The chief Palestinian negotiator says indirect peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians have officially started.
Saeb Erekat made the announcement Sunday after a meeting between U.S. Mideast envoy George Mitchell and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah. Mitchell is to mediate the talks.
Posts Tagged ‘George Mitchell’
Indirect Mideast peace talks begin
No breakthrough in Mitchell ME peace mission
U.S President Barack Obama’s point man in the Middle East has little to show for his latest peace mission. U.S. envoy George Mitchell held three days of separate meetings with Israeli and Palestinian leaders, but failed to achieve a breakthrough on resuming peace talks. He said he will return again next week.
The week ahead
Renewed diplomatic efforts over Iran’s nuclear activities
• AFTER Iran announced that its long-delayed Bushehr civilian nuclear plant will be operational within a few months, American diplomats will renew efforts to obtain further sanctions against the Islamic republic over its suspected efforts to build a nuclear bomb. Hillary Clinton, the American secretary of state, has been trying to persuade members of the UN Security Council, including Russia, which has been helping to build the Bushehr plant since 1995, to accept to a new round of sanctions against Iran. The country’s government refused to agree to a compromise plan for its uranium to be enriched in Russia.
• AMERICA’S vice-president, Joe Biden, tries again to untangle the knot that is Middle Eastern politics. He travels to the region on Monday March 8th and will meet the leaders of Israel, the Palestinian territories, Egypt and Jordan in an attempt to encourage the resumption of peace talks. George Mitchell, Barack Obama’s envoy, is adding his weight to efforts reopen negotiations. A recent row over historical holy sites has not helped to warm relations, as Israeli archaeologists in East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians see as their future capital, are intent on uncovering evidence of Jewish ties that could be used to undermine the Arab presence there. …
US ‘overestimated’ ability to influence Mideast process: Obama
US President Barack Obama said Friday he may have overestimated the influence the US could exert over the Israeli-Palestinian peace process and regretted raising expectations for meaningful talks to restart this year.
Obama, in an interview with Time Magazine, said the political situation in Israel and the Palestinian territories had made it difficult for either side [...]
Clinton holding Mideast peace talks
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is holding talks with Israeli and Palestinian officials on relaunching the Middle East peace process. Clinton, joined by U.S. envoy George Mitchell, met Saturday with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the capital of the United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi.
“No agreement” in Mid-East talks
U.S. envoy George Mitchell’s latest round of shuttle diplomacy in the Middle East has ended without agreement, U.S. and Palestinian officials say. Mitchell met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem in a fresh attempt at getting a deal on Jewish settlement activity.
U.S. envoy meets Israeli PM again to discuss settlements
A U.S. envoy has ended a second day of talks with Israel’s PM without securing Israel’s agreement to freeze settlement building in disputed areas. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office described his meeting with U.S. envoy George Mitchell in Jerusalem Wednesday as “good.” It says the two plan to meet again on Friday, after Mitchell returns from visits to Arab states.
No declaration of US-Israel pact on settlement issue expected
Israeli diplomatic officials have said that Tuesday’’s meeting between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US envoy George Mitchell may not lead to any declaration of a US-Israel agreement on the settlement issue.
The officials, however, said that Israel is willing to start talks with the United States immediately.
According to the Jerusalem Post, the Prime Minister’’s Office [...]
Prepare to freeze
Israel’s prime minister faces a difficult path as he prepares for a possible halt to new settlements
THE Israeli government’s approval this week of 455 new housing units in the West Bank settlements was announced with a wink and a nod, and seems to have elicited winks and nods all round. Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, is expected soon to agree, reluctantly and under American pressure, to a temporary freeze on settlement building, and the new homes are widely seen as an act of face-saving political expediency on his part.
