http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/29/world ... deast.html
Israel Says Egypt Sends Weapons to Abbas’s Forces, With Israeli and U.S. Approval
Sebastian Scheiner/Associated Press
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel prepared to speak during a graduation ceremony for Israeli Army pilots near Beersheba.
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By STEVEN ERLANGER
Published: December 29, 2006
JERUSALEM, Dec. 28 — After coordination with Israel and the United States, Egypt has sent weapons and ammunition into the Gaza Strip to forces loyal to the Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah, Israeli officials said Thursday.
Senior Palestinian officials, including Mr. Abbas’s spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, denied the report. Mr. Abu Rudeineh called it “Israeli propaganda aimed at aggravating the situation between Fatah and Hamas.”
But Israeli officials knowledgeable about the shipment confirmed a report in the daily Haaretz that Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had approved the shipment in his meeting Saturday evening with Mr. Abbas.
They said four trucks with 2,000 automatic rifles, 20,000 ammunition clips and two million bullets had passed from Egypt through the Israeli-controlled Kerem Shalom crossing, where Gaza, Israel and Egypt meet. The shipment was turned over to Mr. Abbas’s Presidential Guard at the Karni crossing between Gaza and Israel, the officials said.
Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, a cabinet member and former defense minister, told Israeli Army Radio that the weapons were intended to give Mr. Abbas “the capability to hold his own against those organizations that are trying to spoil everything.”
That was apparently a reference to Hamas, the militant faction that gained control of the Palestinian government by winning parliamentary elections in January. Hamas refuses to recognize Israel’s right to exist and rejects previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements that call for a permanent two-state solution.
American officials were circumspect but said various moves to support Mr. Abbas’s forces were taking place, including the provision of money for training the Presidential Guard and Israeli approval for the return to the Palestinian territories of a thousand or so well-trained but aging Fatah fighters, the Badr Brigade of the Palestine Liberation Organization. They have been barred from returning and are living in Jordan.
The Bush administration is seeking Congressional support for up to $100 million, mostly for salaries and training, to strengthen Mr. Abbas and his security forces and extend their control over the Gaza crossing points.
A senior American official who deals with the Palestinians insisted that the point was not to promote civil war with Hamas, but to help Mr. Abbas and Fatah and “to provide deterrence and balance” in Gaza, where Hamas is especially strong.
The arms shipment is part of a broader American and Israeli effort, in coordination with moderate Arab countries like Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, to strengthen Mr. Abbas, weaken Hamas and show some movement on the stalled issue of Israeli-Palestinian peace.
At his meeting Saturday with Mr. Abbas, Mr. Olmert also promised to eliminate some West Bank checkpoints and turn over to Mr. Abbas $100 million of the roughly $500 million that the Israelis have collected for the Palestinians but have refused to turn over since Hamas took power.
But officials involved consider their efforts something short of a plan. That, they say, is because Fatah remains weak, Mr. Abbas is unpredictable and too wedded to the Fatah old guard, and conditions are not ripe for a major effort to reach a comprehensive settlement.
Still, the officials say, given the problems of the region — the American difficulties in Iraq, the growing influence of Iran, Israel’s summer war with Iranian- and Syrian-backed Hezbollah in southern Lebanon and Hamas’s sway over Gaza — efforts are needed to alter the status quo and promote moderate Palestinian political goals.
“The most important thing for us is to get a process going between Abbas and the Israelis,” the American official said. “If the Palestinians end up with a consensus supporting Hamas, you push off any real peace process for a long, long time. If they opt for this kind of unity, fine, but then there is nothing we can do for them, and there will be no Palestinian state, and it’s not a good outcome.”
Mr. Abbas has called for early presidential and parliamentary elections, which Hamas opposes. The Americans were pleased by his call, though they would have liked him to have confronted Hamas six months ago, the official said.
“The longer that goes by, the harder it is for him,” the official said. “We’ve been trying to explain to him that every option is risky now but that the status quo also has its downside. Doing nothing and getting weaker does not help.”
The Israeli foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, in essence has been suggesting talks with Mr. Abbas that would result in a Palestinian state with temporary borders — effectively the second stage of the moribund peace plan known as the road map — with Israel pulling back in the West Bank to the current route of the separation barrier it is building there.
In an interview in Haaretz’s weekend magazine, she talked gingerly about “a detailed operative plan” to negotiate with Mr. Abbas, ideas she has discussed with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Abbas aides. “My vision says that the two-nation-state principle is not only an Israeli gift to the Palestinians but advances Israeli interests,” she said.
Mr. Olmert does not like grandstanding by his cabinet ministers, and some aides were dismissive about the notion of a new plan. But Mr. Olmert largely shares Ms. Livni’s thesis: that Israel, the West and moderate Arab countries want Mr. Abbas and Fatah, whatever their weaknesses, to win out over Hamas, a Foreign Ministry official said.
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Instead of using the weapons against israel,he uses against fellow muslims.
Mahmud Abbas is Munafiq ibn munafiq...
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