Israel, Palestinians oK Gaza border deal (AP) Updated: 2005-11-15 22:57
While important in and of itself, the broader significance of the deal to
free up Palestinian movement while satisfying Israeli concerns about terrorism
is that it makes a statement of progress that goes beyond the technical details.
Rice oversaw the marathon negotiations in a Jerusalem hotel, huddling
alternately with Israeli and Palestinian negotiators in her suite. She had
postponed a planned departure for Asia by a day to shepherd the deal to a
conclusion.
On Tuesday morning, she met with Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz to
finalize the details.
The agreement provides a much-needed boost to the shattered Gaza economy. The
deal also strengthens Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas ahead of Jan. 25
parliament elections and could help him fend off a strong challenge by the
Islamic militant group Hamas.
Rice and international Mideast envoy James Wolfensohn badly wanted Israel and
the Palestinian leadership to use Israel's unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza
Strip last summer as traction for tougher peace negotiations down the road.
Cooperation flagged in recent weeks, and Rice's two days of meetings in
Jerusalem and the West Bank were meant to push the two sides to settle
nitty-gritty disputes over Palestinian movement in and out of the territory they
now control. "Underneath what may seem like very small details there are hard
issues," Rice told reporter.
She said she had about two hours of sleep.
Wolfensohn said the deal cleared the way for the international community to
assist the Palestinians and help revive Gaza's economy. Donor countries have
pledged hundreds of millions of dollars, but they money was held up by the lack
of a border deal.
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