prontospyder
Diamond Member
- Oct 9, 1999
- 6,262
- 0
- 0
I hope the other nations of the world listen to Bush's call and get more involved in the peace process.
Originally posted by: prontospyder
I hope the other nations of the world listen to Bush's call and get more involved in the peace process.
Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: prontospyder
I hope the other nations of the world listen to Bush's call and get more involved in the peace process.
there are, US UN EU and Russia are all creators and backers of the current peace plan
Originally posted by: prontospyder
Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: prontospyder
I hope the other nations of the world listen to Bush's call and get more involved in the peace process.
there are, US UN EU and Russia are all creators and backers of the current peace plan
Well, Abbas need more funding to improve the lives of his people and more training of the Palestinian security force.
He needs to be seen as a credible leader by his people.
Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: prontospyder
Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: prontospyder
I hope the other nations of the world listen to Bush's call and get more involved in the peace process.
there are, US UN EU and Russia are all creators and backers of the current peace plan
Well, Abbas need more funding to improve the lives of his people and more training of the Palestinian security force.
He needs to be seen as a credible leader by his people.
he wont get support localy by getting support from the outside, he needs Arafat ironicly enough who has support of the population.
Originally posted by: sward666
Who launched the first attack after the talks started last week?
The only path to peace is one that sidelines Arafat. It would be best not to do so publicly, which would only brand him as the leader who defies the Israelis and Americans. Better to ignore him but systematically weaken his power. The summit will be a good start. Its principal effect will be to elevate Abu Mazen, who will be seen throughout the world?in the company of George W. Bush, Hosni Mubarak, King Abdullah and others?as the leader of the Palestinian people. If the Arab leaders in particular treat him with honor and give him material support, it will translate into stature back home. Much of Arafat?s domestic legitimacy stemmed from the fact that he represented the Palestinian cause in the world. That?s why he spent so much time flying to foreign capitals, reviewing honor guards and embracing presidents and prime ministers. And that is why it is deeply destructive to the peace process for European leaders to continue to accord him respect and attention. A senior White House official told me that the Bush administration has asked every foreign leader who visits Israel?including the French?to stop meeting with Arafat.
