Lebanese opposition leader Walid Junblatt said Sunday his organization would not ask Hizbullah to disarm at the present time. The comments came following a surprise meeting with Hizbullah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut . Nasrallah and Junblatt are on opposite sides of the political spectrum in Lebanon. Junblatt heads the opposition against Syrian presence in Lebanon, whereas Nasrallah, who organized a mass rally of support in the capital of Beirut two weeks ago, heads the camp supporting Syrian presence. And whereas Hizbullah rejects Israel's 2000 pullout from south Lebanon because it didn't include the Mount Dov area, two weeks ago Junblatt said the region is not Lebanese or Syrian land. But Jumblatt seems to have moved towards Nasrallah on several key points. He rejected Sunday the disarming of Hizbullah "at this sensitive time," specifically refusing to discuss the question "as long as Israel occupies Lebanese land." Syria-friendly gov't Junblatt also rejected the notion of setting up a government that would be hostile to Hizbullah and Syria and noted that Syrian forces have already began withdrawing from Lebanon and by so doing are completing one of the oppositions' demands. "We shall not be led by the route of the American work plans, that would achieve Israeli ambitions," added Junblatt. On the relationship between Syria and Lebanon Junblatt noted that they would turn a new leaf in the relations between them, as the countries have no natural hostilities. Junblatt concluded by saying he had refrained from meeting with Nasrallah in the past even though he had been invited. He explained this by saying he had feared for Nasrallah's safety, which he called Lebanon's security.