For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
October 20, 2005
President Welcomes Palestinian President Abbas to the White House
The Rose Garden
In Focus: The Road Map to Peace
10:57 A.M. EDT
PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you all, thanks. It's my honor to welcome the
democratically elected leader of the Palestinian Authority to the White
House for the second time this year. We just had some good talks. Mr.
President, thanks. A good, open, exchange of ideas.
President Abbas is a man devoted to peace and to his people's
aspirations for a state of their own. And today the Palestinian people
are closer to realizing those aspirations. It's a really interesting
period of history, I think. I was just commenting to the President when
we were in the Oval Office how much things have changed in the Holy
Land. After all, he got elected in January; there were successful
Palestinian municipal elections, and then we witnessed the completion of
Israel's disengagement from Gaza and parts of the West Bank. It's been
an eventful year.
And I say it's an eventful year because the ultimate objective is there
-- for there to be two states, living side-by-side in peace; two
democracies living side-by-side in peace. And I believe that's where
we're headed. Israel's withdrawal from Gaza and parts of West Bank was
a bold decision, with historic significance. President Abbas and the
Palestinian Authority contributed to the success of the withdrawal in
significant ways. Mr. President, thank you.
Through the active coordination and ground-level cooperation between
Israeli and Palestinian security forces, the disengagement has been
completed successfully and calmly. Israeli withdrawal creates new
opportunities, creates responsibilities for the Palestinian people.
The way forward must begin by confronting the threat that armed gangs
pose to a genuinely democratic Palestine. And those armed gangs must
confront the threat that armed gangs pose to lasting peace between the
Israelis and the Palestinians.
Now, Mr. President, you ran on a platform of peace. That's why the
people voted for you. I strongly support your rejection of terror and
your commitment to what you have called one authority, one law, and one
gun. The United States, in cooperation with the international
community, has helped you achieve this through the efforts of our senior
U.S. security coordinator, General Kip Ward. I appreciate your service,
General Ward. Thank you for being here, and thank you for all your hard
work to help the Palestinian security forces at a critical time. Job
well done.
In the coming days, I'll be naming our new coordinator to build on the
progress General Ward has made. This person will take on an enhanced
mission to help President Abbas and the Palestinian Authority carry out
their responsibility to end terror attacks, dismantle terrorist
infrastructure, maintain law and order, and, one day, provide security
for their own state.
The way forward must include rebuilding the Palestinian economy. This
goal has the support of the Quartet: the United States, the United
Nations, the European Union, and Russia. Quartet Special Envoy Jim
Wolfensohn is coordinating a broad effort to generate economic and
financial support from the international community for the Palestinian
Authority, and he's doing a good job. I'm going to continue to consult
with our Quartet partners to ask Jim to extend his mission until next
spring.
It's important that we make quick progress on the issues that Jim has
identified as most critical for the Palestinian economy, including
opening the Rafah crossing, connecting the West Bank in Gaza, improving
the ability of Palestinians to travel in the West Bank, and beginning
work on the Gaza seaport. These are all practical steps that will help
the Palestinian economy grow and flourish. I believe that Arab states
have a particular responsibility to help the Palestinians build a strong
and prosperous economy, and I urge them to create an environment in the
region that strengthens the possibility of peace.
The way forward must continue to include democratic elections. The
upcoming elections for the Palestinian Legislative Council offer an
opportunity to open the door to the next generation of Palestinian
leaders. They'll be responsible for building a peaceful and hopeful
future for their country.
In the short-term, the Palestinian Authority must earn the confidence of
its peoples, by holding elections and having a functioning government
that delivers economic opportunity. The Palestinian Authority must also
earn the confidence of its neighbors by rejecting and fighting
terrorism.
As I have stated in the past, achieving peace demands action from all
parties. Israel must continue to work with Palestinian leaders to help
improve the daily lives of Palestinians. At the same time, Israel
should not undertake any activity that contravenes its road map
obligations, or prejudices the final status negotiations with regard to
Gaza, the West Bank, and Jerusalem. This means that Israel must remove
unauthorized posts and stop settlement expansion. It also means that
the barrier now being built to protect Israelis from terrorist attacks
must be a security barrier, rather than a political barrier. Israeli
leaders must take into account the impact this security barrier has on
Palestinians not engaged in terrorist activities.
This is a time of great possibility in the Middle East. And the people
of the region are counting on their leaders to seize the opportunities
for peace and progress. This work isn't going to be easy, but the path
forward is clear. I want to thank President Abbas for his hard work. I
appreciate your service, Mr. President. I assured him that the United
States will use our influence to help realize a shared vision of two
democratic states, Israel and Palestine, living side-by-side in peace
and security.
Welcome.
