Blair optimistic about Mideast peace talks
‘Things can change,’ former PM says as he plans to travel to the region
![]() | Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, the Middle East Quartet's new envoy, speaks at Belem Cultural Center in Lisbon, Portugal on Thursday. |
Miguel Riopa / AFP - Getty Images |
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LISBON, Portugal - Tony Blair waded headlong into the murky world of Middle East peacemaking on Thursday, dismissing concerns that he would fail like so many before him and announcing he would travel to the region.
The former British prime minister brushed aside suggestions that his limited mandate as special envoy to the international diplomatic Quartet — and the group’s refusal to deal with the hard-line Palestinian movement Hamas — would hamstring his mission.
“I’m nothing if not an optimist,” Blair said after a meeting that brought together senior representatives from the Quartet’s members — the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia. “I will probably have need for all that quality of optimism in this task ahead, but I am determined to try.”
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said “a good deal of good luck and optimism” would be required to achieve peace. Talks have sputtered since the second Palestinian uprising in 2001.
Blair gave no specifics on when he would make his first visit to the region, though it is expected in the coming days, and he planned to return later for a longer trip.
He said he intended to brief the Quartet for the first time in September. Israeli President Shimon Peres has said he would meet with Blair in Israel on Tuesday; there has been no confirmation from Blair.
'Things can change'
In a statement after the Quartet’s meeting, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged the Israelis and Palestinians, as well as all states in the region, to work closely with Blair. He said the diplomatic group “encouraged robust international support for his efforts.”
Blair pointed to his successful efforts to push for peace in Northern Ireland, a goal which once, too, had appeared impossible.
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“Things can change,” he said. At the same time, he cautioned against raising false hopes.
“There is a sense that we can regain momentum. That’s the crucial thing. And if we are able to regain that momentum, then a whole lot of things become possible, not least the fact that those people of peace can then feel that the force is with them and not with those who want conflict,” Blair said.
Despite his enthusiasm, many believe Blair’s role is too limited because it only involves developing Palestinian institutions and their economy. He is also only to deal with moderate forces loyal to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who is only in charge in the West Bank following Hamas’ seizure of the Gaza Strip last month.
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