Published: 7:17PM Wednesday November 04, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersHillary Clinton
Israel's offer to show restraint on settlements falls short of
US expectations, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in an
effort to counter Arab accusations she had been too soft on
Israel.
Clinton, meeting Arab foreign ministers in Morocco, tried to
control the damage after failing to put more pressure on Israel
publicly to freeze settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank
when she met Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
She will travel from Morocco to Egypt for a meeting with Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak, a State Department spokesman said.
Those talks are also likely to focus on the stalled
Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
A State Department spokesman said Clinton had tried to explain to
the Arab officials on Monday what Israel had put on the table, and
to calm the situation down.
"We obviously were very conscious of the reaction to her appearance
in Jerusalem," the spokesman said of Clinton's efforts with Arab
leaders. "I would call it public diplomacy."
Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa said he feared US
President Barack Obama's drive to restart Israeli-Palestinian peace
talks could be heading for failure over the settlement issue.
Obama has eased US pressure on Israel over settlements, calling for
restraint in construction where he had earlier pushed for a
freeze.
The change has angered Palestinians who say it has killed any
hope of reviving peace negotiations soon.
"The Israelis have responded to the call of the US, the
Palestinians and the Arab world to stop settlement activity by
expressing a willingness to restrain settlement activity," Clinton
told reporters.
"This offer falls far short of what our preference would be but if
it is acted upon it will be an unprecedented restriction on
settlements and would have a significant and meaningful effect on
restraining their growth."
Clinton also praised Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for
positive steps towards talks, including improving security on the
West Bank, and said Israel should reciprocate.
Arab disappointment
Clinton was in Morocco after a meeting with Netanyahu in Jerusalem
at which she endorsed Israel's view that settlement expansion
should not be a bar to resuming negotiations.
The Arab League chief said Arab states shared the Palestinian
position that resuming negotiations was futile without a freeze on
settlement expansion.
"I am telling you that all of us, including Saudi Arabia, including
Egypt, are deeply disappointed ... with the results, with the fact
that Israel can get away with anything without any firm stand that
this cannot be done," Moussa told reporters.
Asked if Obama's initiative to restart the peace process had
failed, he said: "I still wait until we have our meetings and
decide what we are going to do. But failure is in the atmosphere
all over."
After a bilateral meeting with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud
al-Faisal in Morocco as well as group meetings with Gulf Arab
ministers and officials from Egypt, Jordan and Iraq on the
sidelines of a conference, Clinton said many aspects of the peace
talks issue had been discussed.
"Our conversation was very open," she said.
After Clinton's visit to Jerusalem, Palestinians accused the United
States of back-pedalling on settlements and said a resumption of
Israeli-Palestinian talks was not in sight.
Netanyahu has proposed limiting building for now to some 3,000
settler homes already approved by Israel in the West Bank.
He does not regard building in occupied East Jerusalem, annexed
in defiance of international opposition, as settlement.
Abbas faces intense domestic pressure from Hamas Islamists who
control the Gaza Strip, and any compromise on settlements could
hurt him politically in a run-up to Palestinian elections he has
scheduled for January 24.
Hamas has rejected holding a vote.
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