Netanyahu calls for 'warm peace' with Arabs
July 25, 2009 00:00:00
JERUSALEM, July 24 (AFP): Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for a "warm peace" between Israel and its Arab neighbours Thursday in a rare speech at the Egyptian ambassador's residence near Tel Aviv.
"I think we can have a very warm peace," Netanyahu said, according to statements carried by the private Channel Ten television.
"We hope in the months and years ahead to forge peace with the Palestinians and to expand that into a vision of a broader regional peace," Netanyahu said.
"I think a comprehensive peace is possible," he added.
Netanyahu made the remarks at the residence of Egyptian Ambassador Yasser Rida near Tel Aviv, where a reception was held to celebrate Egyptian national day.
Israeli President Shimon Peres also attended the ceremony in Herzliya north of Tel Aviv and joined Rida and Netanyahu in symbolically cutting the cake.
Egypt was the first Arab state to sign a peace treaty with Israel in 1979. Jordan followed suit in 1994.
Relations between Israel and its peace partners have been lukewarm if not tense at times but in recent weeks several Israeli officials have travelled to Egypt for talks with President Hosni Mubarak.
Netanyahu was in Egypt in May, followed by Defence Minister Ehud Barak in June and Peres, whose role as president is largely ceremonial, was in the neighbouring country earlier this month.