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The London-based al-Quds al-Arabi commented Wednesday there is a lot of diplomatic activity and visits to revive the Middle East peace process, but there is no real progress on the ground.

The independent Palestinian-owned daily said all the talk and movement for the peace process comes while Jewish settlements are still expanding in the West Bank, the separation barrier is still being built and more than 1.5 million Palestinians are still shut away from the outside world. It added the United States was clearly leading a well-orchestrated diplomatic activity that could be in preparation for a peace conference planned by President George W. Bush next fall.

The paper said it nevertheless appears to be an American attempt to "expand the Arab-Israeli normalization on an official level, which could lead to an American-Arab-Israeli alliance to spearhead any impending attack on Iran to destroy its nuclear facilities." The paper complained that some of the Arab governments seem to be no longer demanding a full Israeli withdrawal from the occupied Arab territories as a condition for normalization with the Jewish state in accordance with the Saudi-sponsored Arab peace initiative.

"Israel will be very grateful for this generous Arab concession and will certainly welcome it," it remarked.

Tony Blair should include Gaza in his mission

Egypt's al-Gomhuria said in its editorial the biggest challenge facing the Quartet peace envoy Tony Blair, who started a visit to the Middle East this week, is Israel's refusal to achieve peace.

The semi-official daily remarked that while Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's government is still suffering from the repercussions of its failure in last summer's war with Lebanon, the Palestinians continue to seek a just peace settlement.

The obstacle of the Palestinian division between Gaza and the West Bank could be overcome by Blair if he does not exclude Gaza from his mission, it argued. The mass-circulation urged the envoy against trying to achieve cosmetic or insignificant gains for the West Bank at the expense of other Palestinians and at the expense of the greater objective of establishing an independent Palestinian state.

"Blair can immortalize his name as a peacemaker in Palestine to replace his name as a war maker in Iraq -- if he commits to neutrality and integrity in exercising his mission," it maintained.

"But the question is whether Olmert's government and the Bush administration would enable him to do that."

Qatar's ash-Sharq accused Blair of unconditional support for Israel at the expense of Arab rights, saying he has a bad reputation in the region due to his "conspiring" with President Bush -- starting with the invasion of Iraq and ending with liquidating the Palestinian cause based on Israeli standards.

His first failure as the Quartet's envoy is ignoring Hamas despite the group's acceptance to deal with the Quartet, it remarked in its editorial. The pro-government daily insisted that no real progress can be made in the peace process without acknowledging the elected Hamas authority.

It maintained that Blair, whom it said has totally fallen in Bush's lap, came to the region to listen, not to speak, indicating that some members of the Quartet -- mainly Russia and the European Union -- suspect his qualifications as a peace envoy. "In addition, it shows he has no clear vision and carries no clear working program," it complained.

The paper said Blair is not expected to succeed in his mission due to the conditions in the Palestinian territories and the Israeli government's weakness.

U.S.-Iranian dialogue may benefit Lebanon

Lebanon's as-Safir wondered in a commentary whether the U.S.-Iranian dialogue in Baghdad could benefit Lebanon and avert a reported Israeli preparation for another military strike on Lebanon.

It said the second round of talks held in the Iraqi capital on Tuesday shows a great deal of reason from both the Americans and Iranians. But these two countries have more in common regarding Iraq than they do about other countries and issues in the region, including Iran's nuclear file, Palestine and Lebanon, it remarked.

The independent daily, with Arab nationalist trends, said the second round of U.S.-Iranian talks in Baghdad coinciding with the second round of negotiations between Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna indicates a substantial shift in the relationship between Washington and Tehran that might lead to a "historic reconciliation."

This correlation of events in Baghdad and Vienna means the two countries have entered into a new equation that calls for Iranian cooperation in Iraq in return for American tolerance of Iran's nuclear program, it said. The paper argued if this is the case, then the two countries will gain more credibility and that the "bazaar that is now opening between the two capitals constitutes a new test for their wisdom and craftiness."

Turkish elections paint different picture of Islam for the world

Saudi Arabia's al-Riyadh said the successful elections in Turkey that the Islamist Justice and Development Party won gave the rest of the world not only a democratic picture of Turkey, but also gave a different picture of Islam that has been widely portrayed as anti-freedom and linked to terrorism.

"Turkey changed all that especially that those who reached this advanced model of democracy is an Islamic country in its makeup and history," said the semi-official daily in its editorial.

It insisted that what happened in Turkey came to save the reputation of Islam, and that with real democracy, this religion could be a voice of freedom, reason and development. The paper said it hopes other Muslim countries will benefit from the Turkish experience, adding the Muslim world is passing through a difficult historic phase that calls for understanding why an Islamic party in a big country succeeded while it failed in others.

"Turkey has excelled in its Islam," it said. "So will other Muslims adopt its image and the success of its leadership?"

 
 
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