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Statement of
Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa at the opening ceremony of the Syrian-Israeli
peace talks
The White House,
Washington D.C, 11 December 2000
Although it's very cold, I prepared a statement, and I would like to thank,
first of all, President Clinton for all the efforts that he exerted with his
Secretary of State and the peace team here in Washington. And also, I what like
to convey the best greetings and wishes from President Assad, and his high
appreciation for the efforts which you and Secretary Albright have exerted for
the resumption of the peace talks between Syria and Israel from the point at
which they stopped in 1996.
Your announcement, Mr. President, was warmly welcomed, both in Syria and in
the Arab world, and its positive echoes resonated in the world at large. That is
because it promises, for the first time, the dawn of a real hope to achieve an
honorable and just peace in the Middle East.
And as you have mentioned in your letter of October 12, 1999 to President
Assad, the issues have crystallized and difficulties defined. That is why if
these talks are to succeed as rapidly as we all desire, no one should ignore
what has been achieved until now, or what still needs to be achieved.
It goes without saying that peace for Syria means the return of all its
occupied land; why, for Israel, peace will mean the end of the psychological
fear which the Israelis have been living in as a result of the existence of
occupation, which is undoubtedly the source of all adversities and wars. Hence,
ending occupation will be balanced for the first time by eliminating the barrier
of fear and anxieties, and exchanging it with a true and mutual feeling of peace
and security. Thus, the peace which the parties are going to reach will be
established on justice and international legitimacy. And thus, peace will be the
only triumphant, after 50 years of struggle.
Those who reject to return the occupied territories to their original owners
in the framework of international legitimacy send a message to the Arabs that
the conflict between Israel and Arabs is a conflict of existence in which
bloodshed can never stop, and not a conflict about borders which can be ended as
soon as parties get their rights, as President Assad has stressed at these
meetings more than once before, and after Madrid peace conference.
We are approaching the moment of truth, as you have said, and there is no
doubt that everyone realizes that a peace agreement between Syria and Israel,
and between Lebanon and Israel, would indeed mean for our region the end of a
history of wars and conflicts, and may well usher in a dialogue of civilization
and an honorable competition in various domains -- the political, cultural,
scientific, and economic.
Peace will certainly pose new questions to all sides, especially for the Arab
side, who will wonder after reviewing the past 50 years, whether the
Arab-Israeli conflict was the one who solely defied the Arab unity, or the one
which frustrated it.
During the last half-century, in particular, the vision of the Arabs and
their sufferings were totally ignored, due to the lack of a media opportunity
for them which conveys their points of view to international opinion. And the
last example of this is what we have witnessing during the last four days of
attempts to muster international sympathy with the few thousand of settlers in
the Golan, ignoring totally more than half a million Syrian people who were
uprooted from tens of villages on the Golan, where their forefathers lived for
thousands of years and their villages were totally wiped out from existence.
The image formulated in the minds of Western people and which formulated in
public opinion was that Syria was the aggressor, and Syria was the one who
shelled settlements from the Golan prior to the 1967 war. These claims carry no
grain of truth in them -- as Moshe Dayan, himself, has explained in his memoirs,
that it was the other side who insisted on provoking the Syrians until they
clashed together and then claimed that the Syrians are the aggressors.
Mr. President, the peace talks between Israel and Syria have been ongoing for
the last eight years, with off and on, of course. We hope that this is going to
be the last resumption of negotiations which will be concluded with a peace
agreement, a peace based on justice and comprehensivity; an honorable peace for
both sides that preserves rights, dignity and sovereignty. Because only
honorable and just peace will be embraced by future generations, and it is the
only peace that shall open new horizons for totally new relations between
peoples of the region.
President Assad has announced many years ago that peace is the strategic
option of Syria. And we hope that peace has become the strategic option for
others today, in order to have or to leave future generations a region that is
not torn with wars, a region whose sky is not polluted by the smell of blood and
destruction.
We all here agree that we are at a threshold of an historic opportunity, an
opportunity for the Arabs and Israelis alike, and for the United States and the
world at large. Therefore, we all have to be objective and show a high sense of
responsibility in order to achieve a just and comprehensive peace, a peace that
has been so long awaited by all the peoples of our region and the world at
large.
Thank you, Mr. President.
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