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Baker Institute offers 'street map' for Mideast peace

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  • Baker Institute offers 'street map' for Mideast peace

    Baker Institute offers 'street map' for Mideast peace

    U.S. leadership is essential for lasting stability in
    turbulent area, institute contends

    Houston Chronicle
    February 4, 2005

    By RON NISSIMOV ([email protected])

    On the cusp of an Egyptian summit next week for Israeli and
    Palestinian leaders, Rice University's Baker Institute for Public
    Policy released a policy paper Thursday urging the United States to
    take a leading role in the "road map" peace plan.

    "The timing is impeccable; that's why I'm a little bleary-eyed today,"
    Edward Djerejian, director of the Baker Institute, told the Houston
    Chronicle's editorial board. "I sent a copy to (Secretary of State)
    Condoleezza Rice and (National Security Adviser) Steve Hadley; I sent
    one to (Israeli Prime Minister) Ariel Sharon, to (Palestinian
    Authority President) Abu Mazen, and also one to the Egyptians and
    Jordanians. We did all that last night and today."

    Djerejian, a former U.S. ambassador to Syria and Israel, said the
    policy paper, "Creating a Roadmap Implementation Process Under United
    States Leadership," is a "street map to the road map" because of its
    detailed recommendations.

    "The Israeli-Palestinian peace process is at an important crossroads,
    with the election of Mahmoud Abbas (also known as Abu Mazen) as the
    president of the Palestinian Authority, and the expected
    implementation of Israeli Prime Minister Sharon's disengagement plan"
    from the Gaza Strip and part of the West Bank, said the document.

    "Although the obligations of the parties are unilateral in nature," it
    said, "neither side can successfully implement their commitments
    without adequate support and coordination from the international
    community, and in particular, the United States."

    Djerejian said the Baker Institute's call for U.S. involvement would
    not be in the same vein as President Clinton's failed efforts to
    promote the peace process.

    According to the policy paper, this is because "we have moved from
    'agreement-first, peace later,' to requiring fundamental changes on
    the ground."

    The paper said the United States should be actively involved in:

    - Providing technical and professional assistance in creating a viable
    Palestinian Authority government and improving its internal security,
    and helping Sharon carry out his disengagement plan from disputed
    territories in the Gaza Strip and West Bank.

    - Developing requirements for an Israeli withdrawal from the
    Gaza-Sinai border with Egypt, and transferring security authority for
    the region to the Palestinian Authority.

    - Lead an international effort to improve the Palestinian economy in
    the wake of Israeli disengagement.

    - Develop a trilateral structure with Palestinians and Israelis for
    the orderly transfer of power of evacuated areas to the Palestinian
    Authority.

    - Provide a "safety net" to maintain negotiations in the event of a
    crisis.

    The "road map" peace plan was detailed by President Bush in May 2003.

    The first phase calls for the Palestinian Authority to take strong
    steps to stop violence against Israel and for Israel to dismantle
    disputed settlements that were established after March 2001.

    The second phase calls for the creation of a Palestinian state "with
    provisional borders and attributes of sovereignty."

    The third phase calls for a resolution of all other disagreements.

    Djerejian said Bush had made it clear that achieving peace in the
    Middle East will be a top priority in his second term, especially with
    the opportunity presented by the death of former Palestinian leader
    Yasser Arafat, whom Bush regarded as an obstacle to peace. Arafat
    died Nov. 11, 2004, in Paris at age 75.

    Since then, Abbas has been elected Palestinian president of the
    Palestinian Authority, and senior Israeli and Palestinian officials
    have resumed meetings. Egypt has invited Israeli, Palestinian and
    Jordanian leaders to a peace summit at the resort of Sharm el-Sheik on
    Tuesday. Rice will visit the Middle East this weekend.

    Djerejian said the Baker Institute convened a working group eight
    months ago and rushed to complete the project to take advantage of
    recent events.

    The policy paper did not address such final settlement issues as
    borders, the status of Jerusalem or the so-called "right of return"
    for millions of Palestinian exiles.


    On the Internet: The full report can be found at
    www.bakerinstitute.org

    http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/world/3023697
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