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Clinton meets Israeli pointman on Mideast deadlock

by Staff Writers
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.

Direct Palestinian-Israeli peace talks, only launched here in September, were thrown into disarray on Tuesday when Washington suspended its demand for Israel to renew a freeze on Jewish settlement building in the West Bank.

Crowley said Wednesday that Washington still considered settlements in occupied Palestinian land to be illegal but would now seek means other than a settlement freeze to restart peace talks.

The Palestinians have refused to return to peace talks without a new settlement freeze. They want it not only on the West Bank, but also in east Jerusalem, which they claim as the capital of a future state.



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Washington (AFP) Dec 8, 2010
The United States continues to oppose Israeli settlements in the West Bank, but is holding out hope for a Mideast peace deal next year despite a continued impasse over building there, a State Department spokesman said Wednesday. "Our position on settlements has not and will not change," spokesman PJ Crowley told reporters. "The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Is ... read more







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