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Top Mideast officials fly to US as peace talks crisis looms

Palestinian state should take in Israeli Arabs: Lieberman
Jerusalem (AFP) Sept 19, 2010 - Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman on Sunday proposed that in a future peace deal the Palestinians should take his country's 1.3 million Arabs and let Israel keep its West Bank settlements. "Our guiding principle in negotiations with the Palestinians must not be 'land for peace' but an exchange of territories and populations," Lieberman told reporters as he arrived for Sunday's weekly cabinet meeting. The maverick nationalist has campaigned in the past for Israel's Arab citizens to be stripped of their nationality unless they take an oath of allegiance to the Jewish state. The phrase "land for peace" refers to the concept of Israel withdrawing from Palestinian territories it occupied in the 1967 Middle East war in return for an end to the conflict.

Israeli and Palestinian leaders this month renewed direct peace talks after a gap of nearly two years and have pledged to seek agreement within 12 months. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says any treaty must include recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. The Palestinians oppose the demand, fearing that it could prejudge the future of refugees seeking to return to old homes now in Israel. "It's as if someone sells you a flat and then demands that his mother-in-law continues living there," Lieberman said. "The vigorous refusal of the Arab League and the Palestinian Authority to recognise Israel as the state of the Jewish people obliges us to make the question of the Israeli Arabs one of the main issues on the negotiating table," he said.

In a separate interview with Israeli army radio, Lieberman said that the Israeli Arabs -- those Palestinians who remained after Israel was founded in 1948, and their descendants -- had long sought separation. "Self-determination for Israeli Arabs, autonomy in the Galilee and the Negev and the right to be annexed to a future Palestinian state; Arab MPs talk about this from the rostrum of the Knesset (parliament)," he said. Speaking to Israel's Haaretz daily, Arab legislator Haneen Zuabi, whose parliamentary privileges were revoked after she joined a flotilla of aid ships heading to the Gaza Strip, said Lieberman's views were racist. "Lieberman represents apartheid and ethnic cleansing," she said, but acknowledged that the issue needed serious debate. "Lieberman bases his claims on a doctrine of racism, while I base mine on the principle of full equality among citizens but both of us agree that there needs to be a discussion of the question," Zuabi added.
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Sept 19, 2010
Top Israeli and Palestinian officials headed Sunday for the United States where they are expected to seek ways to break a deadlock over settlements threatening to sabotage peace talks.

Israeli President Shimon Peres left on a four-day visit coinciding with the UN General Assembly meeting in New York, before Defence Minister Ehud Barak set off for talks in Washington.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was also to fly later to New York for the annual sitting, with efforts under way to arrange a meeting with US President Barack Obama, a senior Palestinian official told AFP.

"There are also preparations for a meeting between (Israeli premier Benjamin) Netanyahu, Obama and Abbas," he said. "There is an expectation that they will meet."

Abbas spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina said the Palestinian leader had high-level engagements scheduled, but he would not give details.

"Abbas will take part in the UN General Assembly meetings in New York and meet with several world leaders," Abu Rudeina told AFP.

"He will deliver an important speech about the peace process and efforts to push it forward in a way that would help end the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land in 1967 as well as create an independent Palestinian state, with east Jerusalem as its capital."

Netanyahu's office said he had no plans to fly to the United States this week, and would not say whether he would meet Abbas before the settlement freeze expires later this month.

Israel and the Palestinians began long-awaited peace negotiations earlier this month, but the talks may well collapse if they fail to resolve a bitter dispute over the moratorium expiry.

So far, Israel has stubbornly refused to extend the partial 10-month ban on new construction. The Palestinians have vowed to pull out of the talks if building resumes.

Addressing ministers, Netanyahu reiterated Israel's position: that the moratorium will end as planned.

"Last week, I held political talks in (the Red Sea resort of) Sharm el-Sheikh and Jerusalem. I can't give any detail about the content of the talks because of its sensitivity. What I can say is that regarding the freeze, there has been no change in our position," he said.

The talks, which brought together Abbas, Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, failed to break the impasse.

Clinton said she hoped the Israeli leader would extend the freeze.

"Well, that certainly is our hope," she told ABC News.

"It's been in effect for the time that it was set for, and the talks are just starting," she said. "So we are working hard to make sure there remains a conducive atmosphere to constructive thought."

But Israel's ultra-nationalist Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said it was up to Netanyahu to withstand pressure over the moratorium.

"If we aren't able to withstand pressure on a relatively simple issue like building in (the West Bank), how will we defend our other national interests?" Lieberman said on army radio.

"We said it would be a 10-month freeze and we told everyone. The minute it's over, we can start (building) again," he added.

The deadline for the end of the freeze is widely accepted as September 26, 10 months and a day after the original cabinet decision. But the military order regarding the moratorium states it will only close at midnight on September 30.

Efforts to reach a last-minute compromise now look set to shift to the United States.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, an Israeli official told AFP the main negotiators would meet there this week in order to set up the next leaders' meeting.

"The negotiators will be meeting this week in North America where they will be planning the next round of talks at a leadership level," he said, without giving further details.

Elsewhere, Barak, who reportedly backs an extension of the freeze, was set to meet with Clinton and with US Defence Secretary Robert Gates during his five-day trip.

And Peres was expected on Monday to address the UN's millennium summit in a speech explaining why Netanyahu could not extend the settlement freeze, the Jerusalem Post reported.

He was also expected to speak alongside Palestinian premier Salam Fayyad at a conference organised by former US president Bill Clinton, which Barak would also attend.



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