Posted on 04/26/2002 11:10:38 AM PDT by scratchgolfer
Bush: US Won't Let Israel Be Crushed
By SCOTT LINDLAW, Associated Press Writer
CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - Urged by Saudi Arabia to temper support for Israel, President Bush said Friday his message to the Arab world is unequivocal: "We will not allow Israel to be crushed."
On the same day that Israeli troops re-entered a Palestinian town in the West Bank and fired upon protesters in Ramallah, Bush bluntly told Israel, "It's now time to quit it altogether."
Bush spoke to reporters on the morning after his extraordinary five-hour inaugural meeting with Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, in which the president heard Arab criticism of his handling of the Israeli-Palestinian crisis.
"I told the crown prince that we've got a unique relationship with Israel and that one thing that the world can count on is that we will not allow Israel to be crushed," Bush said.
"The crown prince understands my foreign policy. It's important that we speak with clarity and I will continue to do so."
Bush demanded April 4 that Israeli incursions into Palestinian areas be halted and Israeli troops withdrawn, but his seeming tolerance of Israel's defiance as forces withdrew from some areas but pressed forward into others has angered the Arab world.
Bush said Friday he'd had enough of the Israeli incursions. "The Israelis understand my position. ... There has been some progress, but it's now time to quit it altogether," Bush said near his Texas ranch.
No concrete progress resulted from the five-hour session on Bush's ranch Thursday, but both camps said that by building a personal relationship, the two leaders had made progress in improving U.S.-Saudi relations and perhaps the Mideast peace process.
"I'm convinced that the stronger our personal bond is, the more likely it is relations between our (countries) will be strong," Bush said after the two toured his ranch and dined on pecan-encrusted smoked beef tenderloin.
The relationship between the United States and the desert kingdom has seen more conflict than cooperation recently, and the crown prince delivered a stern warning to Bush that his support for Israel was damaging prospects for Mideast peace and undermining U.S. credibility in the Arab world.
"America is a country that was based on justice and freedom and doing what's right. America should pursue those principles in its foreign policies," the crown prince told Bush, according to Abdullah's foreign policy adviser, Adel Al-Jubeir.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news - web sites) "is doing great harm to America's credibility in the Arab and Muslim world," he said in a telephone interview.
Abdullah urged Bush to pressure Israel to free Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat from house arrest, and "explained to the president the dangers of the continuing stalemate and the importance of negotiating with the Palestinians," Al-Jubeir said.
"This is the closest ally of the United States from the Arab world, who has communicated to the president that Arab-American relations are on the brink of instability," said Clovis Maksoud, former Arab League ambassador to the United States and the United Nations (news - web sites).
Bush went no further after the meeting than repeating his demand that "all parties" Israelis, Palestinians and Arab neighbors have "responsibilities" in pushing for peace.
Nevertheless, Abdullah decided to remain in the United States for a couple more days a sign that the crown prince did not view the session as fruitless.
But James E. Akins, a former ambassador to Saudi Arabia, said he saw no movement in the stated purpose of the meeting: advancing Mideast peace.
"So far it harms the Mideast process. Absolutely nothing was moved forward," Akins said. "If Abdullah leaves there thinking there's no way of separating Bush from Sharon, things are going to be very bad when he gets back home."
Abdullah gave momentum earlier this year to an initiative meant to quell Mideast violence by offering peace and full recognition to Israel in exchange for the territory Jordan and Syria lost in the 1967 war.
The two leaders discussed how to advance the proposal, which was endorsed by the 22-nation Arab League, aides to both sides said.
Bush said he was grateful for Abdullah's assurance that Saudi Arabia would not support any effort by angry Arab states to join Iraq's oil embargo.
The Saudi leader "made it clear ... that they will not use oil as a weapon and I appreciate that, respect that and expect that to be the case," Bush said.
A senior administration official said Bush raised concerns about anti-Israel terror.
I guess Bush thinks of himself as President of Israel, not America.
Only a fool would post such garbage.
Translated: "We like your oil but cut the crap or we'll turn you into a large glass parking lot for Israeli Shopping Malls, y'all comprende?".
According to TIME magazine(yes, I do read TIME, it is a gift from my grandmother) Militants belonging to al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades told TIME that they are preparing to avenge last week's arrest of top Arafat deputy Marwan Barghouti. And they believe the U.S. should share the pain. "Now," says a senoir Brigades leader in the West Bank, "American targets are the same as Israeli targets."
President Bush realizes that the situation in the middle east is no joke, and his job as American President is to look out for welfare no matter how much he wants to get the leash off Israel. I support Israel in this war, but I don't want to see Americans to be harmed as well, and things have a potential to get much worse.
Let it happen and you'll see US Tanks in the west bank !
Well for starters, they would have offered them billions of our tax dollars in aid, then they would have rambled on about the "peace process" for the salivating media, then they would have nominated x42 for the Nobel Peace Prize.
And we won't be so restrained either. A massacre in Jenin by the Israelis? It will be much worse than that! Americans won't have any mercy!!!
I guess Bush thinks of himself as President of Israel, not America.
Doesn't he feel himself like a king of Israel when he gives orders to Israelis how to handle their mortal enemies?
Special relations?
And I believe that GWB got an earful of how bad it can be yesterday from the prince.
Abdullah urged Bush to pressure Israel to free Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat from house arrest, and "explained to the president the dangers of the continuing stalemate and the importance of negotiating with the Palestinians," Al-Jubeir said.
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