TEL AVIV, Dec. 18 (Xinhua) -- Outgoing Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert said Thursday evening that it was possible to negotiate a
peace deal between Israel and Syria, days ahead of his visit to mediator Turkey
to advance the indirect peace talks.
"A peace treaty between Israel and
Syria is feasible," said Olmert at a conference of the Institute for National
Security Studies at Tel Aviv University.
"Syria does not necessarily want to be part of the
axis of evil," he said. "Syria wants to reconnect with the West and the United
States. Removing Syria from the axis of evil is an Israeli interest."
An Israeli-Syrian peace deal will bring "substantial
advantages" to the Jewish state, said the prime minister.
"A peace treaty would lower the possibility of war,
break the strategic ties between Damascus and Tehran, lead to the expulsion of
the Islamic Jihad and Hamas headquarters from Syria and would stop the cash flow
to Hezbollah," said Olmert.
The prime minister stressed that though he could not
guarantee success of a peace process with Syria, it was important to try.
"How will we know if we don't try? How can we try if
we are not prepared to take any risks?" he asked.
On the indirect Israeli-Syrian peace talks mediated
by Turkey, Olmert said that the talks were important and could lead to direct
negotiations.
"The Turkey-brokered indirect talks with Syria are
pivotal. They have proven that real negotiations are doable," said the prime
minister.
Shortly before Olmert's speech, Israeli government
spokesman Mark Regev told Xinhua that Olmert would visit Turkey next week to
advance the peace talks between Israel and Syria.
According to Regev, Olmert will meet Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Monday to discuss various issues,
including the Israeli-Syrian peace talks and the Israeli-Palestinian peace
talks.
Olmert, who will remain in power as caretaker premier
before a new government is formed after the February parliamentary election, is
eager to see progress in the diplomatic process with Syria before his term in
office comes to an end.
Earlier in the day, local daily Ha'aretz reported on
its website that Defense Minister Ehud Barak has said that he is working to
advance peace talks with Syria.
"I am taking action to advance peace in the real
world, not in an imaginary one. I am active more than anyone else in trying to
reach peace with Syria," said Barak in a special interview with Ha'aretz.
He was currently working together with Defense Forces
Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi and Military Intelligence head Amos Yadlin to
advance peace talks with Syria, added the defense minister.
Israeli lawmakers have repeatedly said the talks with
Syria should be put on hold until a new government is established after the
parliamentary election.
Four rounds of indirect peace talks between Israel
and Syria have been carried out since both of them confirmed in mid-May the
renewal of the peace process. Yet a fifth round, originally planned in
September, has been delayed due to Israel's political turmoil.
The peace negotiations between Israel and Syria,
still technically at war with each other, foundered in 2000 when then Israeli
Prime Minister and now Defense Minister Ehud Barak refused Damascus' request for
Israel's full withdrawal from the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau Israel
seized in 1967 and annexed in 1981 with no recognition of the international
community.
The Syrian government has insisted that the peace
talks can be resumed only on the basis that Israel return the Golan while
Israel, for its part, has demanded that Syria abandon its support for
Palestinian and Lebanese militant groups.