Letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
NOVEMBER 1, 2007
NATIONAL INTERRELIGIOUS LEADERSHIP INITIATIVE
FOR PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
The Honorable Dr. Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20520
Dear Secretary Rice:
We write on behalf of Jewish, Christian and Muslim leaders of
the National Interreligious Leadership Initiative for Peace in
the Middle East to reaffirm the support we expressed in our
meeting with you on January 29 for high level U.S. efforts to
achieve Arab-Israeli-Palestinian peace. We appreciate the
opportunity for regular meetings with Under Secretary for
Political Affairs Nicholas Burns. Our sense of urgency related
to preparations for the Annapolis peace conference leads us to
write to you in advance of our next scheduled meeting with Under
Secretary Burns on Friday, November 9.
We support the United States convening a conference for peace
and providing leadership in negotiations for a two-state
solution between Israel and the Palestinians, and for peace
agreements between Israel and Syria and between Israel and
Lebanon. We have noted reports of concerns about preparations
for the conference and believe more assertive U.S. leadership is
needed in the lead-up to the conference to improve conditions on
the ground and to reach agreement on principles for resolving
final status issues.
In relation to improving conditions on the ground to restore
hopes for peace among Palestinians and Israelis, we believe
important steps include working for an end to all violent
attacks and counter attacks by achieving a comprehensive
ceasefire, pressing the Palestinian Authority to confiscate
illegal weapons and disband militias, and pressing Israel to
freeze expansion of settlements and ease movement for
Palestinians in the West Bank by reducing the number of military
checkpoints. We believe the United States can and should press
harder for these and other steps in the lead-up and immediate
follow-up to the Annapolis conference. We pledge our public
support for your efforts in these matters.
We appreciate your encouragement of and personal involvement
in accelerated talks between Prime Minister Olmert and President
Abbas to reach agreement on a statement of principles for
resolving final status issues, including borders and security
arrangements, settlements, refugees and Jerusalem.
It is widely known that substantive benchmarks and ideas for
resolving the final status issues have been developed by
Israelis and Palestinians in official and unofficial
negotiations over many years, including particularly in talks
authorized by Prime Minister Rabin and Chairman Arafat in
1995-96. These Israeli-Palestinian ideas are reflected in
several public documents, including the “Taba agreement,” the
People’s Voice Initiative, and the Geneva Accord. For the last
several years, public opinion polls consistently have reported
that majorities of Israelis and Palestinians would likely accept
a peace agreement along these lines. We are confident that
substantial majorities in our U.S. religious communities also
support these ideas. As preparations for the Annapolis
conference go forward and you work to bridge the gaps between
Israeli and Palestinian positions, we urge your support for
these Israeli-Palestinian ideas for resolving the final status
issues, including a mutually acceptable just solution of the
refugee problem and an agreement for sharing Jerusalem.
Appreciating that the Arab Peace Initiative represents an
historic positive development in the history of this conflict,
we believe participation by Saudi Arabia and other Arab
countries in the peace conference is very important. In addition
to the conference achieving major substantive progress toward
Israeli-Palestinian peace, we hope it will also result in
agreement on renewing negotiations for comprehensive
Arab-Israeli peace, including restarting negotiations between
Israel and Syria and between Israel and Lebanon.
In our December ’06 consensus statement,
“Arab-Israeli-Palestinian Peace: From Crisis to Hope,” we said
that new dangers in the region also created new opportunities
and increased urgency for achieving peace.
In this context, there is heightened interest and concern in
the Middle East, in our country and worldwide for success of the
U.S. hosted peace conference and fears for the implications if
the conference were to fail.
We pledge our public support for active, fair and firm U.S.
leadership for peace in the coming weeks and months, and we
would welcome an opportunity to meet again with you and/or with
the President to express our support in a timely way.
Respectfully,
National Interreligious Leadership Initiative
For Peace in the Middle East
Attached: List of Endorsers of “Arab-Israeli-Palestinian
Peace: From Crisis to Hope” 12/06
+ + +
National Interreligious Leadership Initiative
For Peace in the Middle East
Signers of “Arab-Israeli-Palestinian Peace: From Crisis to Hope”
12/06
Christian Leaders:
His Eminence, Theodore Cardinal McCarrick, Archdiocese of
Washington*
His Eminence, William Cardinal Keeler, Archbishop of Baltimore*
Most Reverend William Skylstad, President, United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops*
His Eminence, Archbishop Demetrios, Primate, Greek Orthodox
Church in America*
His Eminence, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate, Armenian
Apostolic Church in America*
Bishop Mark Hanson, Presiding Bishop, Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America*
Most Rev. Dr. Katharine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop
Episcopal Church*
John H. Thomas, General Minister & President, United Church of
Christ*
The Rev. Dr. Sharon Watkins, General Minister, President,
Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ)*
The Reverend Clifton Kirkpatrick, Stated Clerk, Presbyterian
Church (USA)*
Ann B. Sherer, Bishop, The United Methodist Church*
The Reverend Michael E. Livingston, President, National Council
of Churches USA*
The Reverend John M. Buchanan, Editor and Publisher, Christian
Century*
Richard J. Mouw, President, Fuller Theological Seminary*
The Reverend Leighton Ford, President, Leighton Ford Ministries*
The Rev. Dr. John A. Huffman, Senior Pastor, St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church*
David Neff, Editor and Vice-President, Christianity Today*
Jewish Leaders:
Rabbi Peter Knobel, President, Central Conference of American
Rabbis*
Rabbi Harry K. Danziger, Past President, Central Conference of
American Rabbis*
Rabbi Paul Menitoff, Executive Vice President Emeritus, Central
Conference of American Rabbis*
Rabbi Eric Yoffie, President, Union for Reform Judaism*
Rabbi David Saperstein, Director, Religious Action Center of
Reform Judaism*
Rabbi Jerome M. Epstein, United Synagogue of Conservative
Judaism*
Rabbi Elliot Dorff, Rector, University of Judaism*
Dr. Carl Sheingold, Executive Vice President, Jewish
Reconstructionist Federation*
Rabbi Toba Spitzer, President, Reconstructionist Rabbinical
Association*
Rabbi Amy Small, Past President, Reconstructionist Rabbinical
Association*
Rabbi Alvin M. Sugarman, Vice President, A Different Future*
Rabbi Merle S. Singer, Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Beth El, Boca
Raton, Florida*
Muslim Leaders:
Dr. Sayyid Muhammad Syeed, National Director, Islamic Society of
North America*
Imam Mohammed ibn Hagmagid, Vice President, Islamic Society of
North America*
Naim Baig, Secretary General, Islamic Circle of North America*
Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, Founder, American Society for Muslim
Advancement (ASMA)*
Imam Yahya Hendi, Chaplain, Georgetown University*
Dawud Assad, President Emeritus, Council of Mosques, USA*
Iftekhar A. Hai, Founding Director, United Muslims of America*
*Organizations for Identification Only
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