WASHINGTON, March 8, 2007

Jordan's King Abdullah Speaks To Congress

Calls On U.S. To Take The Lead In Mideast Peace Process

  • Vice President Dick Cheney and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi listen as King Abdullah of Jordan addresses a joint session of Congress, March 7, 2007.

    Vice President Dick Cheney and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi listen as King Abdullah of Jordan addresses a joint session of Congress, March 7, 2007.  (AP)

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(AP)  Citing the risks of further delay, Jordan's King Abdullah II said Wednesday the United States must take the lead in creating conditions for a permanent peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

Speaking to a joint meeting of Congress, Abdullah said that history has shown no progress in Middle East peacemaking is possible without American leadership.

"We look to you to play a historic role," he said, adding that results are needed "not in one year or five years but this year."

"No more bloodshed, no more lives pointlessly taken," Abdullah declared.

He speech, lasting just under a half hour, was delivered in flawless English, with only an occasional aside in Arabic. He was interrupted a number of times by applause.

His remarks were limited almost entirely to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Abdullah made no direct reference to Hamas, to the current divisions in the Palestinian leadership or to recent efforts by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to revive peace efforts.

Instead, he spoke of the suffering that both Israelis and Palestinians have suffered. At one point, he lamented "the 40 years of occupation" that he said Palestinians have endured.

"The goal must be a peace in which all sides gain," he said. "There must be a peace in which Israelis will be part of the neighborhood."

His comments on the Middle East issue before his departure for Washington were far more critical of Israel than the ones he delivered on Wednesday.

Last Friday, he said, "The main responsibility (for achieving peace) lies with Israel, which must choose either to remain a prisoner of the mentality of 'Israel the fortress' or to live in peace and stability with its neighbors."

James Zogby, president of the Arab-American Institute, met with Abdullah after the speech and later issued a statement calling the presentation "smart and courageous."

"It was clear he aggravated some opponents of peace, but what was also clear was that he emboldened and strengthened many in Congress and many more in both the Arab-American and Jewish American communities in their resolve to make peace a reality," Zogby said.

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by clestes-2009 March 9, 2007 1:43 AM EST
Not much chance of the US leading the way to peace in the middle east with Dubya sitting in the whitehouse. Even if he had a sudden change of heart, or rather stopped being Cheney's mouthpiece, there is just not enough time for it to happen.

Reply to this comment
by anneselden March 8, 2007 9:03 PM EST

Good to see CBS giving King Abdullah's speech coverage, it really was a great speech.

I thought is was a beautiful and an inspiring and a very sensitive speech, especially in that he has his facts straight, rather than pretending this fiasco started recently the way many politicians do, his statement begins at the sovereign beginning of the mess we are in now with:

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession, forty years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace process, all this has left a bitter legacy of disappointment and despair, on all sides. It is time to create a new and different legacy, one that begins right now"

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession" is a very important point to remember as the Palestinian refugee crisis is the largest and longest running refugee crisis in the world today. It is also important to be mindful of the fact that many Palestinians have no security anywhere-no real home- no job- no hope and no passport out of this stateless hell.

King Abdullah had many good lines- well worth quoting such as "We must make our process serve our purpose"

And he is right- We can wait no longer... "We must work together to restore Palestine, a nation in despair and without hope. We must work together to restore peace, hope and opportunity to the Palestinian people. And in so doing, we will begin a process of building peace, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world."
Reply to this comment
by anneselden March 8, 2007 5:18 PM EST

Good to see CBS giving King Abdullah's speech coverage, it really was a great speech.

I thought is was a beautiful and an inspiring and a very sensitive speech, especially in that he has his facts straight, rather than pretending this fiasco started recently the way many politicians do, his statement begins at the sovereign beginning of the mess we are in now with:

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession, forty years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace process, all this has left a bitter legacy of disappointment and despair, on all sides. It is time to create a new and different legacy, one that begins right now"

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession" is a very important point to remember as the Palestinian refugee crisis is the largest and longest running refugee crisis in the world today. It is also important to be mindful of the fact that many Palestinians have no security anywhere-no real home- no job- no hope and no passport out of this stateless hell.

King Abdullah had many good lines- well worth quoting such as "We must make our process serve our purpose"

And he is right- We can wait no longer... "We must work together to restore Palestine, a nation in despair and without hope. We must work together to restore peace, hope and opportunity to the Palestinian people. And in so doing, we will begin a process of building peace, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world."
Reply to this comment
by s_sgt7 March 8, 2007 4:26 PM EST
Well, once again the mainstream media doesn't pay attention. How many times, how much more land, how many more missiles and treaties must the Palestinians break before everyone gets this fact - it is the muslims who are not keeping their word.

You all need to do some research on islam. For instance, 'taqiyya in dar al harb', 'turnspeak', and jihad.

the first is deception, the second is blaming their victims instead of themselves and jihad is for muslims to battle against us and that means war.
Reply to this comment
by lars008-2009 March 8, 2007 4:25 PM EST
is it time to round up the muslims like the japanese in ww2???
Former Navy Sailor Arrested On Terrorism Charges
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7006681998

N.Y. imam sentenced in terror sting
The former imam of an Albany mosque was sentenced Thursday to 15 years in prison for his role in a money laundering scheme involving a fictional terror plot set up as an FBI sting.
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/nation/4612732.html

Group defied sanctions, stole public money, U.S. says
Five associates of a defunct Columbia, Mo.-based Islamic charity, including a state employee, have been indicted on charges they illegally sent money to Iraq and stole public donations, the U.S. attorney's office announced Wednesday.
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/missouristatenews/story/71E3B942F0C202978625729800140F2F?OpenDocument

talk is no substitute for action
Reply to this comment
by anneselden March 8, 2007 3:12 PM EST

Good to see CBS giving King Abdullah's speech coverage, it really was a great speech.