PRESIDENT ABBAS: (As translated.) Thank you. Mr. President, I would
like to thank you for your warm welcome, and I would like to express my
satisfaction with the talks that I conducted with you and your senior
aides.
You have emphasized, Mr. President, from this place, about five months
ago, the basic counters for the U.S. position regarding the various
aspects of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. This position, which you
have reiterated today, contributes fundamentally to advance the chances
of reviving and resuming the peace process in the region.
In the last few months, the dismantling of settlements and the
withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip was concluded. The
Palestinian Authority have worked very hard with all its energy, in
order to make sure that this will happen without any incident, in order
to have this as a window of an opportunity that will help us to move
faster toward achieving additional steps on the way toward realizing
just peace, based on your vision and on international resolutions.
This window, Mr. President, must remain open. And this opportunity must
be strengthened through resolving all the outstanding issues -- as you
have mentioned, the Gaza crossing point and the establishment of a
permanent link between Gaza and the West Bank. At the same time, we
must immediately start implementing what the road map and the Sharm
el-Sheikh agreements regarding the cessation of settlement activities
and construction of the wall in the West Bank, particularly in
Jerusalem, in addition to withdrawal of the Israeli forces to positions
prior to September 28, 2000.
With the removal of the roadblocks, which, unfortunately, turned the
lives of Palestinians into hardship, suffering, humiliation, and also a
very important sensitive issue, which is the release of prisoners of
freedom from Israeli jails. The implementation of these requirements,
Mr. President, represents urging the talks on permanent status issues
regarding Jerusalem, refugees, settlements, borders, in order to reach,
at the end, peace, which would allow for the establishment of an
independent, democratic Palestinian state, on all the territories
occupied in 1967. That state that would live in a good, neighborly
relationship in peace with the state of Israel.
Mr. President, there is approximately 100 days between us and the
elections for our legislative council, where the Palestinian people
would go to the ballot box to elect for the first time since their --
for the first time in 10 years their representatives. This, for us,
represents a very important landmark. On one hand, it comes a whole
year since I assumed office, and also these elections would represent a
renewal process, rebuilding process of our political process.
Also, these elections would consolidate and reinforce the slogan I ran
on during my presidential election, which emphasized clearly the one
authority, the one law, the one legal, legitimate law and political
pluralism. The new legislative council would be mandated by the people
to legislate and issue these slogans and make them a reality.
Once again, we repeat our pride of our democratic experience that has
been undertaken by the Palestinian people, and we repeat and we say that
democracy can lose a lot of its momentum in the absence of freedom and
with the continuation of occupation.
Mr. President, our discussions today have allowed us to inform you of
what the Palestinian National Authority is doing and what we are doing
in terms of various policies in various spheres. We have worked and we
will continue to work to continue to ensure the calm and maintain it.
We are also intensifying our work in the field of security. We have
taken active steps in imposing the rule of law and public order and
banned armed demonstrations.
Our measures are continuing to reinforce the judiciary branch, as well
as the administrative reform. We have said and we did during the last
week start launching a series of economic projects in the infrastructure
and in health and education and agriculture in both Gaza and the West
Bank.
And here I would like to salute the United States for its contribution,
and also the help that came from a variety of Arab countries and
countries around the world. And we hope that all these projects will be
activated by the donors' countries in order to increase the number of
projects that our people are in need of.
Our discussion of the overall situation in the region has afforded us
the opportunity to point out what we reaffirmed repeatedly through the
past few weeks on behalf of the Palestine Liberation Organization: We
are determined not to interfere in domestic Lebanese affairs. We
reiterate that the Palestinian refugees in Lebanon are subject to the
authority and the laws of Lebanon as temporary guests awaiting the
resolution of the refugee problem in the accordance with the
international resolutions.
Mr. President, we reaffirm again here today our commitment to peace and
negotiated settlement. We expect that our people's quest in this
direction will be supported. The time has come to put an end to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The time has come that the Palestinian
people will attain their freedom and independence. The time has come to
move quickly towards the resumption of permanent status negotiations.
Peace requires a departure from the policies of occupation and the
adoption of the principle of freedom. Peace requires departure from
the policies of settlements construction, the collective punishment,
unilateral acts that undermine your vision toward two states and replace
that with progress towards negotiations. Peace and security cannot be
guaranteed by the construction of walls, by the erection of checkpoints,
and the confiscation of land, but rather by the recognition of rights.
Peace cannot be attained by the enforcement of discriminatory road
policies and by the policies of imposition and creation of facts on the
ground, but rather through belief in the principles of partnership,
parity and mutual respect.
We are presenting, based on wide public support, our positions that call
upon the Israeli side to join us in a real partnership for making peace.
