Middle East deal unlikely soon - Rice

MIDDLE EAST: US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice began a Middle East visit yesterday by voicing doubts that Israel and the…

MIDDLE EAST:US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice began a Middle East visit yesterday by voicing doubts that Israel and the Palestinians would agree during her four-day trip on parameters for a conference on Palestinian statehood.

Israeli and Palestinian negotiating teams are holding meetings to hammer out a joint document addressing "core issues" for a US-sponsored international meeting expected to be held late next month in Maryland.

"I don't expect ... that there will be any particular outcome in the sense of breakthroughs on the document," Ms Rice told reporters as she flew to Tel Aviv from Moscow. "I would just warn in advance not to expect that, because this is really a work in progress," she said, holding out the possibility she would return to the region in a few weeks.

Israel has sought to address in general terms the most divisive aspects of the Middle East conflict - borders of a Palestinian state, the future of Jerusalem, and the fate of millions of Palestinian refugees.

READ MORE

Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas has been pressing for a document with a timetable for dealing with these issues and moving Palestinians closer to statehood. "The success of Rice's efforts requires reaching a clear statement that will include the final-status issues, in addition to stopping the settlement projects that aim to isolate Jerusalem and divide the West Bank," Nabil Abu Rdainah, an Abbas aide said.

Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert told his cabinet, where he faces right-wing opposition to any major peace moves, that he expected the conference to be followed by "discussions on the possibility of founding a Palestinian state". However he said that "setting a timetable for this process in advance would create more problems than it would solve".

Ms Rice met Israeli defence minister Ehud Barak yesterday and then planned to see Mr Olmert and other senior members of the Labour, Kadima and the ultra-Orthodox Shas parties, all members of the ruling coalition.

Shas generally opposes territorial compromise, and a party leader has called on the prime minister to discuss only economic matters at the parley.

Mr Olmert yesterday named foreign minister Tzipi Livni, a political rival who has cautioned against moving too quickly towards an agreement, as chief Israeli negotiator on the joint document.

Ms Rice also plans to meet Mr Abbas in the West Bank during her visit, which will include a trip to Egypt tomorrow and talks in London with Jordan's King Abdullah at the end of the week.

During her previous visit last month, Ms Rice urged Israelis and Palestinians to draft a document laying the basis for serious negotiations at the gathering, which Washington hopes will attract wide Arab participation.

Israeli, Palestinian and western officials said last week real progress would depend on narrowing differences over Jerusalem and Palestinian refugees.

(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta in Ramallah and Jeffrey Heller and Adam Entous in Jerusalem) - (Reuters)