Wednesday, November 11, 2009

"... 70 minute one-on-one, and dumping Clinton's "unprecedented"

'Ahmad Bahar, the acting head of the Palestinian Legislative Council'
Laura Rosen, here

"When Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Bill Burns spoke to the Middle East Institute on Monday, he used some subtly but notably different language on the Israeli offer for a partial settlement moratorium and related issues than key senior U.S. officials had used recently.

Burns: "We seek to create the best possible circumstances for negotiations, working with the parties, working with key regional partners like Egypt and the Quartet. We do not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements; we consider the Israeli offer to restrain settlement activity to be a potentially important step, but it obviously falls short of the continuing road map obligationfor a full settlement freeze. We seek to deepen international support for the Palestinian Authority’s impressive plan to build over the next couple years the institutions that a responsible Palestinian state requires. And we also seek progress toward peace between Israel and Syria, and Israel and Lebanon, as part of a broader peace among Israel and all of its neighbors." (emphasis added)

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had described Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's offer for a nine-month moratorium on new West Bank settlement construction or further land expropriations as "unprecedented" .....

But since Palestinian President's Mahmoud Abbas's threat last week to not run in next year's Palestinian elections, and the prospect of the collapse of the Palestinian Authority, the U.S. seems to have decided to toss the "unprecedented" language altogether, even with all the qualifiers.

Diplomatic sources say Abbas, his threat to quit and the prospect of the PA's collapse and what it would mean was a major topic of discussion in a meeting between Barack Obama and Netanyahu on Monday night, about which very few details have emerged, in either the Israeli or American press........it went on for 70 minutes, a diplomatic source said — a very long one-on-one meeting with POTUS. There was also a 20 minute meeting between the larger U.S. and Israeli PM delegations.

There's other language in Burns's speech that seems to try to appeal directly to Palestinian concerns, as relayed by American diplomats, that any Israeli-Palestinian final status talks "not start from zero." Burns' reference to "continuing road map obligations" is interesting. While the Obama administration has now joined Netanyahu in calling for peace talks to begin "without preconditions" — e.g., without a full Israeli settlement freeze — the Palestinians do not consider a settlement freeze a "precondition" but an Israeli obligation under the road map.

The Obama administration now seems to be trying to desperately signal to Abbas that it is trying to give him more to work with -- and hoping it is not too late.".... Or operation we're really sorry, please don't quit. Apparently, if Abbas doesn't run and no other Palestinian Authority president is elected (and no one else has agreed to run), the whole PA cabinet including PA Prime Minister Salaam Fayyed will resign, making way for the head of the Palestinian parliament to assume the post. And he is a member of Hamas. A prospect of such concern that it might warrant seventy minutes of POTUS' time."

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