WASHINGTON (Agencies)
President Barack Obama hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for closed-door talks late Monday, amid friction between the two allies as U.S. efforts to revive Middle East peace talks flounder.
Netanyahu left the White House after spending an hour and forty minutes inside, without making the customary public appearance with the U.S. president.
A brief White House statement framed the meeting in only general terms saying that the two leaders discussed a number of bilateral issues, including Iran and "how to move forward on Middle East peace" and also spoke about Iran and security issues.
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No comment " No Israeli government has been so willing to restrain settlement activity. I say today to Abbas ... let us seize the moment to reach a historic agreement. Let us begin talks immediately " Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu A spokesman for Netanyahu declined to comment on the talks and a briefing the prime minister intended to hold later on Tuesday for reporters who accompanied him to Washington was canceled.
Contrary to normal practice with a visiting Israeli prime minister, reporters were not allowed in the Oval Office.
A senior Israeli official said before the talks that Netanyahu planned to tell Obama that "we mean business" and Israel was willing to be "generous in restraining" building in settlements in the West Bank to get peace talks started again.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who has said he has no desire to run in Palestinian elections in January, has accused Washington of failing to press Israel strongly enough on the settlements -- enclaves Palestinians fear will deny them a viable state.
Saying "no Israeli government has been so willing to restrain settlement activity," Netanyahu told a conference of American Jewish leaders: "I say today to Abbas ... let us seize the moment to reach a historic agreement. Let us begin talks immediately."
Israeli President Shimon Peres has asked Abbas to reconsider his threat not to take part in the Jan. 24 ballot, a decision that could plunge Palestinians deeper into political turmoil two years after Hamas Islamists seized control of the Gaza Strip.
Netanyahu made no such appeal in his speech at the conference of the Jewish Federations of North America. |
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"Permanent peace treaty" " My goal is not negotiations for the sake of negotiations. My goal is to achieve a permanent peace treaty between Israel and the Palestinians -- and soon " Netanyahu Rejecting a complete freeze mandated by a U.S.-backed 2003 peace "road map," Netanyahu has proposed temporarily limiting building in the West Bank enclaves to 3,000 housing units.
He has said East Jerusalem, also captured by Israel in a 1967 war, must be kept out of the equation.
"My goal is not negotiations for the sake of negotiations. My goal is to achieve a permanent peace treaty between Israel and the Palestinians -- and soon," Netanyahu said in his speech.
"Let's get on with it. Let's move," he said, echoing appeals he has made in the past.
Obama has eased U.S. pressure on Israel over settlements, calling for restraint in construction where he had earlier pushed for a freeze.
Palestinians have voiced frustration at what they see as U.S. backsliding on the issue, saying the shift in policy has killed any hope of reviving negotiations soon.
In Israel, the last-minute scheduling of the meeting after Israeli officials said over the past several weeks that Netanyahu hoped to see Obama, was widely seen as a sign of strained relations between the two leaders.
During a visit to the Middle East last week, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton faced strong Arab criticism over the U.S. stance on the settlement issue.
She insisted Washington still wanted a freeze on settlement construction but believed that resuming peace talks, suspended since December, was the best way to curb them. |
