TUE 16 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Sep 14, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
U.S. envoys back to Mideast to try to avert imminent crisis

WASHINGTON/CAIRO: The Obama administration’s top two Middle East peace envoys are returning to the region this week in a last-ditch bid to avert a looming crisis over a Palestinian bid for statehood recognition at the United Nations this month.


Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday she was sending David Hale, the special envoy for Middle East peace, and Dennis Ross, the top Mideast adviser at the National Security Council, to Israel and the Palestinian territories to try to persuade the Palestinians to drop their U.N. effort and bring the parties back to long-stalled talks.


Ross and Hale will meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to try “to create a sustainable platform for negotiations that can produce the two-state outcome that we seek,” Clinton told reporters at the State Department. “Our hope is we get the parties back into a frame of mind and into a process where they actually begin negotiating again.”.


Hale and Ross were last in the region just over a week ago but failed to persuade Palestinian officials to abandon their quest for U.N. recognition. Israel vehemently opposes such a move, and the United States has said it will veto it in the U.N. Security Council. However, the Palestinians have suggested that instead of going to the Security Council, they may seek a vote on a recognition resolution at the U.N. General Assembly, where the U.S. cannot veto it and it would be likely to pass.


Israel and the United States insist that the United Nations is not the forum to create a state and that a future Palestine must come as the result of direct negotiations.


“We need an environment that is conducive to direct negotiations,” Clinton said. “We all know that no matter what happens or doesn’t happen at the U.N., the next day is not going to result in the kind of changes that the United States wishes to see that would move us toward a two-state solution that we strongly support. The only way of getting a lasting solution is through direct negotiations between the parties, and the route to that lies in Jerusalem and Ramallah, not in New York.”


Qatari prime minister said Monday Arab states would push for a full-fledged Palestinian state at the United Nations despite a U.S. threat to block such a move.
Earlier Monday, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who is in Cairo for talks with officials at an Arab foreign ministers’ meeting on the Palestinian U.N. bid, said the European Union has still not decided on a united position yet.


“The Arabs had agreed to apply to the United Nations for a full-fledged Palestinian state with its capital East Jerusalem,” Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, chairman of the follow-up committee on the Palestinian U.N. bid, said at the start of the meeting.
“At this meeting, we will look into the steps that has been taken to go to the United Nations,” he said before a closed session began.


President Mahmoud Abbas, heading the Palestinian delegation to the meeting at the Arab League headquarters in Cairo, has been under U.S. pressure not to go ahead with the U.N. bid.



 
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