Diabolic Digest
Israel
says EU should stay out of Middle East peace process
By Khaled Diab
The
European Union should confine itself to supervising reforms in the Palestinian
Authority rather than trying to play a central role in Middle East peace talks,
according to a senior Israeli cabinet advisor.
July 2002
As EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana
attended a 'quartet' meeting in New York to hammer out a common position, the
Israeli diplomat delivered another blow to EU aspirations to kick-start
dialogue between the sides.
The aide to Israeli leader Ariel Sharon, who spoke on condition he was not
identified, said: "We think the US is more balanced in its approach to the
conflict [than the EU]."
He also reiterated his government's call to the EU to stop dealing with
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat. "We have shown that Chairman Arafat
is tainted with terror," he added.
The Israeli dismissed the involvement of the United Nations and Russia in
efforts to resume the peace process. "We don't think anyone can dictate to
us what our relationship with the Palestinians should be," he said.
He said that the EU should be content to assist fiscal and electoral reform in
the Palestinian Authority, along with economic aid to rebuild its
infrastructure.
His views did not go down well with the European Commission. "We reject
the notion that the EU is biased," Gunnar Wiegand, spokesman for external
relations chief Chris Patten, said. "We take the interests of all the
sides into account.
"We are committed to facilitating the reform process, but we are not
willing to play the role of those who merely fund," Wiegand added.
"The US alone cannot achieve a peaceful settlement."
He referred to this week's meeting of the 'quartet' - Kofi Annan (UN), Colin
Powell (US) Igor Ivanov (Russia) and Solana - as the way forward. They four
agreed on Tuesday to coordinate efforts to support Palestinian political and
economic reform, with a view to achieving a possible Israeli-Palestinian
settlement within three years.
This article first appeared in the 18-24 July
2002 edition of the European Voice.
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