US President George W. Bush deviated from the script today and urged an end to the Israeli "occupation" of the West Bank as he pushed for a peace treaty to be signed within a year to create a Palestinian state.
The US rarely uses the politically charged word "occupation" to describe Israel's hold on lands captured in a 1967 war. It is a term Palestinians seeking a state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip employ frequently to describe their plight.
US president George Bush
"The establishment of the state of Palestine is long overdue. The Palestinian people deserve it," Mr Bush said in a statement he read to reporters in a Jerusalem hotel.
His language, after he travelled to the West Bank city of Ramallah past Israeli checkpoints and settlements, could cause political pain to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, whose right-wing coalition partners usually bridle at such remarks.
"There should be an end to the occupation that began in 1967," Mr Bush said. He had earlier met Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and visited Bethlehem, also in the West Bank.
Bush pressed the Palestinians to rein in militants. He said any negotiations must also ensure Israel has "secure, recognised and defensible borders" alongside a "viable, contiguous, sovereign and independent" Palestine.
Challenging sceptics of his new push for peace on the first US presidential visit to Ramallah, he told a news conference with Abbas: "I believe it's going to happen, that there will be a signed peace treaty by the time I leave office."
Critics say Mr Bush, who steps down in January 2009, has failed to deploy Washington's full weight in seeking to end the 60-year-old conflict during his first seven years in office
A summit he hosted at Annapolis in November ended a hiatus in negotiations since 2000. But many doubt differences can be overcome now, as he seeks to burnish his legacy in the Middle East after five years of war in Iraq. Mr Olmert is politically weak and Mr Abbas cannot control the Gaza Strip, which Hamas Islamists seized in June.
Mr Bush reiterated in the keynote statement a vision of territorial compromise he first charted in a policy letter to then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in 2004, advocating mutually agreed changes in armistice lines set in 1949 after fighting with Arab armies that accompanied Israel's foundation.
He urged the two leaders "to make sure their teams negotiate seriously, starting right now".
His use of the term "peace treaty" was seen by some as an indication he was not ready to settle for a vaguer "framework agreement" which Israeli and Palestinian officials have said Mr Olmert thinks is all that is feasible before Mr Bush steps down.
Mr Bush earlier called on Arab states to "reach out" to Israel, claiming that such a move was long overdue.
Bush also reaffirmed a US commitment to a 2003 peace "road map" under which Israel was to halt settlement activity and Palestinians were to crack down on militants.
"On the Israeli side, that includes ending settlement expansion and removing unauthorized outposts. On the Palestinian side that includes confronting terrorists and dismantling terrorist infrastructure," the president said.
"Security is fundamental. No agreement and no Palestinian state will be born of terror. I reaffirm America's steadfast commitment to Israel's security."
Mr Bush has appointed US Lieutenant-General William Fraser to monitor steps both sides are supposed to take under the road map.