TEL AVIV (WJC)–Ehud Olmert, Israel’s former prime minister, has said in a speech that the Bush administration in the United States would have accepted 100,000 Palestinian refugees had Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas accepted his diplomatic overtures in 2008.
In a speech at Tel Aviv’s Eretz Israel Museum, Olmert outlined the offer he made the Palestinians at the end of his premiership, which included a contiguous Palestinian state, transferring control over Jerusalem’s “holy basin,” an area including the Old City, to the stewardship of five countries, and accepting thousands of Palestinian refugees into Israel on humanitarian grounds.
Olmert said that in all of his talks with world leaders, none expected Israel to accept all the Palestinian refugees. But he said he was proud to be the first Israeli prime minister to express sympathy with their plight. He said a limited number of refugees could be accepted on the basis of the Saudi diplomatic initiative.
On Jerusalem, Olmert revealed that he gave Abbas maps with a detailed border down to specific houses, roads and tunnels. “Whoever wants to solve the conflict with the Palestinians must deal immediately with the five core issues, because if we solve them, we can solve the rest of the problems,” he said. “Whoever thinks they can deal with water before dealing with borders will never deal with borders.”
Olmert said the Palestinians now regretted not accepting his offer. In veiled criticism of his successor Benjamin Netanyahu, Olmert challenged him to put reaching a diplomatic agreement ahead of staying in power. “I don’t doubt the current prime minister’s resolve to protect Israel’s security,” he said. “But when a man reaches such a lofty position, he must consider: What will you do with the time you have? “You must be loyal to the truth you believe in,” Olmert added, stressing: “You can’t abandon this responsibility because of political considerations.”
The former Kadima leader said he did not believe US President Barack Obama was hostile to Israel, and that it was not in Israel’s interest to suggest otherwise. “There is no difference between the views of George W. Bush, who is acknowledged as the ultimate friend of Israel, and the views of Obama,” Olmert declared.
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Preceding provided by World Jewish Congress