groups are trying to endanger peace,'' Peres told reporters before the meeting with Qureia. ``We expect the Palestinian Authority to take immediate steps,'' he said, warning violence or further delays of the pullout could endanger the entire process.

In Egypt, visiting Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas said he believed the recent outbreak of violence was subsiding.

``I think that the situation has begun to come under control in Gaza.''

Peres told The Associated Press the Gaza fighting appeared to be a protest by Hamas against the Palestinian Authority over re-elections in certain Palestinian areas called for by the Palestinian Authority.

He said Israel would respond to the outburst ``with great restraint.''

The Palestinian Interior Ministry said Saturday that the militant group Hamas had agreed to stop firing mortars and rockets at Jewish settlements in Gaza after three straight days of renewed violence that threatened the truce agreed upon in February.

Peres said he believed the pullout could still happen on time.

``I was very pleased that (Qureia) said that the Palestinian Authority will take all the necessary measures to bring security'' and to stop the ``outburst in Gaza which (is) always an obstacle and a danger to the continuation of the peace,'' Peres said after their closed-door meeting.



Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board
A R C H I V E S

Individual posts do not necessarily reflect the views of Jannah.org, Islam, or all Muslims. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the poster and may not be used without consent of the author.
The rest © Jannah.Org