Years of Diplomatic Stagnation about to End, Says Israel's Livni

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Israeli negotiator and Justice Minister Tzipi Livni hailed U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's announcement Friday on an agreement for the basis to resume peace talks with the Palestinians.

"These were long months of scepticism and cynicism," she said in a statement. "But now, four years of diplomatic stagnation are about to end."

Livni will be meeting with Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat in Washington in the near future to begin "initial talks", according to Kerry.

"Alongside the opportunity, I also know that the moment negotiations start, they will be complex and not easy," Livni said.

"But I'm convinced this is the right thing for our future, our security, our economy and values."

Livni praised Netanyahu "who made decisions that represent Israel's important interests" and Kerry for his "determination" which "led the Palestinians and us to the negotiating room".

Kerry's announcement came at the end of four days of intense diplomacy by the secretary of state as he consulted Israeli and Palestinian leaders from his base in the Jordanian capital Amman.

Talks have stuttered and started for decades in the elusive bid to reach a final peace deal between the Arab world and Israel.

But they collapsed completely in September 2010 when Israel refused to keep up a freeze on settlement building in Palestinian territories.

Comments 3
Thumb Senescence 20 July 2013, 13:50

Just an appeasement to the Europeans so they don't penalize them for expanding settlements. A bit obvious, that one. Just after the EU released a statement saying the matter is as such, the president, the PM, Livni, and others, suddenly exclaim that peace-talks have spearheaded amazing breakthroughs and that 30+ years of "Diplomatic Stagnation" (rather, their unwillingness to stop expanding settlements and killing Palestinians) are drawing to a close. Thanks Israel/not.

Well, at least I'm somewhat relieved seeing European pressure works some of the time to persuade Israel away from its lunacy.

Missing beirutbastard00 20 July 2013, 14:01

Why would they keep spending money on settlements if they really wanted to make peace. It's a land grab before any eventual agreement with the Palestinians. Noam Chomsky said it best, Israel has to lose a war before it can accept peace.

Missing phillipo 20 July 2013, 17:05

The big difference is that if Israel lost a war, there would be no Israel with which to make peace.