Washington - US President George W Bush vowed Thursday to
keep working toward an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal even as time is
running out on completing a deal before he leaves office.
Meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas at the White
House, Bush offered his full support for Abbas' leadership in
negotiating a settlement with the Israelis, including a creation of a
Palestinian state.
'I've got four more months left in office,' Bush said. 'And I'm
hopeful that the vision that you and I have worked on can come to
pass. And my only pledge to you is that I'll continue to work hard to
see that it can come to pass.'
Bush hosted a Middle East conference in Annapolis, Maryland in
November that kickstarted negotiations between the two sides for the
first time in years. Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
pledged to reach a deal by the end of this year. Bush leaves office
in January.
Abbas praised Bush for his role in the peace process and thanked
him for US financial assistance aimed at building a Palestinian
economy.
'We know very well how important this issue is for you,' Abbas
told Bush through a translator. 'And we will continue to work very
hard together in order to realize your vision of two states living
side by side.'
Israeli and Palestinian officials have met regularly since
Annapolis to negotiate a deal but have revealed little about the
progress. The most difficult issues that must be overcome are the
status of Jerusalem, final borders between the two states and
Palestinian demands for the right of refugees to return.
The process has also hit a snag over the corruption scandal that
forced Olmert's resignation Sunday. Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who
has led the Israeli negotiations and backs the peace process,
succeeded Olmert as head of the ruling Kadima Party and has begun
efforts to form a new government.
Israeli President Shimon Peres charged Livni with setting up a
government Monday, giving her 42 days to form a new coalition or face
fresh elections.
The hardline Likud Party led by Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected
Livni's invitation to join in a coalition, but she was also
negotiating with Ehud Barak, whose Labour Party has been serving as
Kadima's junior partner in the governing coalition in the 120-seat
Knesset.
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