RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Senate regarding the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
Whereas ending the violence and terror that have
devastated the State of Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza since September
2000 is in the vital interests of the United States, Israel, and the
Palestinian people;
Whereas the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict
strengthens extremists and opponents of peace throughout the region;
Whereas more than 7 years of violence, terror, and
military engagement have demonstrated that armed force alone will not
solve the Israeli-Palestinian dispute;
Whereas the vast majority of Israelis and Palestinians
want to put an end to decades of confrontation and conflict and live in
peaceful coexistence, mutual dignity, and security, based on a just,
lasting, and comprehensive peace;
Whereas on May 24, 2006, addressing a Joint Session of
the United States Congress, Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Olmert
reiterated the Government of Israel's position that `In a few years, [the
Palestinians] could be living in a Palestinian state, side by side in
peace and security with Israel, a Palestinian state which Israel and the
international community would help thrive';
Whereas, in his speech before the Palestinian
Legislative Council on February 18, 2006, Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas said, `We are confident that there is no military solution
to the conflict. Negotiations between us as equal partners should put a
long-due end to the cycle of violence... Let us live in two neighboring
states';
Whereas, in June 2002, the President of the United
States presented his vision of `two states, living side by side in peace
and security', and has since repeatedly reaffirmed this position;
Whereas events of the past 18 months, including the
victory of Hamas in Palestinian legislative elections, the continued
firing of rockets from Gaza into Israel, and the escalating
intra-Palestinian violence and chaos, culminating in the June 2007
takeover of Gaza by Hamas, make the achievement of President Bush's vision
even more difficult;
Whereas, on June 27, 2007, the Quartet (the United
States, Russia, the European Union, and the United Nations) appointed
former British Prime Minister Tony Blair special envoy to the Middle East
with a focus on mobilizing assistance to the Palestinians and promoting
economic development and institutional governance;
Whereas a robust and high-level American diplomatic
presence on the ground is critical to bringing Israelis and Palestinians
together to make the tough decisions necessary to achieving a permanent
resolution to the conflict;
Whereas June 2007 marks the 40th anniversary of the
Six-Day War between Israel and a coalition of Arab states;
Whereas all parties should use the occasion of this
anniversary to redouble their efforts to achieve peace; and
Whereas achieving Israeli-Palestinian peace could have
significant positive impacts on security and stability in the region: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved, That the
Senate--