Syria to attend Middle East conference in US

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-11-26 09:16

 

SYRIA SEEN AS KEY

Ending weeks of uncertainty, the official Syrian news agency said Damascus "has accepted the American invitation and will send an official delegation headed by Deputy Foreign Minister Fayssal Mekdad."

While the decision to send only a deputy minister might seem a snub, it was a victory for the Bush administration that Syria, a long-time foe of Israel, chose to attend at all.

Olmert spokeswoman Miri Eisin called the Syrian decision a positive move, saying the Israeli-Palestinian track would stay the main focus of the meeting although Syria's participation "could open additional avenues to peace in the Middle East."

Syria, Israel's neighbor to the north, had insisted the meeting also deal with the future of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights captured in the 1967 Middle East war.

Israel and Syria last held peace negotiations in 2000, in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, but could not reach a deal on the Golan, which overlooks the Sea of Galilee, the Jewish state's main reservoir.

Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, speaking to reporters on Olmert's flight to Washington, said the issue could be raised in a forum at the conference in which "comprehensive peace in the Middle East" would be discussed.

A State Department spokeswoman said Rice met Livni on Sunday afternoon and then hosted a dinner just for Livni and Ahmed Qurei, the head of the Palestinian negotiating team.

Any effort to bring about peace between Israel and the Palestinians faces myriad challenges.

Abbas in June lost control of the Gaza Strip to Hamas Islamists, who are not invited to Annapolis and have criticized the meeting. Hamas's armed wing vowed to keep fighting Israel and said any concessions would be tantamount to "treason."

Olmert is unpopular with voters, not least due to corruption accusations. Bush has less than 14 months in power.

Faced with the legacy of an unpopular war in Iraq, the conference gives Bush a chance for diplomatic success in the Middle East -- an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal all sides say they hope to achieve before he leaves office.

White House national security adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters he expected the meeting to yield an agreement between the two parties to begin peace talks and to carry out the 2003 US-backed "road map" peace plan under US monitoring.

Israel has made any final deal conditional on Abbas carrying out a road map commitment to rein in militants. Palestinians demand Israel fulfill its promise under the plan to halt "settlement activity" in the occupied West Bank.

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