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WAR REPORT
Israel security key in talks on peace, Iran: Kerry
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Dec 05, 2013


Kerry meets Israel PM for third time in 24 hours
Jerusalem (AFP) Dec 06, 2013 - US Secretary of State John Kerry was meeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the third time in 24 hours on Friday for talks understood to be focused on security.

Kerry, who is seeking ways to drive forward stagnant peace talks, met twice with Netanyahu on Thursday for more than six hours of talks about potential security issues in any peace agreement.

He also held a three-hour meeting in Ramallah with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.

Early on Friday, Kerry met Israeli Finance Minister Yair Lapid at a Jerusalem hotel, after which he entered another round of talks with Netanyahu, officials said.

The US diplomat was then expected to head straight to Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv where he would hold a news conference before flying home.

Kerry has said Israel's security is "fundamental" to the peace negotiations with the Palestinians, and a top priority for Washington in nuclear negotiations with Iran.

But his talks in Ramallah did not appear to go so well, with Abbas failing to show at a joint press conference and officials later saying that US proposals on security were unacceptable.

"Today, we discussed at great length issues of security in the region, security for the state of Israel, security for a future Palestine. And we, I think, made some progress," Kerry said.

"The interests are very similar, but there are questions of sovereignty, questions of respect and dignity which are obviously significant to the Palestinians, and for the Israelis -- very serious questions of security," he said.

Chief negotiator Saeb Erakat told AFP the situation was "still very difficult and matters are complicated" but a senior Palestinian source was more direct, saying Kerry's security proposals "were very bad ideas which we cannot accept".

In talks with Netanyahu on Thursday, Kerry and top security adviser General John Allen outlined their view of some of the security challenges likely to face Israel in the context of a final peace agreement.

Mideast talks 'difficult and complicated': Palestinians
Ramallah, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Dec 05, 2013 - A top Palestinian negotiator on Thursday said peace talks with Israel were "difficult and complicated", after a meeting between Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas and US Secretary of State John Kerry.

"The situation is still very difficult and matters are complicated," Saeb Erakat told AFP.

"Abbas met Kerry for four hours... and discussed issues including security. We hope Israel will stick to its commitments and be forced to stop settlement building. Settlements are the reason for the difficulties in negotiations," he said.

Kerry met Abbas at the president's headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah after a more than three-hour meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The US top diplomat reiterated the importance of Israel's security, which was the focus of his first visit to the region since signing an historic nuclear deal with Iran, an accord which angered the Israelis.

"We are not going to discuss this further publicly," Kerry told reporters after the meeting Abbas, saying only that their discussions on security had made "progress".

"I think the interests are very similar, but there are questions of sovereignty, questions of respect and dignity, which are obviously significant to the Palestinians, and for the Israelis very serious questions of security.

"Shortly, perhaps in a week or so, I may return for further discussions, depending on where we are," Kerry added.

US Secretary of State John Kerry insisted Thursday that Israel's security is a top priority for Washington, both in nuclear talks with Iran and peace talks with the Palestinians.

Kerry held a day of talks with Israeli and Palestinian leaders aimed at driving forward peace negotiations which appear to have made little headway since beginning under his patronage in late July.

A senior Palestinian official described the negotiations as being at "a very difficult" stage.

But Iran was also a central issue when Kerry met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for more than three hours in their first face-to-face meeting since their political falling out over the Iran nuclear deal.

"I can't emphasise enough that Israel's security in this negotiation (with Iran) is at the top of our agenda," Kerry said at a joint news conference in Jerusalem.

"The United States will do everything in our power to make certain that Iran's nuclear programme of weaponisation possibilities is terminated."

Kerry stressed the two men had also spent "a very significant amount of time" discussing the peace talks with the Palestinians.

"Israel's security is fundamental to those negotiations," he said.

The US top diplomat reiterated the importance of security after a three-hour meeting with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

"We are not going to discuss this further publicly," Kerry told reporters afterwards, saying only that their discussions on security had made "progress".

"The interests are very similar, but there are questions of sovereignty, questions of respect and dignity, which are obviously significant to the Palestinians, and for the Israelis very serious questions of security.

"Shortly, perhaps in a week or so, I may return for further discussions, depending on where we are," Kerry added.

Abbas himself made no appearance after the meeting.

'Situation still very difficult'

"Abbas met Kerry for four hours... and discussed issues including security," Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat told AFP.

"We hope Israel will stick to its commitments and be forced to stop settlement building. Settlements are the reason for the difficulties in negotiations," Erakat said.

"The situation is still very difficult and matters are complicated."

A Palestinian official speaking on condition of anonymity said Kerry's security proposals "were very bad ideas which we cannot accept".

After meeting Abbas, Kerry returned to Jerusalem for dinner with Netanyahu, and a senior State Department official said the two would meet again on Friday morning.

Kerry would also meet Israeli Finance Minister Yair Lapid before leaving for Washington, the official said.

US special envoy on security General John Allen briefed Netanyahu Thursday, Kerry said, on "potential threats to Israel (and) to the region".

US and Israeli media reports have suggested Allen was to present an outline of how Israel's security arrangements might look under a peace deal, but a State Department official denied Allen had a ready-made plan.

Kerry and Allen, who has been working on the security issue with Israeli defence experts, provided Netanyahu and his top brass "with some thoughts about... security challenges that we're going to be facing, that the Israelis are facing," deputy State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said in Washington.

"This isn't a plan, per se. This is really part of an ongoing conversation," she told reporters. "More details certainly were provided, but it would be incorrect to say that some final plan was put on the table for discussion."

Netanyahu said that under any peace agreement, Israel "must be able to defend itself, by itself, with our own forces" -- an allusion to the reported debate over security in the Jordan Valley, which separates the West Bank from neighbouring Jordan.

Israel has always insisted that in any final agreement, it would have to maintain a military presence there, and has rejected outright the idea of any third party involvement.

Maariv newspaper said that Allen was to have outlined a "bridging proposal" which would enable Israel to reduce, as much as possible, its military presence in the Jordan Valley.

But Deputy Defence Minister Danny Danon insisted Israel would not compromise on security there and "not outsource its basic security needs to the Palestinians".

Alarmist Israeli rhetoric on Iran, which commentators say also deliberately sidelines the Palestinian issue, was heavily criticised by a former head of the Shin Bet internal security service on Wednesday.

"The consequences of not having a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are more existential than the Iranian nuclear project," Yuval Diskin told a conference in Tel Aviv.

"Israel must freeze settlement building immediately" in order to reach a much-needed agreement with the Palestinians, Diskin said.

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