The Palestinian president and the Israeli prime minister have agreed to hold a formal summit within three weeks.
Mahmoud Abbas and Ehud Olmert decided this during informal talks hosted by King Abdullah of
The meeting was the first between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders in a year.
"I am ready to put on (the) line everything for one purpose, to achieve peace, to make compromise, to pull out of certain territories," Olmert said.
"I pray the Palestinians will have the courage to get rid of extremists and fundamentalists."
Political control
Olmert and Abbas shook hands and embraced, with the Israeli premier using the ice breaker to apologize for 13 Palestinian civilian deaths in recent Israeli air strikes.
"It is against our policy and I am very, very sorry," he said after a breakfast meeting with Abbas, but he said later
While he had only warm words for Abbas and indicated he would meet with him again, Olmert cautioned against high hopes: Peace talks are unlikely, he suggested, unless the Palestinians' anti-Israel government changes its policy.
"I think that Abu Mazen is a genuine person and he comes here with good intentions," Olmert said, using the Palestinian leader's nickname.
"But to the best of my knowledge, he is not the prime minister of the Palestinian Authority."
Repeat apology
Speaking in
Olmert also singled out Abbas as a partner for talks but said
The breakfast meeting between Olmert and Abbas took place on the sidelines of a two-day gathering of Nobel Prize winners.
Olmert, Abbas and Abdullah sat at a round breakfast table with the Dalai Lama, a deputy Thai prime minister and Elie Weisel, a Holocaust survivor and the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize winner.
'Very warm'
Asked about his handshake with Olmert, Abbas said: "It was very warm, very warm."
After returning to the West Bank city of
He said he will travel to
Abbas said he hope the talks would achieve "positive results" and that they would "allow us to present the world with new ideas in order to end the siege imposed on us.
Photo Caption
Olmert, Abbas and King Abdullah at the informal talks