Home>News Center>World
         
 

Israeli PM Sharon quits Likud to pursue peacemaking
(AP)
Updated: 2005-11-22 08:39

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Monday he gambled and broke away from his hardline Likud Party because he did not want to squander peacemaking opportunities created by Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip or waste time with political wrangling.

Sharon, whose split from Likud electrified Israeli politics and set the stage for likely March elections, ruled out unilateral withdrawals from the West Bank, however. He also said he remains committed to the internationally backed "road map" plan, which calls for a negotiated peace deal culminating in a Palestinian state.

"There is no additional disengagement plan," he told a televised news conference, referring to the summer's Gaza withdrawal. "There is the road map."

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon speaks during a news conference at his office in Jerusalem on November 21, 2005.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon speaks during a news conference at his office in Jerusalem on November 21, 2005. [Reuters]
Sharon's decision to form a new party he described as "liberal" cemented his transformation from the hawkish patron of Israel's settler movement to a moderate peacemaker reconciled to the inevitability of a Palestinian state.

Weekend polls indicated Sharon, Israel's most popular politician, could marshal enough support to return to the prime minister's office for a third term at the head of a moderate coalition.

Palestinians said the developments created new prospects for peacemaking, which ground to a halt during five years of violence.

"I believe this is an eruption of an Israeli political volcano, and I hope that when the dust settles, we will have a partner in Israel to go toward ... a final arrangement," said Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat.

Sharon said he turned his back on former Likud allies who opposed his Gaza withdrawal because life within the party had become "insufferable."

"The Likud in its present configuration cannot lead the nation to its goals," said Sharon, the first sitting Israeli prime minister to quit his party.

The Gaza pullout created a "historic opportunity," he said. "I will not allow anyone to squander it."

Four small settlements in the northern West Bank were also evacuated along with Gaza, and Sharon said, as he has in the past, that additional West Bank settlements would be dismantled under a final peace deal.

But he reiterated that Israel would hold on to major settlement blocs in the West Bank where most of Israel's 235,000 settlers live, and demanded that Palestinians disarm militant groups.
Page: 12



Ukraine marks 'orange revolution' anniversary
Merkel named first female chancellor in Germany
Anti-nuclear protesters in Germany
 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

CPC not pursuing a road of tyranny - scholar

 

   
 

Harbin cuts water supply for pollution fear

 

   
 

China confirmed three new bird flu outbreaks

 

   
 

Ministry denies ordering Japan bullet trains

 

   
 

Japan LDP seeks to lift ban on having military

 

   
 

China may revise 'green card' procedures

 

   
  US, partners end North Korea nuke project
   
  Iran president confirms retaliation if sent to UN
   
  EU investigator seeks data on CIA planes
   
  Suicide bomber kills 21 in Iraq; 3 GIs die
   
  Suspect in Bush assassination plot convicted
   
  UN: More hungry in Africa than in '90s
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Sharon's Likud loses in local elections
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement