Published: 6:52AM Friday May 16, 2008
Source: Reuters
President George Bush told Israelis they were a chosen people
who can forever count on American support against enemies like
Hamas and Iran.
On a day when Palestinians remembered homes and land lost as Israel
was created in 1948, Bush made only fleeting reference to their
aspirations for a state of their own in a speech marking Israel's
60th anniversary that was laced with references to God.
Basking in ovations on the second day of a farewell visit to a
country where his presidency is hailed as a golden age, Bush again
said little of the talks he has sponsored in recent months between
Israel and the Palestinians, which he hopes can bring a deal on a
Palestinian state before he leaves office in January.
Speaking of the promise of God for a homeland for the chosen people
in Israel, Bush told the Israeli parliament after a visit to the
Roman-era Jewish fortress at Masada: "Masada shall never fall
again, and America will always stand with you."
He predicted the defeat of Islamist enemies Hamas, Hezbollah and al
Qaeda in a battle of good and evil.
Letting Iran have nuclear weapons would be an unforgivable betrayal
of future generations, he said.
By comparing talking with such foes to appeasement of Hitler, he
sparked a debate at home among those campaigning to succeed him as
president.
Bush described the bonds of the Book - faith in the Bible shared by
Christians like himself and Jews - as bolstering an unbreakable
alliance between Israel and the United States.
Of the Palestinians, half of whom were pushed into exile to make
way for the Jewish state, Bush said that, looking ahead another 60
years in the future, "the Palestinian people will have the homeland
they have long dreamed of and deserved".
Slap in the face
The president's language in Israel has dismayed Palestinians
looking for the US superpower to mediate in their negotiations with
Israel.
Islamist Hamas, which spurns such talks, said Bush sounded like
a priest or a rabbi and had delivered a slap in the face to those
Palestinians who placed their hopes in him.
Bush said: "Some people suggest that if the United States would
just break ties with Israel, all our problems in the Middle East
would go away...America utterly rejects it."
In scattered protests marking the anniversary of Israel's first day
of statehood on May 15, 1948, Palestinians in the occupied West
Bank and Gaza Strip threw rocks towards Israeli police and troops,
who fired tear gas and bullets in the air.
In a speech marking what Palestinians call the Nakba, or
catastrophe, when some 700,000 Arabs fled or were forced from their
homes during Israel's foundation, President Mahmoud Abbas said:
"Isn't it time for Israel to respond to the call of a just and
comprehensive peace and achieve historic reconciliation between the
two peoples on this sacred and tortured land?"
But Palestinian political analyst Ali Jarbawi said Bush's rhetoric
showed Washington was not being an honest broker: "He is not
talking about a two-state solution. He is talking about a state of
leftovers for the Palestinians," Jarbawi said.
Arabs are especially sensitive to what they see as amnesia, or
worse, among Israelis and foreigners about how many of them were
forced into exile in 1948.
By saying Jewish "refugees arrived here in the desert", Bush may
have done little to persuade many Palestinians their own refugees
are not forgotten.
Amid the standing ovations that have followed him since he arrived
in Israel on Wednesday, there was some discord.
Three Arab members of Israel's parliament held up a sign reading We
shall overcome and were escorted out of the Knesset chamber as Bush
began to speak.
Hopeful on deal
Asked about Bush's speech, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said
the president was hopeful a deal could be struck by the time he
leaves office.
In Ramallah in the West Bank, pedestrians stood at attention as
sirens wailed for two minutes to remember the Nakba.
Calling Bush the leader of evil in the world, Hamas official Sami
Abu Zuhri said the group would never grow weak.
At Masada, a cable car carried Bush high above the Dead Sea to the
plateau where, according to a Roman-era historian, 960 Jewish men,
women and children committed suicide rather than surrender to Roman
legions crushing a rebellion.
There have been few signs of progress in US-brokered negotiations
since promises were made at a peace conference in Annapolis,
Maryland, in November.
In the latest setback to a deal, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
has said he will quit if indicted in a police corruption probe.
The split between Abbas and Hamas and fighting between Israel
and Hamas in Gaza have also hampered peace efforts.
On Friday, Bush and his wife Laura will wind up their visit to
Jerusalem and fly on to Saudi Arabia before weekend talks in Egypt
with Abbas and other Arab leaders.
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