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KUWAIT CITY - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday the Bush
administration explicitly warned former President Jimmy Carter against meeting
with members of Hamas.
Rice, attending a regional meeting on Iraq's security and future,
contradicted Carter's assertions that he never got a clear signal from the State
Department. Rice told reporters that the US thought the visit could confuse the
message that the US will not deal with Hamas.
"I just don't want there to be any confusion," Rice said. "The United States
is not going to deal with Hamas and we had certainly told President Carter that
we did not think meeting with Hamas was going to help" further a political
settlement between Israel and the Palestinians.
Carter said top Hamas leaders told him during seven hours of talks in
Damascus over the weekend that they are willing to live next to Israel, but a
top Hamas official said the group would never outright recognize the Jewish
state.
Separately Tuesday, a Hamas official said the militant group has softened its
demands for a cease-fire with Israel.
Spokesman Ghazi Hamad said Hamas is now prepared for a partial truce that
would only include the Gaza Strip.
The group previously has demanded the West Bank be included in any deal.
Still, it hopes a Gaza truce will eventually spread to the West Bank as
well.
In return, Hamas wants Israel and Egypt to open their trade and passenger
crossings with Gaza.
Carter won no specific concessions from Hamas. He defended his trip during
remarks Monday in Jerusalem. He said he failed to convince the top Hamas boss,
Khaled Mashaal, that he could gain international goodwill if he stopped rocket
fire on Israel for one month.
"I did the best I could," Carter said. "They turned me down, and I think
they're wrong."
In an interview with NPR, Carter said the State Department did not warn him
off the trip. A State Department spokesman in Washington took issue with that on
Monday, and Rice was more blunt in her account Tuesday.
Rice had heard questions about Carter's meetings several times during two
days of Iraq-themed meetings in the Mideast, with some diplomats wondering
whether the Bush administration was talking to Hamas through the back door or
contemplating a different policy in the future.
Rice said US policy remains that it will deal only with the elected
Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, and his West Bank-based government as it
tried to help Israel and the Palestinians broker terms for an independent
Palestinian state.
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