We are calling for a Palestinian-Israeli partnership for the sake of
creating a better future, and for the entire region that can end decades
from wars, occupation, and open the doors wide open. We were promised
peace, independence and freedom, and we hope that all of this will be
achieved.
Mr. President, once again, I thank you, and reaffirm to you, as we did
in our last visit, we are leaving Washington more sure and more
confident of the possibility of reviving and resuming the peace process,
and more determined to forge ahead along with the path of peace,
democracy and freedom. Thank you, Mr. President.
PRESIDENT BUSH: We'll take two questions a side. Terry.
Q Thank you. Mr. President, there are a lot of distractions for your
White House. The CIA leak investigation, a conservative uproar and
congressional criticism over the Harriet Miers nomination, and even
investigations of top Republican leaders in Congress. How preoccupied
is the White House by these problems, and how are you dealing with them?
PRESIDENT BUSH: Well, I've just finished a very constructive dialogue
with the President of the Palestinian Authority, talking about how to
achieve peace.
And I've got a job to do. Part of my job is to work with others to
fashion a world that will be peaceful for future generations. And I've
got a job to do to make sure this economy continues to grow. I've got a
job to make sure that there is a plausible reconstruction plan for
cities affected by Katrina. I've got a job to make sure this hurricane
headed toward Florida is -- the federal response is prepared for it.
So to answer your question -- there's some background noise here, a lot
of chatter, a lot of speculation and opining. But the American people
expect me to do my job, and I'm going to.
Want to call on somebody, Mr. President. Oops. We've better go one at
a time here.
Q President Bush --
PRESIDENT BUSH: Who do you work for?
Q AFP. The road map that your administration backs calls for the
creation of a Palestinian state in the Gaza strip and the West Bank.
Yet, the Israelis' settlement activities, despite your repeated calls,
included today, still continue in the West Bank. What is your
administration planning to do to get Israel to put an end to those
activities?
And then, President Abbas -- (as translated) -- what are the practical
steps that they want Bush -- President Bush to take in order to
establish the Palestinian state before the end of his term?
PRESIDENT BUSH: As I said in my -- in my comments, that we expect all
parties to adhere to the road map. And we are holding people to account
on the pledges that most of the Palestinians and the Israelis have made
on the road map. And we do so publicly and we do so privately.
It's -- a lot of these issues that have been very difficult for a long
period of time become easier to resolve as there's more trust between
the parties. And trust becomes a permanent part of the political
process as action on the ground takes place. The Gaza withdrawal is a
magnificent opportunity to help develop trust. It's an opportunity to
develop trust between the Palestinians and the Israelis. And after all,
the world watched strong cooperation between two willing governments to
help good disengagement of Gaza, which is a -- right now, I guess, we
take it all for granted.
You look back -- I think prior to the disengagement, there was a lot of
consternation, a lot of concern. I suspect some of you might have even
reported that, you know, better watch out, this disengagement could end
up being a very difficult period. And yet thanks to the President's
leadership and Prime Minister Sharon's leadership, the disengagement
worked, which established trust.
Mr. President has got an -- a job, and that's to establish trust with
the Palestinian people. He is a man who said, "I'm running on a peace
platform," and therefore, he has talked to us about using security
forces to make sure that armed gangs don't disrupt the democratic
process. And our job is to help him do that. And so to answer your
question, yes, we hold people to account for their promises made on the
road map. And many of those promises will be easier to keep for all
parties as there's progress on the ground. And we have seen remarkable
progress during the past year.
And there's -- and the progress isn't over this year. There will be
elections. This is a very hopeful period. I'm very upbeat about being
able to achieve this vision. I understand it's hard. Things don't
happen overnight. Old feuds aren't settled immediately. And it takes a
while.
The key thing, as far as I'm concerned, is that there are partners in
peace. Prime Minister Sharon wants there to be peace. President Abbas
wants there to be peace. And both men are showing strong leadership
toward achieving that objective. And that's why I'm confident. I'm a
heck of a lot more confident today than when -- I was when I first came
into office. I know it's nearly five years ago, and that's an eternity
for some, but there has been remarkable progress in this part of the
world. And we'll continue to work with the parties to achieve this
important objective: two democratic states living side-by-side in
peace.
PRESIDENT ABBAS: (As translated.) Thank you. The truth is, our answer
to that question, we have to change the question: What are we supposed
to do -- as Palestinians and Israelis -- to do.
First of all, we have to work. We have to do our part. We have to
think as partners. So many years passed by, more than four years we did
not have any dialogue. We did not have any talks. And now we have
confidence. We need to rebuild and build on that confidence and on the
relationship.
