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REMARKS BY PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU AT STAKEOUT
Q (Asked in Hebrew.)
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: (Answered in Hebrew.)
Q Mr. Prime Minister, can you assess for us the
prospects of actually getting an accord done this weekend?
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: I can't tell you. We come
with the best intentions, and we hope that there will be an accord.
We're asked to give additional territory; we want to ensure that this
territory doesn't become a base and a haven for terrorists to attack
us, as happened before. And therefore, we seek assurances that the
obligations that the Palestinians took upon themselves in the Oslo
Accords will be fulfilled -- chiefly and firstly, the commitment to
fight terrorism in word and deed; in deed, the operational moves that
must be taken against the terrorists; in word, the stopping of the
incitement and the final annulment of the Palestinian Charter that
still calls for our -- destruction through terror.
If there is a willingness and a determination on the
Palestinian side to do this, then I think the chances will be good.
And I hope that that is the case.
Q Are you prepared to leave here without a deal if
your demands are not met? Are you prepared to leave here without a
deal if your demands are not met?
Q (Asked in Hebrew.)
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: (Answered in Hebrew.)
Q (Asked in Hebrew.)
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: (Answered in Hebrew.)
Q Mr. Prime Minister --
Q (Asked in Hebrew.)
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: (Answered in Hebrew.)
Q Mr. Prime Minister, do you think this weekend
negotiations might help change your position on the Palestinian
state?
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: I think the important thing
is to avoid a situation where we don't have an agreed upon procedure
to enter and conclude permanent status negotiations. If we succeed
-- it's an "if," because in order to succeed we need to have our
security interests and the Palestinian obligations on security
fulfilled -- but if this is done, then we'll enter final status
talks, and those final status talks, naturally, each side will have
differences.
We're concerned with the kind of regimes that we see in
our area -- with Iraq, with Iran, with the possibility of having an
allied regime right next to our doorstep. We want to have certain
assurances. This can only be done through negotiations. It can only
be done through the balance of the Palestinians' desire to run their
own lives and our desire to protect our lives. And this must be done
by negotiations.
So rather than deal with the outcome, I think in this
case, when we deal with the final status negotiations, we must deal
with the process, and an agreed upon process that moves us towards
agreement, rather than disagreement and confrontation.
Q In the past two years we've seen the reduction in
major terrorism in terms of bus bombings and so forth -- to your
credit, to Mr. Arafat's credit. What do you -- like the incident
with the guy with the rifle shooting the two Haredim guys -- that
stuff can go on almost indefinitely. How do you -- what do you
expect him to do, how do you deal with that?
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: We have taken a very clear
position against terrorism. That position is manifested first by the
very tough measures that we have taken against the terrorists,
themselves. We have targeted the terrorists, we fight the
terrorists, and we do so knowing fully well the risks involved. But
we know that the risk of not fighting them is greater. That has
produced a change.
Equally, we have been very firm in telling the
Palestinian Authority that any movement to give them additional land
is premised on their fighting terrorism, as I said, in word and in
deed. And if -- again, if they do so, then we have an ability to
move forward.
But understand my concern. Israel is a tiny country.
We're asked to give large blocks of land right next to our cities,
right next to our "White House," right next to our "Capitol" -- right
next to our major cities. How do we know that these areas, these
territories do not become bases of terrorism?
The answer is, we can't have full knowledge, full
guarantee, but what we can have are concrete assurances by the
Palestinian Authority that they will take those steps that have been
promised before and have yet to be carried out to minimize that risk,
to fight terrorism, to prevent the use of Palestinian areas as
launching grounds for terrorist attacks against us.
That is our basic expectation and that is our basic hope
in the Wye Plantation talks. We're going there with the objective of
trying to secure an agreement. I was asked a minute ago in Hebrew --
and I know your Hebrew is good, but it's not that good -- do you
really expect -- do you really expect -- something like that to
happen there. And the answer is, yes. That's what we've come here
for -- to see a concretization of the fulfillment of Palestinian
obligations. And if they do their part, we shall do our part.
Q Can you discuss the specific steps you --
Q Mr. Prime Minister --
PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: That's the longest sound bite
you've had in years. (Laughter.)
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