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<P><FONT face=Helvetica,Arial>Deseret News, Wednesday, March 13, 2002</FONT>
<P><FONT face=Helvetica,Arial size=5><B>Web Extra: U.S. backs Palestinian
statehood</B></FONT>
<P><FONT size=4><I>It helps gain approval for U.N. resolution</I></FONT>
<P><FONT face=Verdana,Helvetica,Arial><B>By Edith M. Lederer</B></FONT><BR><FONT
face=Verdana,Helvetica,Arial size=2>Associated Press writer</FONT>
<P><FONT face=Georgia,Verdana size=3>UNITED NATIONS — Seeking an end to
escalating Mideast violence, the United States won approval for a U.N. Security
Council resolution that endorsed the idea of a Palestinian state for the first
time and demanded an immediate cease-fire.<BR>
<P>The United States avoided references to Israeli occupation of the Palestinian
territory and other terms critical of Israel, clearing the way for it to
introduce the resolution Tuesday — a move that surprised the council after years
of Washington blocking measures it considered biased against its close ally.<BR>
<P>The 14-0 vote, cautiously welcomed by Israel and the Palestinians, came after
Israeli forces took control of the key West Bank city of Ramallah and several
Palestinian refugee camps, searching for Palestinian militants after a string of
terror attacks, in Israel's biggest military operations in two decades.<BR>
<P>Diplomats said the timing of the resolution was important, with Vice
President Dick Cheney in the region and U.S. peace envoy Anthony Zinni heading
there Thursday. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan issued his toughest statement
yet as violence escalated Tuesday, appealing to Palestinians to halt "morally
repugnant" acts of terror and urging Israelis to end their "illegal occupation"
of Palestinian land.<BR>
<P>Nasser Al-Kidwa, the Palestinian U.N. observer, called the U.S. resolution "a
significant step" and said "the Palestinian side will reiterate its readiness to
abide by the provisions." Israel's U.N. Ambassador Yehuda Lancry called it "a
rare and remarkable" balanced resolution and said his government would like a
cease-fire.<BR>
<P>The Israeli Foreign Ministry issued a statement in Jerusalem praising the
United States for inserting into the resolution a demand for the immediate
cessation of "all acts of terror."<BR>
<P>But Israeli officials insisted Palestinian statehood must be negotiated.<BR>
<P>Foreign Ministry spokesman Arie Mekel said that although Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon has publicly accepted the concept of a Palestinian state,
it must be of a specified character.<BR>
<P>"If such a state is established by agreement between Israel and the
Palestinians, if it's demilitarized, if it's not a hostile base of terror and
particularly if it's the end of the conflict between the Jews and Arabs once and
for all, most people in Israel feel they have no problem with such a Palestinian
state," Mekel said.<BR>
<P>Acting with unusual speed, the 15-member council approved the U.S.
resolution, with only Syria abstaining, criticizing the measure as "very weak"
for not addressing the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land.<BR>
<P>The United States has repeatedly opposed Security Council action, arguing
that only Israel and the Palestinians can resolve the issues dividing them. U.S.
Ambassador John Negroponte insisted that Tuesday's resolution didn't represent a
change in U.S. policy.<BR>
<P>The United States still believes Israel and the Palestinians have to
negotiate agreements. "Our intent in doing this was to give an impulse to peace
efforts and to decry violence and terror," he said.<BR>
<P>In Egypt, Cheney, finding his Mideast tour overshadowed by rising
Israeli-Palestinian violence, pledged Wednesday to work for long-term peace in
the region while waging a wider war on terrorism.<BR>
<P>"The success of liberty and the future of the civilized world now depend on
us," Cheney, with the Red Sea and circling patrol boats as a backdrop, told U.S.
National Guard troops stationed in Sharm El Sheik.<BR>
<P>Cheney is on an 11-nation tour of the region to drum up support for the
post-Afghanistan phase of the anti-terror war, including a tougher stance on
Iraq.<BR>
<P>But the spiraling cycle of Palestinian suicide bombings and increasingly
brutal Israeli reprisals was occupying much of his attention.<BR>
<P>Cheney came to this resort city at the tip of the Sinai Peninsula to meet
with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. A day earlier, he met in Jordan with King
Abdullah II, who urged a more active U.S. role in ending the Israeli-Palestinian
violence.<BR>
<P>Israeli tanks on Wednesday patrolled the deserted streets of the West Bank
town of Ramallah and exchanged fire with Palestinian gunmen. A senior
Palestinian officer, an Israeli soldier and an Italian photographer were killed
in the fighting.<BR>
<P>Seven Palestinians and a French journalist were wounded in other incidents.
Israel said the circumstances of the shootings were not yet clear.<BR>
<P>Al-Kidwa said it marked the first time in a long time that the United States
had displayed "such a positive attitude ... toward the principle of the
engagement by the council in Middle Eastern affairs."<BR>
<P>The resolution "demands immediate cessation of all acts of violence,
including all acts of terror, provocation, incitement and destruction." It calls
on the Israelis and Palestinians to cooperate in implementing steps leading to a
resumption of negotiations on a political settlement.<BR>
<P>A statement added after late-night negotiations affirmed "a vision of a
region where two states, Israel and Palestine, live side-by-side within secure
and recognized borders," a first time for a council resolution.<BR>
<P>President Bush endorsed the idea of a Palestinian state at the U.N. General
Assembly in November, as have leaders of other nations.<BR>
<P>Previous Security Council resolutions dealing with Mideast peace have not
explicitly referred to a Palestinian state because the issue was too
contentious. When it became politically acceptable in recent years, there was a
stalemate in the council on Mideast resolutions.<BR>
<P>"It's the first time the Security Council spells out the vision of two
states," Al-Kidwa said. "It names Israel and Palestine, and that's obviously an
important step forward."<BR>
<P>Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo said Wednesday that "there
is a need now for direct international intervention to implement this resolution
through ending the Israeli occupation and evacuating all the Israeli
settlements" from Palestinian lands.<BR>
<P>Calling the current fighting the worst in a decade, Annan welcomed the U.S.
decision to send Zinni back to the region and urged Sharon and Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat to back his efforts to renew the peace process.<BR>
<P>"You can still lead your people away from disaster," Annan said. He also
called on the Security Council "to lend its full authority and influence to the
vital cause of peace."
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