Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert reserved judgment Sunday on a
Palestinian unity deal and a senior Israeli official said a
US-brokered summit with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas would
be held as planned.
"Israel neither rejects nor accepts the agreements," Olmert said
about a power-sharing pact signed by Hamas and Fatah, an accord
that failed to meet a core demand by the United States and other
Middle East peace mediators to recognize Israel.
"At this stage, we, like the international community are
learning what was exactly accomplished and what was said," he said
in broadcast remarks at the weekly Cabinet meeting.
A senior Israeli official said Olmert's February 19 summit with
Fatah's Abbas and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice would go
ahead as scheduled.
Fatah and Islamist Hamas agreed in Mecca on Thursday to end
factional warfare that has killed scores of Palestinians and to
form a unity government, hoping the move would persuade Western
powers to restore direct aid to the Palestinian Authority.
Olmert reiterated that Israel demanded that any new Palestinian
government accept the three conditions set by a "Quartet" of Middle
East peace mediators for ending the crippling economic sanctions
imposed after Hamas came to power.
The group, comprising the United States, the European Union,
Russia and the United Nations, wants Hamas, which defeated Fatah in
an election last year, to recognize Israel, renounce violence and
accept existing interim peace accords.
The Mecca agreement made no explicit commitment to recognize
Israel. A letter from Abbas reappointing Hamas' Ismail Haniyeh as
prime minister contained a hazy call to the movement to "abide by
the interests of the Palestinian people" and "respect" past
agreements and international law.
A political adviser to Haniyeh said on Saturday the new
government, expected to be unveiled in the coming days, would not
recognize the Jewish state.
(China Daily via agencies February 12, 2007)