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This key U.S. ally must walk a delicate path to appease its own large group of Palestinian refugees, as the bloody conflict between Hamas and Fatah erupts across the Middle East.

Egypt and Saudi Arabia face threats from Hamas' rise, too, leaving the United States' key moderate Arab allies all struggling with how to respond.

The issue came to the fore this week when Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas signaled that he wants Jordan to dispatch to the West Bank a military unit under Jordanian command that is made up of his own Palestinian Fatah loyalists.

The Palestinian force, known as the Badr Brigade, would bolster Abbas's security in the wake of rival Hamas' conquest of Gaza.

Jordan says it condones deploying the troops. Yet it also insists it has no intention of meddling in a Palestinian power struggle, or of assuming any type of protectorate role in the West Bank.

"We shouldn't read too much into this," said chief Jordanian government spokesman Nasser Judeh. Deploying the force in the West Bank "shouldn't be seen as Jordan taking up a security or any other role" in the Palestinian territories.

Still, stakes are high for Jordan because mobilizing the 2,000-strong unit could stir controversy among West Bank Palestinians who may view the Jordan-equipped and trained troops as loyal to Jordan, and thus another occupying force.

That could also feed Palestinian worries that Jordan nurtures dreams of regaining control over the West Bank, which it ruled for 17 years until Israel's seizure of the territory in the 1967 war.

Late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat had bumpy relations with Jordan's rulers and repeatedly rejected the brigade. However, at this week's summit in Egypt, Abbas _ who has good ties with Jordan _ asked Israel to allow the unit to help him enforce order in the West Bank, said Miri Eisin, a spokesman for Israel's prime minister.

Eisin said Israel is evaluating the request. Palestinian officials have publicly denied that Abbas made the request.

The possible deployment of the brigade is not Jordan's only worry _ it also fears the Fatah-Hamas violence that erupted in Gaza could spread to the West Bank and then to its own territory, where about half the nearly 6 million people are Palestinian.

Along with Egypt and Saudi Arabia, Jordan also fears Hamas will inspire its own Islamic opposition, the Muslim Brotherhood _ or make the coastal strip a base for Amman's regional foe, Iran.

Egypt also worries about the Brotherhood on its territory, while conservative Saudi Arabia worries both about Hamas' Iran links and its ability to empower Saudi Islamic militants. Saudi Arabia and Egypt said Tuesday they won't try to mediate the conflict between Hamas and Fatah until the two groups resume dialogue.

Of the three countries, Jordan's balancing act toward Hamas may be the most delicate, because of its historical ties to the West Bank.

Jordan has strongly denied recent speculation that it may want to assume some type of "protectorate" role in the West Bank. In May, the Israeli Maariv daily said that Jordan was pressing hard for a confederation with the Palestinians. But Jordan's King Abdullah II bluntly denied any such plans in a meeting two weeks ago with European Union envoys.

"The concept of Jordanian-Palestinian confederation or federation is not in our dictionary, and we won't tackle this issue for the time being," Abdullah said.

Jordanian officials said in private that prolonged Palestinian infighting could raise Israeli concerns that Abbas's Palestinian Authority may collapse, leaving no administration in the West Bank in charge of security, law and justice.

But Jordan fears that any confederation before a final settlement of the Palestinian issue could give credence to Israeli hard-liners, who have urged making Jordan home for the West Bank's Arabs.

Under a 1950 deal, Jordan administered the West Bank and east Jerusalem until Israel captured them in the 1967 war. The late King Hussein severed administrative links with the West Bank in 1988, handing responsibility to Arafat's PLO.

But Hussein also called for a Jordanian-Palestinian confederation once the Palestinians had an independent state.

 
 
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