WASHINGTON: The United States plans a new push to promote  comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton  said on Tuesday, suggesting reinvigorated US role in trying to solve the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
President Barack Obama  will lay out US policy toward the Middle East and North Africa in the  coming weeks, Clinton told Arab and US policy makers in a speech that  placed particular emphasis on Israeli-Palestinian peace.
Obama’s  launch of direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks last year went nowhere  and he is under pressure to make a new initiative or face the prospect  of the Palestinians seeking the UN General Assembly’s blessing for a  Palestinian state.
“The president will be speaking in greater  detail about America’s policy in the Middle East and North Africa in the  coming weeks,” Clinton said at the US-Islamic World Forum, a gathering  sponsored by Qatar and the Brookings Institution, a Washington think  tank.
“America’s core interests and values have not changed,  including our commitment to promote human rights, resolve long-standing  conflicts, counter Iran’s threats and defeat al Qaeda and its extremist  allies,” she added. “This includes renewed pursuit of comprehensive  Arab-Israeli peace.”
Clinton spoke against the backdrop of the  popular revolts that have toppled long-time authoritarian leaders in  Tunisia and Egypt this year and spurred public protests in much of the  Arab world, including Libya, Bahrain, Syria and Yemen.
“The status  quo between Palestinians and Israelis is no more sustainable than the  political systems that have crumbled in recent months,” she said, saying  the only way to meet both people’s aspirations was through a two-state  solution.
“And while it is a truism that only the parties  themselves can make the hard choices for peace, there is no substitute  for continued, active American leadership — and the president and I are  committed to that,” she added.
While Obama came into office saying  that settling the six-decade Arab Israeli conflict would be a priority,  he has little to show for his effort.
Peace talks aimed at ending  the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians broke down last year  after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refused to extend a  partial freeze on Jewish settlement building in the occupied West Bank.
Israeli security officials have cautioned that the absence of any peace initiative could spark a new Palestinian revolt.
Over  500 Israeli civilians died in 140 Palestinian suicide bomb attacks from  2000 to 2007. More than 4,500 Palestinians were killed by Israeli  forces in the same period.

No comments:
Post a Comment