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Abbas conditions peace talks on settlement freeze

Clinton meets Israeli pointman on Mideast deadlock
Washington (AFP) Dec 9, 2010 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met here Thursday with Israel's chief peace negotiator Yitzhak Molcho to see how to break the deadlock in the Middle East peace talks, her spokesman said. Clinton sought to get "a perspective on the Israeli side of how to move forward, and the secretary and Mr. Molcho also engaged in substantive issues," her spokesman Philip Crowley said without elaborating. Their meeting lasted "for more than an hour" while US envoy George Mitchell, who is due to return to the region next week, and other Middle East experts also met with Molcho, Crowley said. Meanwhile, the Palestinian chief negotiator, Saeb Erakat, was due to arrive for talks with the US State Department's Middle East team later Thursday and for talks with Clinton on Friday, he added.

When asked if the Israeli and Palestinian teams could meet together here under US auspices, Crowley replied: "I'm not anticipating that there would be a three-sided meeting in Washington." Crowley said Clinton had spoken twice over the telephone on Wednesday with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas. The calls were "to follow up on other meetings that President Abbas had had in the region and to encourage President Abbas to dispatch Saeb Erekat here for follow-on discussions, and President Abbas agreed," he said. Crowley said Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad was also heading to Washington where he was expected to meet Clinton ahead of a forum at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy. The chief US diplomat was due to give a speech at the forum on a new strategy for advancing the peace process.

Syria's Assad says no Israeli peace partner
Paris (AFP) Dec 9, 2010 - There is no Israeli peace partner, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said Friday, also slamming an Israeli law requiring a referendum ahead of a withdrawal from Arab lands annexed since 1967. "This Israeli position is completely unacceptable from a legal point of view," Assad said of the November 23 law, following lunchtime talks with President Nicolas Sarkozy. The law notably requires any government signing a peace deal that cedes territory in occupied east Jerusalem or the Golan Heights, seized from Syria in 1967, to secure approval either from parliament or a referendum. It would not affect territorial concessions within the occupied West Bank or the Gaza Strip, which Israel has not annexed.

With peace talks stalled as Israel continues to authorise settlement building in the West Bank, Assad said that US mediation efforts should not be blamed. "Before blaming the sponsor, you have to blame the concerned parties. Today, we notice that there is no Israeli peace partner," he said. Assad added that he was opposed to the issue of Jewish settlement building on occupied Arab land being at the centre of peace talks. "We know that the land will return, with or without the settlements. If you want to talk about peace, you have to talk about the law, the return of territory, you shouldn't talk about settlements or settlement building."
by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) Dec 9, 2010
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas Thursday stood firm on his demand for a halt to settlement building before talks with Israel can resume, as US officials scrambled to rescue the collapsing peace process.

"We will not accept negotiations as long as settlements continue," Abbas told reporters in Cairo after more than an hour of talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

"We have made this clear to the Americans: without a halt to settlements, no negotiations."

The Palestinian leader said he also wanted to hear explanations from Washington as to why it failed to persuade Israel to freeze settlements in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem.

"We want to know what happened exactly between America and Israel," he said, adding he would be meeting Washington's Middle East envoy George Mitchell when he returns to the region next week.

A Palestinian diplomat said the two would meet on Monday.

Other Palestinian officials have indicated that indirect talks, along with Mitchell, are likely to be the immediate way forward in Washington's stuttering attempts to secure a peace deal by the end of 2011.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said he still favours direct peace talks, despite the dwindling prospects of them resuming any time soon.

"It is very important that the dialogue between us and the Palestinians continues," Lieberman said in Sofia after talks with his Bulgarian counterpart, Nikolay Mladenov.

"Nothing can replace direct negotiations. We believe in direct negotiations."

Abbas, apparently still leaving the door open, said a final decision on talks with Israel would be taken in consultation with Arab and Palestinian officials.

"There must be clear references for peace... and we will discuss all that with the follow-up committee, the Palestinian leadership and after that there will be a decision."

An Arab League official said in Cairo that foreign ministers on the follow-up committee would meet next Thursday, along with Abbas, after he had had a chance to consult with Arab leaders and with Mitchell.

In the past, Abbas has sought the endorsement of the Arab follow-up committee on the question of resuming the US-brokered direct peace talks.

The Palestinians have repeatedly stressed they will not resume direct talks unless there is a halt to building in the West Bank as well as in east Jerusalem, which they consider the capital of their future state.

In his comments on Thursday, Abbas reiterated that a future state should be within the 1967 boundaries -- before the Six-Day June 1967 war when Israel seized the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.

"We will categorically refuse any Israeli presence on Palestinian land after the establishment of a Palestinian state," Abbas said.

Meanwhile, Erakat was heading to the United States for talks with top US officials over the situation.

Palestinian premier Salam Fayyad was also heading for Washington where he was expected to meet Hillary Clinton ahead of a forum at the Saban Centre for Middle East Policy at which the secretary of state is to speak about a new strategy for advancing the peace process.

Fayyad, expected to arrive early on Friday, was also slated to address the forum, alongside Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak.

Asked about Erakat's mission to Washington, Abbas stressed that his chief negotiator will only be meeting Clinton.

"There will be no secret meetings between him and Israeli officials."

The United States is holding out hope a peace deal can still be reached next year, a target it set as the chief broker before direct talks resumed in Washington in September amid fanfare but little optimism from the two sides.

"We're shifting our approach, but are still focused on the goal of a framework agreement within a year ... We believe that's still achievable," State Department spokesman PJ Crowley said on Wednesday.

In Paris, meanwhile, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said: "Today, we notice that there is no Israeli peace partner," he said.

"We know that the land will return, with or without the settlements. If you want to talk about peace, you have to talk about the law, the return of territory, you shouldn't talk about settlements or settlement building."

Direct talks were re-launched on September 2 after a 20-month hiatus but stalled three weeks later when Israel refused to renew a moratorium on settlement building.



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