Watch CBS News

Mideast Leaders Will Resume Talks

Under U.S. pressure to answer increasing Arab flexibility on Mideast peace, Israel has agreed to resume face-to-face talks with a moderate, Western-backed Palestinian leader who is sharing power with Islamic Hamas militants, a U.S. official said Monday.

Also Monday, Israel welcomed the idea of a regional peace summit, although no such meeting is set, and Saudi Arabia suggested it would consider changes in a dormant peace initiative that could make it more acceptable to Israel.

The new developments came at a time of high-profile diplomacy, with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and United Nations chief Ban Ki-Moon both in the region for talks with Israeli and Arab leaders.

Rice has been trying to revive peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, with help from Arab neighbors. The odds were long even before the latest complication posed by Hamas, a political and military organization that Israel, the United States and the European Union count as a terror group.

A senior U.S. official said Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert agreed to sit down with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for the first time since Abbas sealed a desperation pact with the militants.

The two will hold "regular face-to-face discussions," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of a planned address by Rice on Tuesday.

The coalition government was formed more than a week ago under terms that fall short of international demands to recognize Israel, renounce violence and accept agreements negotiated by the previous, secular Palestinian leadership.

Abbas has called the deal the best he could get from the politically formidable militants, and a necessary step to end deadly internal Palestinian violence.

Olmert, who had once called Abbas a "partner for peace," said the deal meant he would limit talks with the Palestinian leader to humanitarian or similar immediate concerns. He initially ruled out more detailed discussions or negotiations.

In other developments:

  • Palestinians are split over whether their new government should accept the world's conditions for acceptance, including recognition of Israel and renunciation of violence, according to a poll released Monday. Forty-eight percent want the Hamas-Fatah coalition to meet the international demands: recognize Israel and peace agreements signed with the Jewish state, and to renounce violence. That might end the year-long boycott of the Palestinian Authority that has driven many deeper into poverty. An equal number don't want the government to change its platform to win acceptance, The poll was conducted last week by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research.
  • The Palestinian economy faces a "dramatic decline" if a yearlong international boycott of the Palestinian government is extended into 2007 and Israel continues to withhold hundreds of millions of dollars in tax rebates, according to a study released Monday by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The sanctions were imposed a year ago on the Hamas government, after it refused to meet the international demands.
  • Thousands of Israeli settlers and their supporters converged on the former West Bank settlement of Homesh, which was dismantled by Israel a year and a-half ago, for a one-day demonstration, reports Berger. "We have no intention of reoccupying settlements that were disengaged as part of the disengagement that took place at the end of 2005," Olmert said. The settlers, however, say that some day they'll return to stay.
  • (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)
    Israeli police want to question President Moshe Katsav (left) on new allegations, officials said Monday, in addition to multiple criminal charges he already faces, including rape and sexual assault. "These are new allegations, a new complaint. They have nothing to do with the previous charges," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. It was just the latest wrinkle in a series of scandals involving Israel's highest officials, including the prime minister, two Cabinet ministers and the police commander.

    Olmert's reconsideration of that stance was a small step, since Olmert held such sessions with Abbas before the Hamas deal, but a sign of fresh and surprising traction toward peace talks despite the complication posed by Hamas.

    The U.S. official said Olmert and Abbas would initially hold low-key "confidence-building" sessions. The talks have "an open door to all issues," the official said, but it was clear that the United States wanted Israel to go farther.

    Negotiators haggled behind closed doors for several hours Monday night, apparently stuck over whether Olmert would fully open the door to fresh talks over the hardest issues that divide Israel and the Palestinians, such as the borders of an eventual Palestinian state and the fate of disputed Jerusalem.

    It was not clear when the leaders might meet, although Palestinian officials had said U.S. diplomats proposed a date in mid-April.

    The U.S. official said Rice will continue to raise all issues in her separate meetings with each leader.

    "The prime minister is interested in keeping an open line of dialogue with the Palestinian Authority chairman on humanitarian and security-related issues and has met with him twice in the last month," said David Baker, an official in Olmert's office.

    Rice has shuttled between Israeli, Palestinian and Arab leaders this week, trying to rally greater Arab support for eventual peace negotiations, and to persuade Israel to be more flexible in its dealings with Abbas.

    Rice held two sessions apiece with Abbas and Olmert, including a lengthy evening meeting with Olmert in her Jerusalem hotel on Monday. The agreement for new meetings with Abbas apparently came then.

    Rice had canceled plans for an evening press conference, at which she was expected to announce some new progress toward talks. She will hold that session on Tuesday instead, before returning to Washington.

    Earlier Monday, Rice encouraged Israel and the Palestinians to continue direct talks, but said for now she is talking to each side separately.

    "I don't intend by any means to take control of the Palestinian-Israeli bilateral dialogue," Rice told reporters before a meeting with Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni. "I think it's extremely important that that continue."

    Speaking separately, Olmert said he "wouldn't hesitate" to take part in a regional summit. Palestinian officials cautiously endorsed the idea.

    Any such meeting — especially if Saudi and Israeli officials were to publicly meet — would be a huge symbolic breakthrough. Saudis and Israelis are believed to have held private meetings in the last year.

    Rice said it is "premature to talk about any specific kind of meeting," but another U.S. official said the idea of a large group meeting is one proposal among several under discussion. Nothing has been scheduled.

    Rice's visit was timed before a critical Arab League summit later this week in Saudi Arabia.

    Rice wants Arab states to reissue a broad 2002 land-for-peace offer to Israel, and be willing to negotiate with the Jewish state. Some version of the plan is expected to be part of the upcoming summit in Riyadh.

  • View CBS News In
    CBS News App Open
    Chrome Safari Continue