by Shlomo Cesana, Mati Tuchfeld, Daniel Siryoti, Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: "We have a set of specific terms that have yet to be met in the negotiations. ... We are still not there, not even walking down that hall" • Netanyahu set to meet with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday.
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu: Peace deal only possible once Israel's terms are met
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Photo credit: AP |
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Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry are set to meet on
Thursday, as the U.S. ramps up efforts to get Israel and the
Palestinians to reach a peace accord. Officials in Jerusalem have yet to
comment on the details of a proposed U.S. security arrangement, but
have stressed that an agreement on the Jordan Valley still remains to be
reached.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki
said Monday night that the U.S. is focusing on a permanent agreement,
not an interim one.
"Only once Israel's terms are met will there
be a peace deal," Netanyahu said at a Likud faction meeting in the
Knesset on Monday. "I would like to say something regarding the
speculation about the coalition on the peace process. I want to clarify:
Any deal, if one is reached, will be brought to a national referendum.
What will decide whether a deal is reached is not one coalition's
dictate or another, but the essence of the agreement."
Netanyahu said that Israel and the Palestinians are not that close to signing a deal.
"We are not standing before a permanent
accord. We have a set of specific terms that have yet to be met in the
negotiations. ... We are still not there, not even walking down that
hall," he said.
The Palestinians echoed a similar sentiment on
Monday. Officials in the Palestinian Authority are upset with Kerry and
claim he stood behind the talks of delaying the third wave of
Palestinian prisoners to be released, currently scheduled for Dec. 28.
Palestinian Liberation Organization Executive
Committee Secretary Yasser Abed Rabbo told Israel Hayom that Kerry's
attempts to delay the prisoner release were made to pressure the
Palestinians to accept the conditions proposed by the Americans.
The U.S. plan calls for Israel and the
Palestinians to sign an interim deal which settles security concerns,
and to defer national policy and future statehood details to after the
nine month period allotted to the negotiations.
Netanyahu on Saturday tied the negotiations
with the Palestinians to the Iranian nuclear program. The two topics
were also a central focus during his meeting with Guatemalan President
Otto Perez Molina on Monday.
"We share a desire to see a peaceful and
stable Middle East, and the greatest threat to that and to the peace of
the world is Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons. It's therefore critical
that the final deal with Iran prevent that from happening," Netanyahu
said.
Defense Minister Moshe (Bogie) Ya'alon also spoke with the Guatemalan president.
"The Iranians are building terrorist
infrastructure to strike the U.S.," he said. "Everywhere there is an
Iranian embassy, there is a base for intelligence gathering and
terrorist activity."
Kerry leaves Wednesday on his ninth trip to the Middle East to resume talks with Israel and the Palestinians.
''It's a commute, folks,'' Kerry joked Monday
night about his frequent travel to Jerusalem and Ramallah, the first two
stops on an eight-day trip that continues on to Vietnam and the
Philippines.
Kerry spoke at the 100th anniversary dinner of
the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, a leading
international Jewish humanitarian organization that works in more than
70 countries and Israel.
In his speech, Kerry tried to allay fears that
Israel is threatened by the agreement signed by six world powers with
Iran to prevent it from developing a nuclear weapon.
Netanyahu has complained that the deal gives
Iran too much relief while leaving Iran's nuclear infrastructure intact.
Netanyahu, who believes Iran is trying to build a nuclear bomb, says
Iran's military nuclear program must be dismantled.
''We will not allow Iran to acquire a nuclear
weapon. Not now. Not ever,'' Kerry said, reaffirming U.S. commitment to
the security of Israel.
Shlomo Cesana, Mati Tuchfeld, Daniel Siryoti, Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=13909
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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