Question 1:  Is Arafat serious, or is he just "accepting" a plan that he
knows Sharon won't so Sharon ends up looking like a hardass and the blame
falls on Israel?

Question 2:  If he is, does he have the support of the people enough to at
least reduce the bombings and begin to approach some type of stability?

Question 3:  What do the other Arab states think of this?

P.T.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Beth F" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Community" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, June 21, 2002 6:09 PM
Subject: optimism


> Arafat Said Ready to Accept Plan
> Fri Jun 21, 8:10 AM ET
>
> By MARK LAVIE, Associated Press Writer
>
> JERUSALEM (AP) - Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat ( news - web sites) is
prepared to accept a Mideast peace plan put forward by then-U.S. President
Bill Clinton in December 2000, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported
Friday.
>
> In an interview at his Ramallah headquarters, Arafat told Haaretz reporter
Akiva Eldar that he would take the Clinton plan without changes, Eldar told
The Associated Press on Friday. "I am prepared to accept it, absolutely,"
Eldar quoted Arafat as saying, and he endorsed the points of the plan one by
one, Eldar said.
>
> Palestinian officials could not immediately be reached for comment on
Friday.
>
> Clinton presented the plan after a July summit meeting between Arafat and
then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak ( news - web sites) broke down
without an agreement. According to the plan, the Palestinians would set up a
state in 95 percent of the West Bank and all of Gaza and would gain
sovereignty over Arab quarters in Jerusalem and a hotly disputed holy site.
>
> The plan also called on the Palestinians to drastically scale back their
demand for all refugees and their descendants from the 1948-49 war that
followed Israel's creation, about 4 million people, to have the right to
return to their original homes.
>
> After Clinton presented his plan, the Palestinians said they accepted it
with "deep reservations," asking for clarifications about all the key
points.
>
> Talks continued until late January 2001 but ended without agreement just
before a special election, in which Barak was soundly defeated by hawkish
Ariel Sharon ( news - web sites). At that point, both Israel and the United
States said their proposals were off the table.
>
> Now Arafat is willing to sign on to the Clinton plan, Eldar wrote, calling
it the first time the Palestinian leader has endorsed it. Arafat said Israel
would receive sovereignty over the Jewish Quarter in the Old City of
Jerusalem and the Western Wall, the last remaining remnant of the compound
of the Jewish Temples, Judaism's holiest site.
>
> Also, Arafat said he would be prepared for modifications in the line
between Israel and the West Bank and exchanges of territory with Israel,
principles the Palestinians have balked at up to now. The official
Palestinian demand has been that Israel must pull back to the 1949
cease-fire line, relinquishing all of the West Bank, Gaza Strip ( news - web
sites) and east Jerusalem and dismantling all Jewish settlements there.
>
> Arafat did not repeat the demand for the right of return of all the
refugees and their families to Israel, Eldar said. Instead, he said, a
solution must be found for the 200,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon,
adding that he was calling on European and other world bodies to help.
Israel has refused to take in large numbers of refugees. Lebanon says there
are 350,000 refugees there.
>
> However, Sharon is prepared to offer much less than his predecessor.
Sharon insists that all violence must stop before peace talks resume, and
then he would propose a long-term interim agreement, during which the
Palestinians would maintain control over the areas they now have. The
Palestinians have rejected the idea of another interim accord.

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