Kerry Meets Netanyahu, Abbas over Peace Talks Crisis

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U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was holding late-night talks with the leadership in Jerusalem and Ramallah on Monday on his latest mission to salvage the crisis-hit peace process.

He flew in from Paris for what was expected to be little more than a 15-hour visit to push both sides to resolve a lingering dispute over Palestinian prisoners which is threatening to derail the negotiations ahead of an April 29 deadline.

U.S. peace efforts are teetering on the brink of collapse after Israel refused to free a group of 26 veteran Palestinian prisoners under an agreement which brought the sides back to the negotiating table in July 2013.

Furious Palestinian officials have warned that unless Israel changes its stance on the prisoner releases, it could signal the end of the talks.

They gave Kerry 24 hours to resolve the prisoners' dispute after which they will resume moves to seek international recognition.

"If we don't get an answer from John Kerry on the prisoners tonight, we'll begin to ask for membership in all U.N. agencies tomorrow," Palestinian MP Mustafa Barghuti told Agence France Presse following a top-level leadership meeting in Ramallah which took place as Kerry arrived in Israel.

Kerry, who landed in Tel Aviv shortly after 1600 GMT, went straight to Jerusalem and began talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accompanied by his envoy Martin Indyk and U.S. ambassador Dan Shapiro, an AFP correspondent said.

Israel's chief negotiator Tzipi Livni was also present.

He was later expected in Ramallah for talks with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas who has spent the evening locked in a key leadership meeting in Ramallah to discuss the standoff.

Washington has been fighting an uphill battle to coax the two sides into accepting a framework proposal which would extend the negotiations beyond April 29 to the end of the year.

But shortly before Kerry landed, a Palestinian official told AFP Ramallah had rejected a fresh Israeli offer to extend talks, describing it as "blackmail".

The question of extending the talks has become intricately tied up with the fate of the 26 prisoners.

Just a day ahead of the expected releases, Israel said it would not free detainees convicted of deadly attacks unless the Palestinians would commit to extending the negotiations.

But the Palestinians say they will not even discuss any extension of the negotiating period unless Israel frees the prisoners.

The impasse has triggered "intense" U.S. efforts to resolve the dispute, with Kerry speaking with both sides earlier on Monday.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Kerry's team had been working with both parties to "agree on a path forward".

"After consulting with his team, Secretary Kerry decided it would be productive to return to the region," she told reporters in Paris shortly before departing for Tel Aviv.

The U.S. decision to fly Kerry in came after a late-night meeting between the negotiating teams in Jerusalem at which Israel had made a fresh proposal for extending the negotiations which was rejected by the Palestinian leadership.

"Israel made a proposal which was refused by the Palestinians," a Palestinian official told AFP.

"Israel is practicing a policy of blackmail and linking its agreement to releasing the fourth batch of prisoners with the Palestinians accepting to extend the negotiations," he said.

In exchange for Palestinian agreement to continue the talks, Israel had offered to free the fourth batch of detainees and to release another 420 others.

But that number would involve only common law criminals and not sick detainees, women or children. And it would not include political heavyweights.

And although the Israelis were offering a partial settlement freeze in the West Bank, it would not be extended to annexed east Jerusalem, nor would it cover construction where tenders had already been published.

"The Israeli proposal aims to continue the negotiations indefinitely, without any results, in parallel with continued settlement building," he charged, saying such policies posed a "real danger" to the peace process.

On Sunday, Netanyahu said the fate of the peace process would be sealed within the coming days, saying any deal to extend talks beyond April would have to be put to the cabinet.

It was Kerry's first visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories since early January, although he has held face-to-face meetings with both Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in Europe and the United States.

He also met Abbas last week in Amman.

Comments 3
Thumb FlameCatcher 31 March 2014, 19:04

You know what's funny Southern ? All that talk about what Israelis have done to Palestinians.

Hezbollah is doing exactly the same to Lebanese !

- They built an army
- They hijacked our country and democracy
- They took over lands that do not belong to them
- They block off access to many parts of the country
- They create fear
- They ignore the existence of the Lebanese State and its institutions
- They piss on Lebanese laws
- They rely on foreign funding and weapons (meaning they are controlled by outsiders)
- They harass and terrorize the rest of the lebanese

I wonder how long it will take until Hezbollah builds itself a wall to separate it from the rest of the Lebanese population.

How can you claim to be against Israel when you copy their exact modus operandi ?

Thumb FlameCatcher 01 April 2014, 11:54

@Bigjohn : BS ! The majority of the Lebanese voted AGAINST HEZBOLLAH and their weapons ! You can interpret the results and twist them left and right. Fact is, Lebanese do not want their weapons ! They did not want Syria in Lebanon and this is not to replace them with Hebzollah's rule !

Thumb FlameCatcher 01 April 2014, 11:50

@Bigjohn : BS ! The majority of the Lebanese voted AGAINST HEZBOLLAH and their weapons ! You can interpret the results and twist them left and right. Fact is, Lebanese do not want their weapons ! They did not want Syria in Lebanon and this is not to replace them with Hebzollah's rule !