'Bush’s speech will raise the level of violence'
UN | 26.06.2002 11:23
-- Ahmed Tibi, Israeli-Arab legislator and former adviser to Yasser Arafat.
"The mouth was President Bush’s but the hand that wrote the speech was Ariel Sharon’s hand … If the last two years killed the Oslo Accords, President Bush’s speech buries it in the annals of history. "
-- Israeli political commentator Nahum Barnea in Yediot Ahronot, Israel’s largest newspaper.
"The totally unbalanced speech will only complicate the situation. From this perspective, Bush’s speech may have been a huge step for Ariel Sharon, but apparently a very small step for the chances for peace."
-- Israeli political commentator Hemi Shalev in the Israeli newspaper Maariv.
"The Arab world will not sleep tonight … He practically demanded the removal of Arafat, the symbol of Palestinian unity … The Palestinians have elected Arafat and they will elect him again. If the Palestinians re-elect Arafat, are they going to be punished?"
-- Mohamed el-Sayed Said, Washington bureau chief for the Egyptian daily Al-Ahram.
"The American president apparently understands what we know well: a Palestinian state in the current conditions will be quickly defined as a terror state and the United States itself will be forced to include it on its list of states that support terrorism."
-- Israeli cabinet minister Dan Naveh.
"Potentially a major leap forward in US Middle East diplomacy … [the speech] put [Mr Bush] firmly on the side of a new and very different Middle East, one with democracy at its core."
-- Wall Street Journal.
"The Israelis and Palestinians need a road map in which a concession by one will be followed by a concession from the other. On this point, yesterday’s speech left much to be desired."
-- New York Times.
UN