May 03, 2004
Middle East: Likud Party Rejects Sharon Plan As 'Quartet' Prepares To Meet
by Jeffrey Donovan
Will Sharon seek a nationwide referendum to gain support for his plan?
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Ariel Sharon's Likud Party has overwhelmingly rejected a plan by the Israeli prime minister to unilaterally remove Israeli troops and settlements from Gaza. Yesterday's vote is seen by some as an embarrassment for the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush, who boldly backed the controversial plan despite broad international criticism. RFE/RL correspondent Jeffrey Donovan looks at the situation ahead of a meeting in New York tomorrow of the Middle East "Quartet."
Prague, 3 May 2004 (RFE/RL) -- For now, George W. Bush has lost his big gamble on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Despite strong backing from the U.S. president, Israel's right-wing ruling Likud Party yesterday rejected a controversial plan by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to unilaterally pull all Israeli troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip in exchange for keeping all but four of 120 Jewish settlements on the West Bank.
The roughly 60-percent vote to reject came after a pregnant Israeli settler and her four daughters were killed by Palestinian gunmen in Gaza. Another Gaza settler, Rivka Goldschmidt, said the vote was a victory for the Jewish settler movement.
"We really feel that this is a very strong message to Prime Minister Sharon, that the country is saying to him: 'Go back to what you were before and fight for Israel, not against Israel,'" she said.