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Saudis call for Israeli talks with Syria and Lebanon

ANNAPOLIS, Maryland
Tue Nov 27, 2007 4:46pm EST

ANNAPOLIS, Maryland (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia called on Tuesday for a quick start to Israeli peace talks with Syria and Lebanon following an announcement that Israeli-Palestinian negotiations would resume immediately.

"We have come to support the launching of serious and continuing talks between the Palestinians and the Israelis that will address all the core and final status issues," Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal told the Annapolis, Middle East conference.

"These talks must be followed by the launching of the Syrian and Lebanese tracks at the earliest," he said, according to a copy of his remarks released by the Saudi embassy in Washington.

Leaders of the United States, Israel and the Palestinians agreed at the conference to start work immediately on reaching a peace treaty within 13 months that would create a Palestinian state.

Saudi Arabia, an Arab diplomatic heavyweight with close ties to the United States, is the driving force behind an Arab peace initiative offering Israel normal relations with all Arab states if it withdraws from all land it occupied in 1967.

Syria and Lebanon are both front-line states formally at war with Israel. Syrian-Israeli negotiations collapsed in 2000 over the future of the Golan Heights captured by Israel in the 1967 war.

(Editing by Howard Goller and David Storey)



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