His Majesty King Abdullah II
His Majesty
King Abdullah II Interview with Director of Agence France-Presse Randa Habib
May 16, 2009
Amman, Jordan
AFP: Your Majesty, you stressed
during your latest visit to Washington that peace in the Middle East will not be
achieved without American intervention and that the Israelis and Palestinians"
will not achieve results" on their own. What type of American intervention is
required?
HM KING ABDULLAH: Many years have passed without the peace process achieving the
desired results - and that is comprehensive peace that ensures real security and
stability in the region and that responds to the Palestinian people's rights to
freedom and to the establishment of their independent state on their national
soil, that restores all occupied Arab lands and that realises acceptance and
security for Israel, in accordance with the Arab Peace Initiative.
What we need now is serious and direct negotiations to reach a two-state
solution as part of a comprehensive approach that achieves regional peace. As
you know, I visited Washington last month and conveyed to US President Obama the
position of the Arab states, which are committed to achieving comprehensive
peace on the basis of the Arab Peace Initiative. This initiative is an
unprecedented opportunity to end the conflict and it opens the door for Israel
to build normal ties with all Arab and Muslim states that support the
initiative.
Fifty seven states do not recognise Israel; that's a third of UN member-states.
The reason is the continuation of the occupation and the absence of a peace
settlement. Our only option is comprehensive and lasting peace and a resolution
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on the basis of the two-state solution. This
has international consensus, and that is simply because it is the only way to
resolve the conflict. And Israel has to make choices: does it want to be a
fortress, isolated from the region, or does it want to co-exist with its
neighbours and with all the countries that do not recognise it and achieve
acceptance and real security?
President Obama has announced his commitment to the two-state solution within a
comprehensive approach to achieve comprehensive peace, and it was clear during
my talks with him and members of the US administration that he wants to work
seriously to achieve peace. He also understands the urgency of the situation
today, and understands that procrastination threatens the security of the region
and the world.
We believe that progress towards a solution requires a leading American role and
European, Arab and international support. We expect an announcement from the US
administration - and it has said that a resolution to the conflict is an
American strategic interest - of its plan to re-start negotiations to achieve a
comprehensive solution. And we hope that it will announce this plan as soon as
possible, because lost time undermines the chances for peace. There is a
tremendous need to move quickly, seriously and effectively. Otherwise the
possibilities of a new round of violence, a new war, will increase and the
region and the world will pay the price.
AFP: Your Majesty, you said after your meeting with President Obama last month
that you were comfortable with the US commitment to the two-state solution. Does
that, in your opinion, close the door to the idea of the alternative homeland?
HM KING ABDULLAH: In our dictionary there is no such thing as the alternative
homeland. There is not even a door to open as far as it concerns this issue, and
Jordan is able to resist having something imposed upon it. The solution to the
conflict lies in an end to the occupation and in the establishment of an
independent Palestinian state on national Palestinian soil. Anyone who thinks
otherwise is fantasizing. Peace will not be achieved in this region unless the
Palestinians gain their right to statehood, and Israel will not achieve real
security unless the Palestinian people also achieve security and a decent life
in an independent state. Israel should know that security cannot be achieved by
walls, blockades and armies. Real security is achieved through peace and
acceptance, and this is dependent on the restoration on Arab rights, especially
Palestinian rights, through direct negotiations that should start immediately
and according to a clear plan to achieve the desired results.
AFP: Does Your Majesty have any hope that the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is serious about the peace process, especially after his statements
about the need to recognise Israel as a Jewish state?
HM KING ABDULLAH: I met Netanyahu two days ago, and we had a clear and direct
discussion about the need to move, to work seriously and to commit to achieving
the peace that is needed by the region and the world. The security of the region
is threatened if there are no serious efforts to end the conflict. Israel has to
stop building settlements and to lift the blockade and end the siege on the
Palestinians. It also has to stop unilateral actions that threaten Jerusalem,
its holy sites, its identity and its Muslim and Christian residents. It should
enter into real negotiations to achieve the two-state solution as soon as
possible and within a specific time frame. Israel now has a chance to live in
peace and achieve acceptance within the region according to the Arab Peace
Initiative, and it must choose between this and continued isolation within the
region and bearing responsibility for continued conflict and the threat of war.
AFP: When the Arab Peace Initiative was launched, Israel accepted it with some
reservations but Netanyahu did not mention it in Cairo, and Lieberman described
it as dangerous. Are there any intentions to amend the issues pertaining to the
refugees in the initiative?
HM KING ABDULLAH: There is only one Arab Peace Initiative, which is complete and is
an historic opportunity to achieve peace on all tracks: Palestinian, Syrian and
Lebanese, in accordance with a very simple formula: Israel's withdrawal from all
occupied Palestinian, Syrian and Lebanese lands. This is a condition to achieve
normal relations with the Arab states. There is no change to the Arab Peace
Initiative, and there is no need to amend it. Any talk about amending it, is
baseless.
AFP: If we look to the future, how can Israel be integrated into the region.
What can the Arab world do? And what was the reaction of Arab leaders to your
talks with Obama?
HM KING ABDULLAH: The Arab world has done and will do what is required of it. The
Arab states have presented an initiative to achieve comprehensive peace and have
committed to working to achieve that goal in accordance with this initiative,
which corresponds to international consensus about what is necessary to end the
conflict. The Arabs have reiterated this position at every summit since the
announcement of the Arab Peace Initiative at the Beirut summit in 2002. We will
support every effort to achieve this. The whole world knows the path to a
solution, and it knows the choice of the Arabs. Israel today bears
responsibility for continuing the conflict. If Israel wants to integrate into
the region, it has to end the occupation in order to pave the way for the
establishment of a Palestinian state as well as reach peace with Syria and
Lebanon. And Israel will have normal ties with all Arab states. I want to
emphasise here that peace is an Israeli, American, Arab and international
interest, because peace means development. It means a better future, and it
means economic growth and cooperation.
AFP: Does Jordan aspire to be a centre for anti-terrorism training, since it was
also a centre for the training of Iraqi and Palestinian police?
HM KING ABDULLAH: What Jordan wants and strives to achieve is peace for this region
and freedom, security and stability for its people, so that real development can
take off, opening the door to achievement, decent living standards and job
opportunities. Jordan will continue to do everything possible to achieve this.
Terrorism is the enemy of all of us, and fighting it is a joint responsibility.
As for training the Palestinian police, we have always provided all the support
we can to Palestinian institutions in order to build the infrastructure that any
state needs to grow and prosper. We have also always been on the side of
stability and security of Iraq, as well as its territorial integrity and
national unity, and we will provide every support to Iraq, and we will stand by
its people.