Kerry Meets Abbas for First Time since Collapse of Peace Talks

W460

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met late Wednesday in London with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas for their first face-to-face talks since the peace process collapsed last month, U.S. officials said.

The two were meeting in an upscale hotel for what U.S. officials have billed as "informal" talks, seeking to downplay any hopes of a breakthrough in Kerry's ill-fated bid to reach an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal.

"The door remains open to the peace process. The secretary continues to believe that," a senior State Department official said before Kerry left Washington.

"But the purpose of the meeting is more about our ongoing relationship with the Palestinian people."

After weeks of angry moves by both sides, Israel suspended its participation in the talks on April 23 after Abbas announced the Palestine Liberation Organization was seeking a unity deal with the Hamas militants who run the Gaza Strip.

Washington has branded Hamas a terrorist organization since 1993 and has said it must recognize Israel and renounce violence.

But top U.S. officials have already warned that a unity government including Hamas members risks seeing a freeze in millions of dollars of U.S. aid.

Under US law it is forbidden for U.S. funds to be given to blacklisted foreign terrorist groups.

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