Arab leaders closed ranks to appeal to Israel recently to overcome its long-standing reservations and accept a landmark offer that could lead to a breakthrough in the Middle East peace process.
Saudi Arabia, abandoning its customary reticence to host its first Arab League summit for 30 years, bridged its quarrels with Syria and persuaded the Palestinian Islamists of Hamas to stay on side as it sought endorsement of a land-for-peace deal that would require Israel to return to its pre-1967 borders.
”If Israel refuses that means it doesn’t want peace,” said the Saudi Foreign Minister, Saud al-Faisal, at the summit in Riyadh. ”Then the conflict goes back into the hands of the lords of war.”
The Arab offer of recognition and peace was first made in 2002, but was ignored by the West and Israel at the height of the second Palestinian intifada and was then overshadowed by the Iraq war.
Israel has welcomed aspects of the plan but is unhappy with what it says about Palestinian refugees as well as the unambiguous call for the surrender of all occupied territories. Existing United Nations resolutions are ambiguous on that point and land swaps have been mooted before.
Amr Musa, the Egyptian secretary general of the 22-member league, stuck to the take-it-or-leave-it approach. ”Israel says change the plan first. We say to them, accept it first and come to the negotiating table.”
The plan’s revival represents the broadest possible Arab support for a permanent accommodation with Israel. The final declaration is expected to appeal directly to ”the Israeli government and people”.
But it will be up to the international community to create a mechanism for new negotiations. Arab League working groups are expected to hold talks with the quartet of Middle East peacemakers next month, and only later with Israelis and Palestinians, diplomats said.
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian President, said: ”This initiative simply says to Israel: leave the occupied territories and you will live in a sea of peace that begins in Nouakchott and ends in Indonesia” — referring to the capital of Mauritania and the world’s most populous Muslim country. ”If this initiative is destroyed I don’t believe there will be another opportunity … like this.”
Cautious hopes for progress on the Israeli-Arab front were not matched elsewhere. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia said Iraq was heading towards civil war and regretted that the Arabs were as divided as they were in 1945, when the league was set up. The summit has no chance of breaking the deadlock in Lebanon — between the pro-Western government of Fouad Siniora and the Iranian and Syrian-backed Hizbullah opposition. Nor is it likely to go beyond platitudes about Darfur and Somalia. — Â