He was commenting on the lease-back arrangement which formed part of the historic peace treaty initialed Monday between Israel and Jordan, under which Israel will keep the Tsofar settlement in the Arava desert and retain the right to work farm fields on Jordan's side of the border.
Israel's parliament will convene to ratify the accord next Monday and Jordan's parliament is expected to act soon. A final signing ceremony will take place the following Wednesday along the Israeli-Jordanian border. The White House has said U.S. President Bill Clinton will attend the event, to which Russian President Boris Yeltsin has also been invited.
The treaty also calls for Israel to supply water to Jordan and cede some land and provides for the setting up of embassies and full diplomatic ties within a month.
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said on Tuesday that Israel preferred this treaty with Jordan over its 1979 treaty with Egypt as a model for peace with Syria.
In rejecting a Jordan-style treaty, Assad also criticized Arab states which have broken ranks and reached separate agreements with Israel. PLO chief Yasser Arafat on Tuesday also condemned the accord as undercutting Palestinian rights in Jerusalem.
In a statement, Arafat said: "This is a outrageous infringement on the declaration of principles between the PLO and Israel, and the letters exchanged between the two parties in regards to Jerusalem, the holy Islamic and Christian shrines."
He viewed Israel's promise to give Jordan a special role in overseeing religious sites and charities as jumping the gun on talks on the final status of Jerusalem, which are not set to start until 1996.
Israeli and Jordanian officials met in the Jordanian port of Aqaba Tuesday to set about the task of translating their new agreement into reality.
(Reuters, AP)
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