I thought is was a beautiful and an inspiring and a very sensitive speech, especially in that he has his facts straight, rather than pretending this fiasco started recently the way many politicians do, his statement begins at the sovereign beginning of the mess we are in now with:

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession, forty years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace process, all this has left a bitter legacy of disappointment and despair, on all sides. It is time to create a new and different legacy, one that begins right now"

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession" is a very important point to remember as the Palestinian refugee crisis is the largest and longest running refugee crisis in the world today. It is also important to be mindful of the fact that many Palestinians have no security anywhere-no real home- no job- no hope and no passport out of this stateless hell.

King Abdullah had many good lines- well worth quoting such as "We must make our process serve our purpose"

And he is right- We can wait no longer... "We must work together to restore Palestine, a nation in despair and without hope. We must work together to restore peace, hope and opportunity to the Palestinian people. And in so doing, we will begin a process of building peace, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world."
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad March 8, 2007 2:14 PM EST
HERE ARE THE SENATORS UP FOR REELECTION IN 08 WRITE THEM OR QUIT COMPLAINING! The longer we interject American military and money in the Middle East the longer the problems will exists. If America pulls out of the Middle East the countries will have to work out their differences. 50 YEARS OF SACRIFICE IS ENOUGH! We cannot want peace in the middle east more than those who live there! ASK THEM WHO IS PAYING THEIR SALARIES?

Alexander, Lamar- (R - TN)
Allard, Wayne- (R - CO)
Baucus, Max- (D - MT)
Biden, Joseph R., Jr.- (D - DE)
Chambliss, Saxby- (R - GA)
Cochran, Thad- (R - MS)
Coleman, Norm- (R - MN)
Collins, Susan M.- (R - ME)
Cornyn, John- (R - TX)
Craig, Larry E.- (R - ID)
Dole, Elizabeth- (R - NC)
Durbin, Richard- (D - IL)
Enzi, Michael B.- (R - WY)
Graham, Lindsey- (R - SC)
Hagel, Chuck- (R - NE)
Harkin, Tom- (D - IA)
Inhofe, James M.- (R - OK)
Johnson, Tim- (D - SD)
Kerry, John F.- (D - MA)
Landrieu, Mary L.- (D - LA)
Lautenberg, Frank R.- (D - NJ)
Levin, Carl- (D - MI)
McConnell, Mitch- (R - KY)
Pryor, Mark L.- (D - AR)
Reed, Jack- (D - RI)
Roberts, Pat- (R - KS)
Rockefeller, John D., IV- (D - WV)
Sessions, Jeff- (R - AL)
Smith, Gordon H.- (R - OR)
Stevens, Ted- (R - AK)
Sununu, John E.- (R - NH)
Warner, John- (R - VA)

If you think Americas sacrifice is worth it contact your ELECTED OFFICIAL and tell them http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/

Speakers email address: AmericanVoices@mail.house.gov
Reply to this comment
by anopinion1 March 8, 2007 1:41 PM EST
i nominate anopinion1 :

as next chief honcho of the neo-neocons! good thinking partner!

Posted by karlimhof at 08:35 AM : Mar 08, 2007

yay

(btw it was a joke)
Reply to this comment
by anneselden March 8, 2007 1:32 PM EST

Good to see CBS giving King Abdullah's speech coverage, it really was a great speech.

I thought is was a beautiful and an inspiring and a very sensitive speech, especially in that he has his facts straight, rather than pretending this fiasco started recently the way many politicians do, his statement begins at the sovereign beginning of the mess we are in now with:

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession, forty years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace process, all this has left a bitter legacy of disappointment and despair, on all sides. It is time to create a new and different legacy, one that begins right now"

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession" is a very important point to remember as the Palestinian refugee crisis is the largest and longest running refugee crisis in the world today. It is also important to be mindful of the fact that many Palestinians have no security anywhere-no real home- no job- no hope and no passport out of this stateless hell.

King Abdullah had many good lines- well worth quoting such as "We must make our process serve our purpose"

And he is right- We can wait no longer... "We must work together to restore Palestine, a nation in despair and without hope. We must work together to restore peace, hope and opportunity to the Palestinian people. And in so doing, we will begin a process of building peace, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world."
Reply to this comment
by anneselden March 8, 2007 1:15 PM EST

Good to see CBS giving King Abdullah's speech coverage, it really was a great speech.

I thought is was a beautiful and an inspiring and a very sensitive speech, especially in that he has his facts straight, rather than pretending this fiasco started recently the way many politicians do, his statement begins at the sovereign beginning of the mess we are in now with:

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession, forty years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace process, all this has left a bitter legacy of disappointment and despair, on all sides. It is time to create a new and different legacy, one that begins right now"

"Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession" is a very important point to remember as the Palestinian refugee crisis is the largest and longest running refugee crisis in the world today. It is also important to be mindful of the fact that many Palestinians have no security anywhere-no real home- no job- no hope and no passport out of this stateless hell.

King Abdullah had many good lines- well worth quoting such as "We must make our process serve our purpose"

And he is right- We can wait no longer... "We must work together to restore Palestine, a nation in despair and without hope. We must work together to restore peace, hope and opportunity to the Palestinian people. And in so doing, we will begin a process of building peace, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world."
Reply to this comment
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