JERUSALEM -- Prime Minister Ariel Sharon canceled a planned trip to the United States Sunday for next week, saying he intended to focus his energies on patching together a new blueprint for withdrawing from the Gaza Strip after his party rejected his original plan.\nSharon told his cabinet ministers during a stormy meeting that he will present them with a revised version of his "disengagement plan" in the next three weeks. He did not reveal what changes he is contemplating or how he would satisfy his deeply divided coalition.\nThe announcement was the latest sign of Sharon's determination to push ahead with his plan after its overwhelming defeat in a May 2 referendum of Likud Party members. That vote, though nonbinding, would make it difficult for many Likud Cabinet ministers to support the plan.\nSharon told his Cabinet he was canceling his trip to Washington, D.C., scheduled for next week, during which he was to have addressed the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a pro-Israel lobbying group. He also had been expected to meet with President Bush, who had endorsed Sharon's plan as a valuable step to reviving peace efforts.\nThe original plan called for a full pullout of Gaza, where 7,500 Israeli settlers and 1.3 million Palestinians live, and a withdrawal from four small West Bank settlements. Sharon said the plan to disentangle the Israeli and Palestinian populations would boost Israel's security in the absence of a peace deal.\nVice Premier Ehud Olmert said Friday Sharon still intends to evacuate all Gaza settlements.\nHard-liners in the government oppose any territorial concessions and some Likud ministers, who gave the plan only tepid support in the first place, have said they will not go against the party's decision.\nAt the same time, Justice Minister Yosef Lapid of the moderate Shinui Party has threatened to quit the government if Sharon does not push forward with the Gaza withdrawal. He dismissed the Likud referendum, saying 1 percent of the population should not be allowed to decide policy for the country.\nAs Lapid addressed the Cabinet meeting, two hard-line ministers, Avigdor Lieberman and Benny Elon, walked out, participants said.\nLapid also got into a shouting match with minister Uzi Landau, a Likud hard-liner. Landau and his allies said it was undemocratic to ignore the referendum, and he said there was no chance the Cabinet would pass a new plan.\nFinance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Sharon's biggest rival and a reluctant supporter of the plan before the referendum, said three weeks was not enough time to come up with a proper alternative and urged Sharon to honor the party's decision.\n"A diplomatic program isn't a pair of socks that can be changed every day," Netanyahu said, according to participants in the meeting.\nIn considering a new plan, Sharon asked the ministers to decide how Israel can best fight terror and how it can combat the demographic problem that Palestinians will soon outnumber Jews in the combined area of the West Bank, Gaza and Israel.\nLater Sunday, Palestinian militants fired on a group of settlers holding a memorial ceremony at the spot along a road in the Gaza Strip where a pregnant woman and her four young daughters were killed by militants last week.\nScores of settlers, some carrying babies, jumped behind concrete barriers and scrambled to hide behind cars, according to television footage shown on Israel's Channel 10. One woman ran, carrying a baby carriage, for the safety of a nearby bus. Settlers armed with assault rifles returned fire.\nSoldiers also shot at the three Palestinian gunmen responsible for the attack, the army said. No injuries were reported on either side.\nIslamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the shooting.\nThe army said Sunday it had discovered a weapons-smuggling tunnel in the Gaza town of Rafah, along the Egyptian border, in an overnight raid. The army said it had arrested a number of Palestinians in the tunnel.\nThe army, which frequently conducts raids in the area, said it had discovered 11 weapons-smuggling tunnels in Rafah this year.
Sharon postpones U.S. visit
Israeli Prime Minister to revise disengagement plan
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