Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, heading for the
Middle East for a joint diplomatic mission with Defense Secretary Robert Gates,
has defended Bush administration plans for major new weapons sales in the
region. Rice says the multi-billion-dollar plans will not upset the regional
arms balance or halt American democracy agenda among Arab states. VOA's David
Gollust reports from Shannon, Ireland where Rice made a refueling stop.
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| US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice at Camp David, Maryland, 30 July
2007 |
The package, made public
just before Rice's departure from Washington, would sharply increase U.S.
weapons sales and military assistance to Arab allies and to Israel.
In a talk with reporters traveling with her, Rice defended
the plan as a continuation of a long-standing American commitment to regional
allies, while assuring supporters of Israel in the U.S. Congress that the
military balance in the region will not change.
Under the plan, Israel would receive three billion dollars a
year in U.S. aid - a 25 percent increase - with a commitment that funding would
continue at that level for 10 years - for a $30 billion total.
Egypt would get $13 billion over the same 10-year period
along with additional security-related economic aid to be announced later.
Meanwhile Rice and Gates, in their unusual joint mission to the area, will begin
talks this week with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf allies on arms sales to them
that could exceed $20 billion.
In the airborne news conference, Rice said the plan is
intended to reassure American allies during what she termed a "complicated"
moment in the Middle East:
"We are very aware of, and very determined, to maintain the
ability of our allies and friends to rely on the United States to help them with
their security concerns," she said. "At the same time, we are also determined to
maintain the balances, the military and strategic balance, within the region
that we've been committed to as well."
Rice dismissed Iranian criticism that the U.S. arms plan
would destabilize the region, saying any instability that exists now can be laid
to Iran and its backing for Palestinian and Lebanese radicals and insurgents in
Iraq.
She said Iran constitutes single most important strategic
challenge to U.S. interests in region and to, as she put it, "the kind of Middle
East we want to see."
She also said under questioning that the weapons plans
should not been seen by autocratic U.S. allies in the region as a sign that that
American pressure for democratic reforms will cease:
"Of course it's important that Egypt be able to defend
itself and its interests in the region," she said. "Of course it's important
that Saudi Arabia, which has been an ally of the United States for decades, be
able to defend its interests in the region. And of course that's important to
the defense of American interests. But that does not preclude discussions about
the domestic course these countries are taking. And we're going to continue to
have those discussions, and we are going to continue to press for
reform."
Rice and Gates flew separately to the region but will join
up Tuesday in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, for meetings with
senior officials of Egypt, Jordan and the Gulf Cooperation Council member
countries. They both fly on to Jeddah later Tuesday to meet senior Saudi
leaders, including King Abdullah.
Wednesday they part company, with Gates continuing talks in
the Gulf while Rice heads to Jerusalem for meetings with Israeli and Palestinian
leaders.