Friday, July 19, 2013

Kerry heads to West Bank in last-ditch push for renewed Middle East peace talks

Mandel Ngan / Pool via AP

Secretary of State John Kerry speaks to reporters during a visit at the Zaatari refugee camp in Mafraq, Jordan on Thursday.

By Arshad Mohammed, Ali Sawafta, Maayan Lubell and Nidal al-Mughrabi, Reuters

AMMAN, Jordan -- Secretary of State John Kerry was due to travel to the West Bank to meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Friday in a last-ditch effort to clinch a renewal of peace talks with Israel, U.S. and Palestinian officials said.

Kerry met Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat in Amman on Friday and had been consulting Israeli officials by telephone, a U.S. official said, but did not say if a breakthrough was near.

A State Department official in Amman said Kerry would go to Ramallah in the afternoon to see Abbas, but did not disclose his proposals to revive peace talks that broke down in 2010.

The Palestinian leadership on Thursday did not accept Kerry's latest plan, but signaled that it was leaving the door open for him to continue his peace push.

Negotiations, which have ebbed and flowed over two decades, collapsed in late 2010 in a dispute over Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, territories it captured in the 1967 Middle East war.

The Palestinians want that land as part of an independent state and have demanded Israel halt all settlement construction and recognize the pre-war lines as the basis for negotiations over the future state's borders before peace talks begin.

A Palestinian official said Erekat had told Kerry the Palestinians were ready to return to negotiations if Israel agreed that talks be based in principle on the 1967 borders.

America's top military brass told Congress Thursday Syria's President Assad is winning his country's civil war, but Congress is worried that if the U.S. sends weapons to the rebels they will end up in the wrong hands. During Secretary of State John Kerry's visit to a refugee camp in Jordan, rebels said they blame America for their setbacks. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

"We also have some clarifications needed in relation to (Israeli) settlement and (the release of Palestinian) prisoners," a Palestinian official said.

An Israeli government spokesman could not be reached for comment on Kerry's visit. Israel has balked at the Palestinians' demands and says talks should resume with no preconditions.

Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Zeev Elkin said to establish a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders would be "suicidal".

"A negotiation in which you first say what you are willing to give up ... is not the kind of negotiation that leads to good results in the Middle East," Elkin told Israel Radio.

Kerry, on his sixth peacemaking visit to the region since March, was due to return to the United States later on Friday.

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2ee4cf75/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C190C195594530Ekerry0Eheads0Eto0Ewest0Ebank0Ein0Elast0Editch0Epush0Efor0Erenewed0Emiddle0Eeast0Epeace0Etalks0Dlite/story01.htm

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