Bush begins visit to Middle East

Israeli and Palestinian leaders agreed to begin tackling the core issues of a final peace agreement in a last-minute push to breathe life into stalled negotiations before US president George Bush's arrival in the Middle East today.

Israeli and Palestinian leaders agreed to begin tackling the core issues of a final peace agreement in a last-minute push to breathe life into stalled negotiations before US president George Bush's arrival in the Middle East today.

The renewed peace talks, formally launched at a US-hosted conference in November, are a centrepiece of Mr Bush's agenda in his last year of office.

Negotiations have made little headway however, marred by Israeli building plans in disputed territory and Palestinian militant attacks in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Mr Bush hopes in the three-day visit to get peace talks back on track.

At the November peace conference in Annapolis, Maryland, Israel and the Palestinians pledged to reach a final agreement by the end of the year, before Bush left office.

Israeli vice premier Haim Ramon said today the sides were belatedly beginning to discuss the most contentious subjects, and that he believed Mr Bush's visit would help the sides reach an agreement.

"I am happy that we are beginning to talk on the subjects that perhaps we should have begun to talk about earlier," Mr Ramon told Army Radio.

"Both sides relate to his (Mr Bush's) requests and his wishes and his visit will certainly accelerate the talks."

Israel was making the final touches on the preparations for the Bush visit, deploying about 10,000 police in Jerusalem, employing refuse collectors in the holy city and rolling out red carpets at the airport.

Aides to Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert met overnight to outline Israel's "red lines" in the negotiations with the Palestinians that Mr Olmert will present to Mr Bush in their meeting later today, Army Radio reported.

At yesterday's meeting between Mr Olmert and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, the sides pledged to move beyond their recent disputes and have negotiators begin work immediately on the so-called final status issues.

These issues include the final borders between Israel and a future Palestine, completing claims to the holy city of Jerusalem, the fate of millions of Palestinian refugees and Israeli security concerns.

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, who attended yesterday's talks, said the meeting was "serious and in-depth", and confirmed the two leaders told negotiators to begin talking about core issues.

"The president (Abbas) urged that the year of 2008 be a year of peace," he said.

At Annapolis, Mr Olmert and Mr Abbas pledged to begin work immediately on the big issues, but negotiations have hit a number of snags.

The Palestinians are furious about Israeli plans to build new housing in east Jerusalem and the West Bank - areas captured by Israel in the 1967 war and claimed by the Palestinians for their future state.

Israel, for its part, has demanded that Palestinian forces do more to rein in militants in the West Bank. Since Mr Olmert and Mr Abbas last met, two Israelis were killed in the West Bank, and Israeli security forces say members of Mr Abbas' Fatah movement were responsible.

US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, who will be accompanying Mr Bush, called for the Israelis and the Palestinians to move quickly.

"We do expect both sides to act with urgency, we do expect the negotiations to move forward, we do expect both sides to live up to their obligations," she told Israel's Channel 10 TV.

"The Palestinians need to do everything they can to fight terror. Israel frankly needs to look at its road map obligations and to do nothing that would prejudge the final status agreement."

The US-backed "road map" peace plan requires Israel to freeze settlement construction and the Palestinians to crack down on militants.

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