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With 10 months left in office, Bush will hold talks with Abbas in the face of deep skepticism over the chances for securing a Middle East peace deal before the
Abbas, weakened by Hamas' takeover of the Gaza Strip in June, was expected to seek stepped-up
Negotiations between Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert have yielded little progress since a U.S.-sponsored conference in
The administration now appears to be picking up the pace of
In White House talks on Wednesday, aides to
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is going to the region ahead of Bush, who is looking to shape a foreign policy legacy that encompasses more than the unpopular war in
Abbas, speaking late on Wednesday to the Arab community in
"I would like to reiterate, despite those gaps my commitment to achieving a peace agreement."
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SETTLEMENTS A MAJOR IMPEDIMENT
"Settlements are the most important obstacle to the peace process," Abbas said. I call upon Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to halt settlement activities." He added that the Bush administration had shown seriousness in trying to resolve the conflict.
In the months since Bush shepherded the formal resumption of peace talks, there has been little if any narrowing of differences over key issues such as borders, the fate of Palestinian refugees and the status of
"The gaps between the two sides on the core issues are deep," chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said, recounting what Abbas told Rice on Wednesday.
The atmosphere has been further clouded by Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank and outbreaks of violence in and around
Critics had accused Bush, who disdained predecessor Bill Clinton's failed hands-on peace effort at the end of his presidency, of neglecting the Middle East conflict and they say he still has not deployed
Also uncertain is whether Abbas and Olmert, who heads a shaky ruling coalition, have enough clout to close a deal. Bush wants to boost Abbas, a moderate who governs only in the West Bank since Hamas seized control of
Insisting Bush's strategy of isolating Hamas was counterproductive, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter met the group's leaders in
Hoping to show Palestinians the fruits of peacemaking, Abbas wants
Abbas' aides say there is concern not only that a failure of Bush's peace effort would weaken the Palestinian leader and strengthen Islamist rivals, but that any momentum toward a deal would be lost at the start of a new U.S. administration.
For his part, Olmert has made clear he prefers a vaguer list of "understandings" with the Palestinians.