Dr. Aaron Lerner
IMRA
30 September '10
[Dr. Aaron Lerner - IMRA: Of course there was no letter. Technically. There apparently was a draft of the letter that President Obama would sign in the event that PM Netanyahu extended the freeze by 60 days. But since PM Netanyahu hasn't extended the freeze the letter hasn't been signed and thus does not exist. And that's good for Israel because the letter implied that the U.S. would go along with the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state via the UN in the event that talks between Israel and the Palestinians failed to be concluded within a year. ]
Negotiator says Mitchell denied US guarantees
Published yesterday (updated) 30/09/2010
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=319742
BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- A member of the PLO negotiating team said Thursday that US envoy to the Middle East George Mitchell denied reports in the Israeli media that the US had offered Israel guarantees in exchange for freezing settlements.
Israel's Hebrew language daily Maariv reported Wednesday that US President Barack Obama sent a letter of guarantees to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in bid to save direct peace talks from collapse.
The guarantees were reportedly in exchange for an immediate halt to settlement construction and dealt with issues around Israeli security negotiated between Israel defense minister and head of the Israeli negotiating team during visits to the US.
According to the report, Obama committed the US administration to providing Israel with upgraded weapons if a final solution to the conflict is reached. The US would also veto any attempt by Arab nations to present the Palestinian issue to the UN Security Council for one year, and prevent Palestinian negotiators from setting settlements as the central condition to
a peace agreement, the report said.
But PLO negotiator and Fatah leader Nabil Sha'ath said Mitchell denied the report.
"Mitchell's denial came during the meeting with President Abbas, and he affirmed there are no such US guarantees concerning this issue," Sha'ath told the Nazareth-based radio station Shams.
Israel's return to building settlements in the occupied territories has cast the future of peace talks into question following a brief return to negotiations following a 20-month hiatus sparked by Israel's assault on Gaza in December 2008.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton was scheduled to meet with Mitchell shortly after her arrival to the region on Thursday and speak with Abbas the day after. Informed sources told Ma'an that Abbas would sit with Mitchell for a second set of discussions Friday.
Palestinian leaders have made clear in public that they will not compromise on demands, made even before talks began on 2 September, that continued settlement construction on lands intended for a Palestinian state under a two-state solution would not be acceptable.
While Netanyahu said he hoped talks would continue, he has not agreed to halt construction despite reports that the US offered the package of incentives to get the peace process back on track. Netanyahu met with Mitchell on Wednesday.
Abbas said he would discuss continuing talks at an Arab League meeting next week.
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One Choice: Fight to Win
2 months ago
The Palestinian Arabs want Israel to prejudice its legitimate claims before negotiations get started. They want the deck stacked in their favor and all that is left for Israel is how to figure out how to accommodate them. That is not a negotiation and capitulation to Arab demands will not lead to a lasting peace.
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