http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070311/wl_nm/palestinians_israel_dc

 
Reuters Photo: Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert (L) and Palestinian 
President Mahmoud Abbas walk together before their... 
 
Abbas, Olmert meet but no sign of progress 
By Jeffrey Heller 1 hour, 28 minutes ago 

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian 
President Mahmoud Abbas held talks on Sunday that yielded little sign of 
progress toward peace. 

"The meeting was very frank and very difficult," said Mohammed Dahlan, a senior 
Abbas aide who attended part of the 2-1/2 hour session.
Olmert, in comments before hosting Abbas at his official Jerusalem residence, 
appeared to open the door to exploring whether a 2002 Saudi peace initiative 
could serve as an alternative track toward an Israeli-Palestinian settlement.

"Many issues were discussed including the national unity government, which the 
Palestinian side stressed was an internal Palestinian affair," Dahlan told 
Reuters.

Olmert has vowed to boycott the coalition government Abbas is forming with 
Hamas Islamists unless it recognizes Israel, renounces violence and accepts 
existing interim peace deals as demanded by the Quartet of international powers.

"The prime minister presented the Quartet conditions and said that Israel 
cannot cooperate with a government or with a part of a government that does not 
respect these conditions," an Israeli government official said.

However, Olmert has promised to keep a channel of communication open with the 
moderate Abbas, a policy promoted by the United States, which plans to send 
Secretary of State    Condoleezza Rice back to the region in the next few weeks.

Olmert and Abbas spent part of the session in face-to-face talks without aides 
present and agreed to talk "on a regular basis," an Israeli official said.

Before the meeting, the third Olmert and Abbas have held since December, both 
sides played down expectations of a breakthrough. Neither leader made 
statements at the start or end of the talks.

Last month's Saudi-brokered Palestinian coalition agreement that calmed weeks 
of warfare between Hamas and Abbas's Fatah faction contains a vague promise to 
"respect" previous Israeli-Palestinian accords.

It does not, however, commit the incoming government to abide by those pacts, 
nor to accept international conditions which are key to the resumption of aid 
to the   Palestinian Authority, which was cut off by the West after Hamas came 
to power a year ago.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, a Hamas leader, said a unity 
government could be announced as early as Monday.

ARAB LEAGUE

In broadcast remarks before the session, Olmert looked ahead to an Arab League 
summit in Saudi Arabia at the end of the month and repeated that Israel saw 
"positive elements" in the Saudi peace initiative adopted by the group five 
years ago.

Speaking to his cabinet, Olmert said he hoped those elements would be 
reaffirmed at the Riyadh discussions, a reference to the plan's offer of normal 
diplomatic relations with Israel.

"We said more than once that the Saudi initiative is a subject we would be 
willing to treat seriously," he said.

The proposal, however, came with terms Israel has said it could not accept: 
withdrawal from all territories captured in the 1967 Middle East war and the 
return of Palestinian refugees to what is now the Jewish state.

Palestinian officials said changing the plan would not be on the Arab League 
summit's agenda. 

Hamas leaders have offered a long-term truce with Israel in return for a viable 
Palestinian state. The group continues to say it will not formally recognize 
Israel and its 1988 founding charter calls for the destruction of the Jewish 
state. 

Al Qaeda's second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahri criticized the Hamas leadership 
over its deal with Fatah. 

"The leadership of Hamas surrendered to the Jews most of Palestine" to keep 
heading the Palestinian government, said the militant leader in an audio 
statement, parts of which were aired by Al Jazeera television. 

(Additional reporting by Wafa Amr in Jerusalem and Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza) 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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