JERUSALEM, May 26 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert on Monday
denied outright the Syrian claim that Israel had already agreed to cede the
Golan Heights during their talks.
"No obligations were offered - either spoken or in writing ¨C to Syria,"
Olmert was quoted by local daily Jerusalem Post as saying. "All I said from
February 2007 until May 2008 was 'I know what you want and you know what I
want.'"
Olmert made the remarks during an appearance Monday at the Knesset
(parliament) Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee to discuss his diplomatic and
defense policy, particularly in light of the recent revelation that Israel has
been conducting secret negotiations with Syria.
Olmert added that he could prove that all four of the previous Israeli
prime ministers had held negotiations with Syria and had been "ready to offer
extremely painful concessions."
"Everybody who has sat on my side of the table as prime minister
understands that this kind of thing must be done with the maximum level possible
of carefulness," he said.
Olmert said on Sunday morning at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting
that Israel takes peace negotiations with Syria seriously and is preparing for
them rigorously.
"They (negotiations) will be held according to the current reality, not
according to the situation ten years ago, according to today's diplomatic
sensitivities, and not according to what took place in the past," Olmert said.
Israel and Syria simultaneously announced on Wednesday that they began
dialogues under Turkey's auspices with a goal of reaching a comprehensive peace,
the first confirmation of diplomatic contacts between the two neighbors in eight
years.
Peace negotiations between Israel and Syria broke off in 2000, when then
Israeli Prime Minister and now Defense Minister Ehud Barak refused Syria's
request to fully withdraw from the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau Israel
seized in 1967 and annexed in 1981.
Israel and Syria will carry out the next round of Turkey-mediated peace
negotiations in the coming weeks, Turkish and Israeli officials said Friday.
"The two parties agreed to meet regularly. The next round will be in
Istanbul in a week or in 10 days," said a Turkish official, while Israeli
government spokesman Mark Regev also expected a round of Israeli-Syrian talks in
Turkey shortly.
Following the first round of renewed talks earlier last week, Turkish
officials said both Israel and Syria have understood that any future peace
agreement would include Israel's full withdrawal from the Golan Heights and
Syria's distancing itself from Iran and militant groups like Hamas and
Hezbollah.