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Palestinians doubt U.S. will help them get state
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Palestinians doubt U.S. will help them get state
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By Tom Perry
RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - Palestinian leaders said on Wednesday that "Israeli obstinacy" made Washington give up on efforts to halt Jewish settlement and questioned whether the United States could ever help them attain...
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By Tom Perry
RAMALLAH, West Bank |
Wed Dec 8, 2010 11:08pm EST
RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - Palestinian leaders said on Wednesday that "Israeli obstinacy" made Washington give up on efforts to halt Jewish settlement and questioned whether the United States could ever help them attain independence.
Senior Palestinian official Yasser Abed Rabbo said that with its bid to revive direct Israeli-Palestinian negotiations now at a dead end, the United States was proposing a return to indirect talks to try to unblock a peace process in deep crisis.
U.S. envoy George Mitchell will head back to the region next week for another round of diplomacy, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said as the administration of President Barack Obama indicated it intended to continue its peace push.
"Senator Mitchell will go back to the region next week to consult," Crowley said in Washington.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is scheduled to meet with chief Israeli negotiator Yitzhak Molho in Washington at 9 a.m. (1400 GMT) on Thursday.
Officials in Washington have said the United States was weighing a move to separate discussions with both sides -- a return to the indirect talks conducted for much of last year along shuttle diplomacy lines, as in past U.S. mediation bids.
The Palestinians had demanded a halt to Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem before agreeing to resume direct talks in pursuit of the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Under U.S. stewardship, the Israeli and Palestinian leaders held three rounds of talks in September. But the Palestinians pulled out when Israel's 10-month freeze on West Bank settlement building expired at the end of that month.
Israel says a settlement freeze was a precondition that never existed in previous stages of the 20-year-old peace process and blames Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for taking too long to sit down for talks after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the moratorium in November 2009.
U.S. CREDIBILITY HIT
Israel has settled the territory extensively since 1967, when it captured and occupied the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The international community for the most part deems the settlements illegal.
Settler leaders claim a biblical right to the West Bank.
The U.S. announcement giving up efforts to halt Jewish settlement was a big setback for Obama, who believes settling the Middle East conflict is "a vital national security interest." When launching the talks in September, Obama said he hoped to have a deal signed in a year.
Samih Shabib, a political scientist at Birzeit University near Ramallah, said the failure meant the U.S.'s "credibility has become very weak among the Palestinians and Arabs."
Abed Rabbo, a senior aide to Abbas, told Voice of Palestine radio that U.S. policy had changed "because of Israeli obstinacy and rejection."
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Comments (2)
andrewhorning wrote:
Well if the USA still subsidizes Israel, one of the richest nuclear powers, especially after the USS Liberty incident (among other embarrassing/horrifying fiascos), then the Palestinians should indeed doubt that any help will come from the USA.
Dec 08, 2010 8:08pm EST -- Report as abuse
USAalltheway wrote:
andrew you repeat the same tired lines like a parrot. Palestinians can’t make a peace deal amongst themselves so why is Israel expected to?
Dec 08, 2010 10:07pm EST -- Report as abuse
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