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Published 04 Jun, 2008 12:00am

Washington to press for peace deal: Rice: Olmert in US

WASHINGTON, June 3: US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made clear on Tuesday that Washington will press for an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal this year despite the corruption scandal dogging Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

Olmert, who arrived in Washington on Tuesday at the start of a three-day visit, has rebuffed calls that he leave office over allegations that he took envelopes stuffed with cash from a Jewish-American businessman.

“The present opportunity is not perfect by any means,” Rice told a policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a pro-Israeli lobby group, without mentioning Olmert’s political troubles.

“But it is better than any other in several years and we need to seize it,” she added. “We still believe that we have a chance to reach an agreement on the basic contours of a peaceful Palestinian state.”

Olmert, who is to see President George Bush at the White House on Wednesday, has described the $150,000 in cash and unpaid loans he received from the businessman as legitimate election campaign contributions. Both men deny wrongdoing.

US officials acknowledge the uncertainty about Olmert’s future had made their task of trying to strike some kind of an outline peace deal this year even harder.

The political crisis could trigger an early Israeli election and derail the peace talks, Israeli, Palestinian and Western officials say. Olmert says he will resign if indicted.

Olmert met in Jerusalem on Monday with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who has been politically weakened by the takeover of the Gaza Strip by Hamas Islamists last June.

Officials said Olmert’s strategy was to push ahead with negotiations with the Palestinians, as well as indirect talks with Syria, as if nothing has changed, in the hope the police investigation does not end in charges against him.

“This process will continue,” Olmert’s spokesman, Mark Regev said of the talks with the Palestinians. The talks have shown few visible signs of progress, leading to deep scepticism among Israelis and Palestinians that they are going anywhere.

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino acknowledged that the corruption scandal has garnered heavy media attention, but said, “our focus hasn’t been on that ... President Bush has to keep his focus on the big picture.”

Before leaving Israel, Olmert said that while in Washington he would discuss issues at the core of Israel’s existence, an allusion to Iran’s uranium enrichment programme, which he has termed a threat to the Jewish state’s survival.

The United States accuses Iran of pursuing atomic weapons under cover of its civil nuclear program. Iran denies this and has said its nuclear program is to generate electricity.

Rice argued for increasing international pressure on Iran, which faces three UN Security Council sanctions resolutions over its nuclear programme.

—Reuters

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