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November 22, 2002



Bush Calls for Arafat's Removal

President Bush today urged Palestinians to replace Yasser Arafat as their leader and adopt "a practicing democracy" leading to an independent state in three years.

"Peace requires a new and different Palestinian leadership so that a Palestinian state can be born," the president said, unveiling his much-anticipated Middle East initiative.

"A Palestinian state will never be created by terror," Bush said from the White House Rose Garden. "It will be built through reform."

The message from Bush to replace Arafat echoed long-time Israeli demands. It was also a dramatic change in U.S. policy and is likely to draw an angry response from much of the Arab world.

But Bush also had sympathetic words for both sides. To the Israelis, he remarked: "You have lived too long with fear and funerals."

To the Palestinians, he said, "For decades you've been treated as pawns in the Middle East conflict.

"You deserve democracy and the rule of law. You deserve a life for your children and an end to occupation."

Bush said the borders and certain aspects of a future Palestinian state's sovereignty would be provisional until resolved as part of a final settlement. He also identified two of the thorniest issues - the future of the disputed city of Jerusalem and the plight of Palestinian refugees - but offered no prescription.

"When the Palestinian people have new leaders, new institutions and new security arrangements with their neighbors, the United States of America will support the creation of a Palestinian state, whose borders and certain aspects of its sovereignty will be provisional until resolved as part of a final settlement in the Middle East," Bush said.

No Pause in Violence

Bush's address had been planned for last week, but continuing violence delayed it.

His speech came as Israeli forces surrounded Arafat's West Bank headquarters today and killed six Palestinians in a major new campaign.

Earlier in the day, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said: "We are preparing massive activities against Hamas in the Gaza Strip and one could see the start of that this morning." He did not elaborate.

In a deadly attack on the outskirts of the Rafah refugee camp in Gaza earlier today, Israeli helicopter gunships fired on a convoy of cars. Israeli military sources said two senior leaders of the militant group Hamas were among the six killed. Reuters news service said two other Hamas members were also killed.

In Gaza City, Palestinian police have placed Hamas spiritual leader Sheik Ahmed Yassin under house arrest as witnesses said clashes broke out between Hamas supporters and Palestinian police.

The crackdown in Gaza came as Israeli tanks and troops rolled back into Ramallah before dawn and surrounded Arafat's compound, using rubble to block the entrance to the compound.

Ramallah has been declared a closed military zone and is the sixth West Bank city to be occupied by Israeli forces since Israel declared a new policy last week to hold on to Palestinian lands until suicide bombing attacks ceased.

The Israeli push into Ramallah was widely condemned by senior Palestinian officials. "This is a very dangerous step," said Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo. "This will lead in fact into more deterioration in the situation. This will not bring security or peace to the Israelis."

But Raanan Gissin, spokesman for Sharon, said, "Israel will be there in military presence only, in order to crush terror."

Tensions High in the Territories

But even as the international community has been calling for a dialogue to end the current violence, the situation in the territories has deteriorated during the past week as nearly 600,000 Palestinians in the West Bank are under virtually round-the-clock curfews in major Palestinian towns and cities.

In Jenin, troops carried out house-to-house searches and made arrests as a building, which Israel said housed a homemade bomb factory, was imploded today.

And in Gaza, tensions were high as Palestinian police surrounded Yassin's home as Hamas spokesmen threatened reprisals against Israel for today's missile strikes.

Hamas officials also warned Arafat to lift the house arrest against Yassin in what has become a public rift with Arafat's Palestinian Authority.

Meanwhile, on the Egyptian side of the border with Gaza, Egyptian police today fired at a man attempting to cross the border into Gaza to support the intifada. Although Egypt has a peace treaty with Israel, there have been a growing number of Egyptians attempting to sneak into Gaza to support the Palestinian uprising.

An Interim Palestinian State

At a joint news conference with French Foreign Minister Dominique Galouzeau de Villepin in Cairo today, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak called for a dialogue between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders to prevent a further deterioration of the situation.

Mubarak's call came as Saudi Arabia questioned the notion of an "interim Palestinian state."

Since the end of March, Israel has intermittently conducted massive military operations across the West Bank. The Israel army has called up at least 2,000 reservists for their latest operations.

(China Daily June 25, 2002)

In This Series
Arafat Appeals for Complete Halt to Suicide Bombing

Arafat Pledges to Set Date for New Elections

Bush Backs Sharon,Criticizes Arafat

Arafat Streamlines Cabinet as Sharon Visits US

Arafat Emerges From Compound After Israeli Attack

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