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WAR REPORT
Borders 'essential' to any Mideast peace deal: US
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 09, 2014


Pentagon chief to head to Saudi, Israel next week
Washington (AFP) May 09, 2014 - US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel will fly to Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Israel next week for talks that are expected to focus on Iran's nuclear program and Syria's civil war, officials said Friday.

"This trip will be the secretary's third to the Middle East in just over a year, and it will advance America's regional strategy in that region," Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby told a news conference.

The tour was part of "our effort to work in a coordinated manner with allies and partners across the region to address common security challenges," Kirby said.

US officials have struggled to reassure Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia, over an interim nuclear deal with Iran that the Saudis worry will embolden Tehran. The Gulf governments have also been dissatisfied with Washington's cautious approach to arming rebel forces in Syria.

In Saudi Arabia, Hagel was due to meet with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) defense ministers, a session he proposed during his visit to the region in December, Kirby said.

The meeting will offer a chance for Hagel "to underscore US security commitments in the Middle East and to reinforce the United States' unstinting policy of preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and further destabilizing the region," Kirby said.

It will be the first US-GCC meeting of defense ministers since 2008, according to Kirby.

The gathering of Gulf ministers will also focus on coordinating "air and missile defense, maritime security and cyber defense," he said.

From Saudi Arabia, Hagel will travel to Jordan, where he will meet his counterpart there to discuss the raging civil war in neighboring Syria.

"This visit will highlight the US commitment to the defense of Jordan, where more than 1,000 US personnel are on the ground working closely with Jordanian defense authorities," Kirby said.

US officers killed armed civilians in Yemen capital: official
Washington (AFP) May 10, 2014 - Two US officers shot and killed two armed civilians who tried to kidnap them last month in Yemen's capital, a State Department official said Friday.

The two Americans were removed from Yemen shortly after the shooting, the official added.

"We can confirm that, last month, two US Embassy officers in Yemen fired their weapons after being confronted by armed individuals in an attempted kidnapping at a small commercial business in Sanaa," deputy State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said in a statement to AFP.

"Two of the armed individuals were killed. The embassy officers are no longer in Yemen."

The incident occurred amid fresh tensions in the already troubled nation after the army launched a major offensive against Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula on April 29.

Suspected Al-Qaeda militants attacked Yemen's presidential palace earlier Friday, killing five guards and triggering a fierce gunfight as the extremists hit back at the offensive.

President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi was not at the palace in the capital when gunmen attacked a checkpoint manned by guards outside the compound, a security source said.

The New York Times said a lieutenant colonel with the elite US Joint Special Operations Command and a Central Intelligence Agency officer were involved in the shooting on April 24.

Some US officials told the newspaper that the two officers were getting a haircut at a barbershop in an upscale district of the capital popular with foreigners rather than a clandestine operation, though it remains unclear exactly what they were doing.

The Yemeni defense ministry indicated at the time that a foreigner had shot dead two gunmen who had tried to abduct him, but did not indicate the nationality of any of the people involved.

US Secretary of State John Kerry believes sketching the borders of a future Palestinian state and agreeing to security arrangements for Israel will be "essential" if peace talks resume, the top US negotiator has said.

In his first public comments since negotiations collapsed last month, Martin Indyk candidly described the behind-the-scenes atmosphere between Israelis and Palestinians and voiced hopes the talks would resume soon.

Speaking late Thursday at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy think tank, Indyk said although the two sides both showed "flexibility" it was clear they "do not feel the pressing need to make the gut-wrenching compromises necessary to achieve peace."

In the end despite nine months of "serious and intensive negotiations," Indyk said it was "easier for the Palestinians to sign conventions and appeal to international bodies in their supposed pursuit of justice.

"It is easier for Israeli politicians to avoid tension in the governing coalition and for the Israeli people to maintain the current comfortable status quo," said Indyk, a former US ambassador to Israel.

"If we, the US, are the only party that has a sense of urgency, these negotiations will not succeed."

Should the peace talks resume however, Kerry believes both sides must work on the future contours of a Palestinian state and security arrangements for Israel alongside the other core issues such as refugees and Jerusalem.

Indyk pointed to "unprecedented" work by General John Allen on how to secure Israel's security, as well as a willingness by the Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas to put the security of a future Palestinian state in US hands to overcome Israeli distrust.

"Once a border is agreed each party would be free to build in its own state," Indyk argued, highlighting the tensions caused during the past months by announcements of Israeli plans for more than 12,800 new settlements in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem.

- Settlements used 'to sabotage' talks-

The top US negotiator, who spent hours locked in rooms pouring over documents, voiced concern that the settlement movement could one day "drive Israel into an irreversible binational reality."

A "binational" state -- as opposed to a two-state solution -- would enshrine the current status quo in which Jews and Arabs live in one state, with many demographers predicting that in only a few years the number of Palestinians will surpass the Jewish population.

"Rampant settlement activity -- especially in the midst of negotiations -- doesn't just undermine Palestinian trust in the purpose of the negotiations; it can undermine Israel's Jewish future," Indyk warned.

"If this continues, it could mortally wound the idea of Israel as a Jewish state -- and that would be a tragedy of historic proportions."

The announcement of new settlements had accompanied each tranche of prisoner releases during the past nine months and "had a dramatically damaging impact on the negotiations," Indyk said.

"By the way, it was intended to have that damaging effect," he added, saying supporters of the settlers used such activity as "a way of sabotaging the negotiations."

Abbas was increasingly "humiliated by false Israeli claims that he had agreed to increased settlement activity" in return for the prisoner releases, and as the talks went on "he shut down."

"It wasn't the only reason he shut down," Indyk said, answering questions after his speech, "but it was the major reason that he shut down toward the end of last year."

Some Israeli officials, however, reacted angrily to Indyk's comments, with deputy minister Ofir Akunis, a leading hawk from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyhau's Likud party saying: "I regret that Palestinian lying also influences our friends."

"There are not two truths, only one," he wrote on his Facebook page. "The Palestinians torpedoed the negotiations when they agreed on reconciliation with (militant group) Hamas and when they made unilateral requests to the United Nations."

Indyk insisted however that, despite moments of frustration and humiliation felt by both sides, he had also seen "moments of genuine camaraderie and engagement... to find a settlement to these vexing challenges."

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