And on our side, we are extending our hand to be true partners in the
peace process, and we hope that the Israeli side also will do the same,
so we can do our parts. And what we ask President Bush to do is what he
mentioned during his remarks, the road map and the achievement and the
realization of his vision. The road map talks about settlements, about
the barrier; all these issues that will facilitate the road to achieving
true peace, and will facilitate building the confidence between the two
peoples, the Israelis and the Palestinians.
PRESIDENT BUSH: Steve.
Q Thanks very much, sir. Senator Specter called the rollout of the
Miers nomination "chaotic." Is that a fair criticism? Are you
satisfied with the way the nomination has been handled? Would you be
willing to release any more documents about her if it would help?
PRESIDENT BUSH: First of all, it's an unusual nomination because she's
never been a judge. And so, generally, people are used to looking at
different court opinions and how one ruled on this case, or how one
ruled on that case. That's not the case with Harriet.
I picked Harriet for a lot of reasons. One reason was because she had
never been a judge. I thought it made a lot of sense to bring a fresh
outlook of somebody who has actually been a very successful attorney --
and not only a successful attorney, but been a pioneer for women lawyers
in Texas. I remind you that she was one of the top 50 women lawyers in
the United States; she's consistently ranked that way. And so this is a
little different process than the norm. I understand that.
Secondly, the questionnaire that she filled out is an important
questionnaire, and obviously they will address the questions that the
senators have in the questionnaire -- or as a result of the answers to
the questions in the questionnaire. But one thing the questionnaire
does show -- if people look at it carefully -- is Harriet's judicial
philosophy. And it's the main reason I picked her to serve on the
bench, if confirmed, and that is that she is not going to legislate from
the bench. She will strictly interpret the Constitution.
I said that when I ran for President -- I said, if you elect me, I will
name people that will have that judicial philosophy. I've now had two
chances -- one, John Roberts, and now Harriet Miers. And they share the
same judicial philosophy. That's what the questionnaire says.
And so Harriet will answer all the questions asked, and -- but out of
this will come a clear picture of a competent, strong, capable woman who
shares the same judicial philosophy that I share.
Do you want to call on somebody, Mr. President?
Q Thank you, President Abbas. As President Bush referred and said,
that the only way to achieve progress and the peace road is combating
armed gangs. And you are facing difficulties in doing this. Are you
going to seek help and support from American President George Bush, to
help you in disarming the resistance movements?
And, President, you say you wanted to see the Palestinian state made
before the end of your presidency. Are you still hoping to see
something like that? This is number one. Number two, don't you think
the time has come to talk about timetables to get the two parties to the
issues of final status negotiations?
PRESIDENT ABBAS: (As translated.) Regarding your questions, I am
saying that we are truly in need of help from the United States in a
variety of issues -- economic issues, and financial issues, and also
security support. And the reason is having General Ward among us, a man
who has done a magnificent job, and we appreciate him and appreciate his
work very much.
Regarding our internal issues, we are following a policy. I believe it
is a successful policy. When we started and we asked everyone to accept
the hudna, or the calming, all the organizations that are recognized
accepted that. Then we moved into another phase, and that is the phase
of banning all public demonstrations with fire arms. All groups
accepted that.
Now, all groups are underway to the electoral process, so all groups
will become a part of the political Palestinian fabric. I believe this
will create a new phase in the life of Palestinian people. It's a phase
of democracy and pluralism in full fledge in order to be a solid base
for peace in the region.
PRESIDENT BUSH: I believe that two democratic states living
side-by-side in peace is possible. I can't tell you when it's going to
happen. It's happening. And the reason I can't is because there will
be moments of progress, and there will be moments of setback. The key
is to keep moving forward, is to have partners in peace to move forward.
But one thing that will not happen is that we will try -- the United
States will try to conform and force parties to make decisions based
upon the political schedule in America. That doesn't make any sense.
What matters is the decisions made by the Palestinians and the Israelis,
and the confidence earned as we move forward.
And so you said I would like to see two states before I get out of
office." Not true. I'd like to see two states. And if it happens
before I get out of office, I'll be there to witness the ceremony. And
if it hadn't -- if it doesn't, we will work hard to lay that foundation
so that the process becomes irreversible.
Timetables are interesting -- an interesting thing. Everybody wants a
timetable, it seems like, on different issues. And these are very
complicated matters where years of conflict and years of mistrust are
being resolved by some basic truths. And one of the basic truths is
free societies are peaceful societies. And so we can look forward to
working with a partner in peace, a person who said, vote for me, I'm for
peace, and a man who declares his understanding that the Palestinian
people, the long-suffering Palestinian people, will be well served by a
democracy, a truly functioning democracy.
And so, Mr. President, we're glad you're back. I want to thank you for
your strong leadership, and we wish you all the very best. Thank you,
sir. Appreciate you.
END 11:27 A.M. EDT
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