Expressions of protest and disapproval from foreign governments, upset Palestinian negotiators and domestic doveish critics had a predictable air to them. An American State Department spokesman deflected reporters’ irate questions on the matter with equanimity. He declined to consider whether the administration felt it was being spat on, and said that a planned trip to the region by America’s envoy, George Mitchell, would go ahead as planned at the weekend. …
U.S. peace envoys continue Middle East tour
U.S. peace envoy George Mitchell has continued his whistle-stop tour of the Middle East with a visit to Ramallah to meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Mitchell made no mention of the contentious issue of settlements but did say that all those involved must make efforts in the drive for peace.
Obama Called “Racist” By Israeli Rabbi
A settler rabbi in Jerusalem has labelled Obama a ‘racist’ at a rally to protest the United States’ call for a total freeze on Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank, Haaretz reports.
The groups behind the rally also aim to organize…
US moves to reassure Israel over Iran
Defence secretary among four senior officials in the Middle East advocating a diplomatic solution to festering crisis with Tehran
The United States today sought to reassure Israel that it was worth attempting to persuade Iran to give up its nuclear ambitions — but made clear that Washington expected Tehran to reply to its diplomatic overtures by September.
Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, is one of four senior Obama administration officials visiting Israel this week, underlining the president’s determination to secure a comprehensive Middle East peace agreement.
Gates said he did not believe that Barack Obama’s timetable would “increase the risks to anybody” — a reference to Israeli concerns that its nuclear monopoly may soon be challenged by the Islamic republic.
Israel has hinted at a pre-emptive attack on Iran should it deem diplomacy to be at a dead end. Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said today that he reaffirmed to Gates “the need to use all means to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear military capability”.
George Mitchell, the president’s special envoy, flew to Cairo today and was due back later for more meetings in Israel. On Saturday he was in Damascus meeting President Bashar al-Assad, who is being wooed by Obama after being shunned by the Bush administration.
The US envoy said restarting talks between Israel and Syria was a “near-term goal” for Washington. “I told President Assad that President Obama is determined to facilitate a truly comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace,” he told reporters.
Indirect negotiations between Syria and Israel, mediated by Turkey and centred on the occupied Golan Heights, were suspended during Israel’s offensive against the Gaza Strip in December. Turkey said this month it was ready to resume mediation efforts.
But there has been no public sign from Syria that Assad has agreed to influence Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist movement that controls Gaza, and the bitter opponent of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority. Hamas, listed as a terrorist organisation by the US and Britain, is based in Damascus.
The US is sending an ambassador back to Syria after withdrawing the previous incumbent in 2005 in protest at the Beirut assassination of Rafiq al-Hariri, the former Lebanese prime minister, which was widely blamed on Damascus, despite repeated denials.
Syria’s foreign minister, Walid al-Muallem, said in London on Friday that Damascus – Tehran’s only Arab ally – could help find a way out of the impasse over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, complicated by domestic turmoil since last month’s disputed presidential elections.
As well as Iran, Gates’s talks in Israel centre on missile defence and bilateral security issues. General Jim Jones, Obama’s national security adviser, and Dennis Ross, a senior Middle East and Iran expert, are also due in Israel.
The flurry of high-level activity follows Obama’s long-heralded speech to the Arab and Muslim worlds in Cairo in June, when the president made clear his strategic commitment to working to achieve Middle East peace. These latest moves are intended to achieve concrete results.
Mitchell and the Israeli defence minister, Ehud Barak, have been trying to agree a delicate compromise on freezing Israeli settlement activity in the West Bank – a hot potato in Israeli domestic politics but vital if Arab countries are to take any steps, at the urging of the US, to “normalise” their relations with Israel.
Netanyahu has pledged not to build new outposts or expropriate territory in the West Bank. But he insists construction must continue to accommodate “natural” Jewish population growth. The precise definition of a moratorium has yet to be agreed, though Israeli officials speak of exempting 2,500 housing units that are still being built. Palestinians and Arabs say a total freeze is the minimum required and accuse Netanyahu of bad faith. Mitchell is also due to see Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, at his Ramallah headquarters.





