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NewsJanuary 6, 2002

JERICHO, West Bank -- A U.S. envoy was hopeful Saturday he could guide Israelis and Palestinians toward a truce, after Israel said it would further ease West Bank blockades and the Palestinians continued to arrest suspected militants. In Washington, meanwhile, a U.S. official raised the possibility that a 50-ton weapons shipment intercepted by Israel was intended for Hezbollah, Hamas or another extremist group, rather than for the Palestinian Authority, as Israel claimed...

By Karin Laub, The Associated Press

JERICHO, West Bank -- A U.S. envoy was hopeful Saturday he could guide Israelis and Palestinians toward a truce, after Israel said it would further ease West Bank blockades and the Palestinians continued to arrest suspected militants.

In Washington, meanwhile, a U.S. official raised the possibility that a 50-ton weapons shipment intercepted by Israel was intended for Hezbollah, Hamas or another extremist group, rather than for the Palestinian Authority, as Israel claimed.

Israeli officials said the crew was led by Palestinian naval police and had confessed that the arms were to have been delivered to the Palestinian Authority in the Gaza Strip. The Palestinian Authority denied any links to the shipment, which included Iranian-made rockets and anti-tank missiles.

The U.S. envoy, Anthony Zinni, met Saturday with Palestinian negotiators and said he would chair a meeting Sunday of Israeli and Palestinian security officials.

CIA plan

Zinni is pushing both sides to implement a truce plan drafted last year by CIA chief George Tenet.

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Under the plan, Israel is to lift its sweeping travel bans on Palestinians and pull back troops to positions they held before fighting broke out in September 2000. The Palestinians are required to go after suspected militants and prevent attacks on Israelis.

Israel eased restrictions before Tenet's arrival in the region Thursday, pulling back tanks from some Palestinian areas and opening some roads in the West Bank. "The moves to ease the situation of the Palestinian population will continue," Israeli government spokesman Arnon Perlman said Saturday.

Zinni said he believed the two sides were moving in the right direction. "I'm hopeful. I'm encouraged," Zinni said after meeting with Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat in the West Bank town of Jericho on Saturday.

Once a truce is in place, the two sides are to follow a plan by an international commission, headed by former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell, for returning to peace talks. Israel would have to freeze settlement activity in the West Bank and Gaza, while the Palestinians would have to dismantle militant groups.

However, Zinni said that for now, security was his focus.

"We are going to start with security issues, and that's the beginning point," Zinni said. "We will get those other issues when the time is ready."

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