US advises Carter against any meeting with Hamas

WASHINGTON (AFP) — The US State Department said Thursday it has advised former US president Jimmy Carter against meeting with the radical Palestinian group Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal if he visits Syria.

The State Department advised Carter in late March not to meet any officials from Hamas, because it is a terrorist group opposed to the Palestinian-Israeli peace talks, spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters.

He also confirmed that The Elders, a group of elder statesmen that includes Carter and former UN chief Kofi Annan, had postponed plans for a similar tour after US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice discussed the trip with Annan.

The group posted its decision on its website on Tuesday, the same day McCormack said Rice spoke to Annan. The conversation focused mainly on the political crisis in Kenya where Annan has been mediating, he said.

The State Department will help Carter with arrangements if he visits Syria but "will not participate in the planning or scheduling of any meetings with Hamas figures in Damascus," McCormack said.

"And in fact we have counseled the former president (against) having such a meeting," he said.

The US government brands Hamas a "terrorist" group and believes it is "not in the interests of our policy or in the interests of peace to have such a meeting," McCormack said.

The United States is supporting the moderate Fatah faction headed by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in new peace talks with Israel while backing the Jewish state's bid to isolate the radical Islamist Hamas movement.

Israel has sealed off Gaza from all but vital goods since Hamas seized power last June in bloody battles with Fatah, in a bid to halt rocket attacks from the territory and to put pressure on the Hamas-run government.

Carter plans to travel next week to Syria and the region to help the Middle East peace process, but spokeswoman Deanna Congileo told AFP she could not "confirm or deny speculation of any specific meetings that might take place."

News reports say Carter, architect of the 1979 Egypt-Israeli peace treaty and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, plans to meet Meshaal, who lives in Damascus.

"Carter will lead a study mission to Israel, the West Bank, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan April 13-21, 2008 as part of the Carter Center's ongoing effort to support peace, democracy, and human rights in the region," the center said.

The Elders said they had planned a visit Israel, the Palestinian territories, Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Saudi Arabia in April to listen to "representatives from government, civil society, business and the public."

"The Elders will continue consultations with key leaders in the region and outside with the purpose of developing a comprehensive report, but have decided to postpone their visit," they said on their website.

McCormack said David Welch, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, advised Carter not to meet Hamas in a telephone call at the end of March while Welch and Rice were in the Middle East.

He said the State Department had no confirmation that Carter would actually meet Meshaal and did not say exactly how it knew the meeting might take place.

But indicated the issue came up during a general briefing that State Department officials routinely give former presidents at their request when they travel abroad.

With a new book in 2006, "Palestine: Peace, Not Apartheid," Carter raised a furor among Jewish groups who accused him of racism and anti-Semitism.