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Prim
e Minister Ariel Sharon warned rebellious cabinet members
yesterday that Israel risked losing a package of unprecedented US
guarantees if they rejected his Gaza pullout plan.
Locked in a political crisis threatening to bring down his
government, Sharon raised the stakes by suggesting commitments he
received from US President George W Bush in April that could widen
Israel's borders are now in danger.
"Our agreement with the US speaks of an entire series of steps that
Israel has to take and US guarantees of supreme importance," he
told reporters. "It's all one package."
Sharon is facing a challenge from Finance Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who is leading resistance within their right-wing Likud
party to a proposal that calls for evacuating all Gaza Strip
settlements and four of 120 in the West Bank.
Justice Minister Yosef Lapid, a leading moderate, said he hoped to
avert the collapse of the ruling coalition by brokering a
compromise between Sharon and hardliners who see removal of
settlements as a reward for what they term Palestinian
"terror".
Sharon, who postponed a cabinet vote last Sunday to avoid almost
certain defeat, received a boost from a new opinion poll showing
solid public support for his Gaza pullout plan even though Likud
members rejected it in a May 2 referendum.
The survey in the Maariv daily showed 54% of Israelis who normally
vote for the Likud back Sharon's plan while 31% support Netanyahu,
who appears willing to part with few of Gaza's 21 settlements.
Among the general public, Sharon's plan polled 55% support to his
rival's 32%.
Sharon has vowed to push through his plan, even if it means
dismissing ministers who oppose it. His political weakness has also
fuelled talk about early elections.
Vice Premier Ehud Olmert, a Sharon ally, voiced hope that the
cabinet would be ready to reach a decision by next Sunday.
A Sharon confidant said the prime minister had rejected a Lapid
proposal that the cabinet vote on removing just three Jewish
settlements in Gaza and "take note" of the original plan.
Sharon said he had backing for a Gaza pullout from Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak and pledged to send Foreign Minister Silvan
Shalom to Cairo on Thursday to discuss how Egypt could help secure
Gaza from arms smuggling and takeover by militants.
Israeli commentators said the trip was also aimed at persuading
Shalom, seen as the key swing vote that could give Sharon a cabinet
majority, to support the Gaza plan.
But the Foreign Ministry said Shalom's trip had been put off until
Monday - a day after the next crucial cabinet meeting - sparing him
from having to promote a plan he has so far opposed.
In Cairo, an Egyptian official source said Egypt requested the
postponement because Mubarak had sprained his ankle.
Sharon's chief of staff, Dov Weisglass, flew to Washington to
assure the White House he was set on passing the Gaza plan.
At talks with Sharon in April, Bush not only approved the proposal
but also said Israel should be allowed to keep some occupied West
Bank land and prevent the return of Palestinian refugees,
commitments that angered Palestinians. - Reuters