Bush says he's hopeful for democratic reform in Middle East

(Video)US president urges Arab leaders meeting in Egypt to 'move past old resentments against Israel and invest aggressively in the Palestinians'. Abbas to Bush: Your Knesset speech angered us
News agencies |
VIDEO - SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt - At the start of his Mideast trip, US President George W. Bush gave Israel glowing praise. As it ended on Sunday, the president gave the Arab world a stern lecture: Isolate state sponsors of terror and give citizens more freedoms.
"Too often in the Middle East, politics has consisted of one leader in power and the opposition in jail," Bush said at the World Economic Forum on the Middle East. "The time has come for nations across the Middle East to abandon these practices, and treat their people with the dignity and respect they deserve."
Bush's address to hundreds of global policymakers and business leaders gathered in this Red Sea beach town was his finishing touch on a five-day Mideast trip to Egypt ,Israel and Saudi Arabia.
The speech, and Bush's second Mideast trip of the year, came eight months before the end of his presidency, his target date for reaching a sweeping peace agreement that would resolve generations-old grievances and create a Palestinian state.
Video courtesy of infolive.tv
The president counseled Arab states to "move past their old resentments against Israel" and "invest aggressively" in the Palestinian people, what he views as their role in the process. In contrast, many Arabs think Bush leans too far Israel's way in the long-running Mideast dispute, and that Washington doesn't push Israel hard enough to give way on issues that anger Palestinians and stymie a deal.

'We said speech was disappointing'

Bush has tried to counter that by talking more about the Palestinians' plight while here in Egypt than he did in Israel. He also offered plenty of praise for democratic advances, naming countries like Turkey, Afghanistan, Iraq, Morocco and Jordan.
"The light of liberty is beginning to shine," he said. Bush's address was meant by the White House as the twin to president's speech Thursday before the Knesset, the Israeli parliament.
In that speech, Bush showered Israel with praise, strongly reiterated its right to defend itself and only gently urged leaders to "Make the hard choices necessary," without mention of concrete steps. He did not mention the Palestinians' plight; he spoke of them only in one sentence saying that Israel's 120th anniversary - in 2068 - would see it neighboring an independent Palestinian state.
Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas said on Sunday that Bush's speech to Israel's parliament had angered Palestinians, the official MENA news agency reported.
Abbas told Bush directly about his concerns with the Knesset speech when the two met on Saturday at the Egyptian resort, according to Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat.
"We said that it was disappointing, and a missed opportunity, because you (Bush) could have said that the Palestinian people should have their freedom and independence in order to achieve peace in the entire area," he said.
Erekat said Bush responded in the private meeting by saying he was the first American president to endorse an independent Palestinian state and that he would spare no efforts to achieve the goal.
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