Former US president Jimmy Carter met Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal in Damascus on Friday for talks expected to focus on ways to include the Islamist group in efforts to achieve Palestinian-Israeli peace.
High-level Hamas members also attended the meeting, at which Carter would also raise with Meshaal the fate of an Israeli soldier captured by Hamas, according to a source familiar with the agenda. Carter, who is on a Middle East tour to hear views on solving the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, earlier met Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Carter's meeting with Meshaal is one of the highest profile encounters between the group and a Western figure.
Previous efforts to broker a prisoner exchange deal between Hamas and Israel involving the soldier, who was captured by Palestinian fighters in a 2006 raid on Israeli territory, have floundered. "Carter is very upbeat. The publicity put out by his detractors made him more determined to pursue a different way with Hamas. Hrts to end the soldier's saga," the source said.
In a proposal passed to Carter this week, an Israeli cabinet minister offered to meet the leadership of Hamas to ask for the release of a soldier held in Gaza - a move which would contravene official Israeli government policy.
Carter, 83, who brokered the 1979 peace treaty between Israel and Egypt when he was president, met two senior Hamas officials in Cairo on Thursday after Israel refused him permission to enter the Gaza Strip, where they live.
Carter said the Hamas leaders he had met in Cairo told him they would accept a peace agreement with Israel negotiated by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, leader of the rival Fatah faction, if the Palestinians approved it in a referendum.
But one of them, Mahmoud al-Zahar, wrote this week that a peace process could not start until Israel withdrew from all the land it occupied in the 1967 war, ended its military presence in the West Bank and Gaza, dismantled all settlements, repudiated its annexation of Arab East Jerusalem, released all prisoners and ended its air, sea and land "blockade" of Palestinian land.
"Given what we have lost, it is the only basis by which we can start to be whole again," Zahar wrote in an article published by the Washington Post this week. Palestinian political commentator Ali Badwan said Carter's meetings with Hamas could help erode a US-led drive to isolate the group, which has refused to abandon armed struggle and recognise past Israeli-Palestinian peace agreements.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert did not meet Carter during his visit to Israel and Washington criticised him for his contacts with Hamas, which both regard as a terrorist group.
Hamas says it is a legitimate resistance group fighting Israeli occupation. Carter said Hamas, which won Palestinian parliamentary elections in 2006, must be involved in any arrangements that could lead to peace. Carter has expressed sympathy for the Palestinians during his tour, calling the blockade of Gaza a crime and an atrocity. He is accompanied by his wife and son as well as ex-Congressman Stephen Solarz, who supported Israel strongly during his 18 years in Congress.
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