http://www.washtimes.com/world/20070327-122847-2983r.htm

Israel, Palestine leaders to meet regularly
March 27, 2007 



12:28 p.m. 
    JERUSALEM (AP) - Israeli and Palestinian leaders have agreed to meet every 
two weeks to discuss day-to-day issues, a small step in a quickening diplomatic 
pace that could lead to talks on a final peace settlement, Secretary of State 
Condoleezza Rice announced today. 
    After shuttling between the two sides for the past three days, Miss Rice 
also said that an American general serving as her security envoy will try to 
set benchmarks for a cease-fire, including halting rocket fire from Gaza and 
improving the flow of Palestinian travelers and goods through Israeli 
crossings. 
    "The Israelis and the Palestinians are taking the initial step on the path 
to peace," Miss Rice said. "The American role will include helping them to 
overcome obstacles, develop new ideas and rally international support for their 
efforts." 
    Miss Rice said the first talks between the two leaders will be on practical 
questions, not the so-called "final status" issues defining peace and security 
between Israel and an independent Palestine. But she did not rule out formal 
negotiations on those hard questions before President Bush leaves office in 
less than two years. 
    The most difficult issues dividing Israel and the Palestinians include the 
borders of an eventual Palestinian state, the fate of disputed Jerusalem and 
the rights of Palestinians and their descendants who left land when Israel was 
formed in 1948. 
    Miss Rice praised Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian 
President Mahmoud Abbas for flexibility and resolve, although both leaders have 
balked at making overtures suggested by the United States. 
    "They achieved something, which is the very regularized meetings between 
the two of them, in which they will not just talk about their day-to-day 
issues, but also about a political horizon," Miss Rice said, speaking at a news 
conference in Jerusalem. 
    A senior Israeli government official said that for now, Mr. Olmert will 
only talk to Mr. Abbas about security and humanitarian issues, as well as a 
"general political horizon," which was not further defined by Mr. Rice or 
Israeli officials. Mr. Olmert will not discuss specifics, such as the borders 
of a future Palestinian state, said the official who spoke on condition of 
anonymity. 
    Miss Rice called on Arab states to hold contacts with Israel, and said 
peacemaking was made "more complex" by Hamas' presence in the government with 
Abbas. Israel, the United States and the European Union count Hamas as a terror 
group.




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