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"..the
initiative indicated a readiness on behalf of the Arabs to pay the
price of peace, which includes acceptance of Israel as a state within
the region and transcending past tragedies and present problems in the
hope of a better future."
The
Arab Peace Initiative
by Shafeeq Ghabra
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Informed
sources said the Jordanian peace proposals did not
include Jerusalem as capital of the Palestinian
state and the return of Palestinian refugees.
Analysts said the Arab peace plan could not go
forward because it was not properly “served” by
the Arab League. In the light of new geopolitical
changes, more should be done, they said.
Speaking
to Saudi journalists attending the summit, Foreign
Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal said the Arab League
was seeking membership for an Arab country on the UN
Security Council at the time of its expansion.
Analysts predicted Egypt could become that member.
Prince
Saud emphasized the significance of the security
pact endorsed by Arab leaders in their 16th Summit
in Tunisia. “It is part of the Arab Security
Council Charter,” he added.
Saudi
diplomats are working quietly to build a consensus
among the many diverse perspectives represented
here.
Administrative
and financial reforms for Arab League, presented by
its Secretary-General Amr Moussa, also will figure
high on the summit agenda. The league suffers
financial constraints as a result of the delay in
payment of contributions by some member states.
Saudi Arabia has been prompt in paying its dues.
Informed sources said civil institutions, such as
NGOs, will be included in future Arab League
meetings.
The
Arab Free Trade Agreement is another important topic
on the agenda, delegates said, adding that some
issues, such as customs tariffs and product origins,
have remained unresolved.
Economic
analysts expressed their optimism that after AFTA,
Arab countries soon would reach agreement on a
customs union. “This is a bigger task because of
the different economic setups of Arab countries,”
they said.
“Arab
League summits in the last couple of years have
taken on a new dimension in the sense that economic
dictates have prevailed over political differences,”
one analyst told Arab News.
Prince
Saud said the foreign ministers’ meeting, which
finalized the agenda, also discussed UN reforms,
adding that UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan would
attend the summit’s opening session and hold talks
with Arab leaders.
A
top diplomat called for the revival of the Middle
East peace road map by the Quartet including the
United States and Russia. He hoped that the unity of
Palestinian factions would advance the peace plan.
Iraq,
reeling under a two-year foreign occupation and
struggling to form a new government, is expected to
recover its legitimate seat at the summit, analysts
said.
Commentators
said the postwar Iraqi authorities, who were kept at
arm’s length by their Arab peers after the fall of
Saddam Hussein’s regime two years ago, will be
embraced back into the Arab fold in Algiers.
“The
Arab states cannot oppose any elected government
that represents the various Iraqi factions, even if
it emerged under US occupation,” said Marwan
Beshara, a political science professor at the
American University of Paris.
“Arab
states have no alternative but to accept the fact
that the United States has the power to change the
facts on the ground,” Beshara said. Iraqi diplomat
Hana Rubaie Arab expected her country’s
delegation, led by outgoing President Ghazi Al-Yawar,
to be welcomed warmly at the Algiers summit.
Reprinted
with permission of Arab News