Sunday, March 23, 2008

Peres warns against returning Golan

JPost.com Staff
THE JERUSALEM POST
Mar. 23, 2008

Israel will not agree to a deal with Syria involving the return of the Golan Heights, President Shimon Peres said Sunday.

"If the Golan is given back, it will boost Iran's influence in Lebanon and the territory will effectively be under Iranian-Syrian control," said Peres.

Cheney said the US was concerned by developments in Syria, specifically about Damascus supplying weapons to Hizbullah.

The US vice president added that he did not get the impression that Syrian President Bashar Assad was interested in dialogue with Israel. "It appears that Bashar is not interested in dialogue, or any kind of talks," a statement from Peres's office quoted Cheney as saying.

Peres also told Cheney that the US and Europe were apparently ignoring Iran's ballistic missile development.

"Iran's only intentions of developing ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads are to destroy Israel and threaten the entire world," he added.

Peres stressed that the anti-Israel declarations that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad makes against Israel, and Iran's support for Lebanese and Palestinian terror groups, cannot be ignored.

"We have this problem of the Iranians who want to build two satellites, the Hizbullah (in Lebanon) and the Hamas in Gaza. ... Nobody can control us and say that declarations by Ahmadinejad are less serious," Peres said. "We have to take it seriously."

Cheney vowed that the US would do everything it could to deal with the Iranian nuclear threat.

Peres insisted that until the end of the current US administration's term, several goals could be reached. The president said negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians must be focused on with a view to economic development.

He said time is of the essence, but that progress was achievable. "The mere fact that in spite of the differences the negotiations go on is a great hope for the future."

Cheney said that the US would do its utmost to advance the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. "We are obviously dedicated to doing all we can as an administration to try to move the peace process forward, and obviously actively involved in dealing with the threats that we see emerging in the region - not only threats to Israel, but threats to the United States as well," he said.

Cheney also met with opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu on Sunday. Netanyahu told the US vice president that regarding the Iranian nuclear issue, all options must be on the table.

Netanyahu went on to say that if Israel withdraws from any part of Jerusalem, Hizbullah and Hamas would take over there and establish "another Iranian base" next to Israel, similar, he said, to the Hizbullah-ruled base in the North and the Hamas-ruled base in the South.

After his meeting with Cheney, Netanyahu told reporters that in his opinion, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni had effectively admitted that negotiations over the division of the capital were already being conducted and said they must not be allowed to continue.

Netanyahu also called on Shas to withdraw from the coalition so as not to enable discussions over the division of Jerusalem and to prevent the possibility of a Palestinian flag being hoisted on the Temple Mount.

Nimer Hamad, a political adviser to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, said he saw no chance for an agreement in 2008 if Israel continued settlement expansion and its military incursions: "Without strong American intervention and pressure on Israel, there will be no progress in the peace talks," he said.
Hamas scoffed at the Cheney peacekeeping mission.

"All the visits of the American administration officials to the region have one goal, which is to give unlimited support to the occupation and the Israeli government, and to encourage their aggressions against our people," Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said.

He said the "so-called peace process" was a "paralyzed and ailing" fiction, and said Cheney was visiting Abbas "to encourage him to practice more anti-Hamas policy and work against the unity of his people."

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