by Lazar Berman
Nabil Shaath says once other questions are solved, they may be open to discussing key Israeli demand
Palestinians would be open to discussions
about recognizing Israel as a Jewish state, but only at the end of peace
talks, a senior Palestinian official said in remarks published Tuesday.
“Had this come at the end, after having
resolved all these issues, it would have become an issue that we could
settle by simply asking practical questions… and if we get the right
answers it could have been resolved then. But now, it’s very
suspicious,” Shaath said.
Shaath, who sits on the Fatah Central
Committee and is a former neogtiator, said the Palestinians would
consider studying the issue at the end of talks.
“We will study it and we will ask practical
questions… and if these questions are answered correctly, we will think
about it,” he said.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made
Palestinian recognition of Israel as a Jewish state a key Israeli demand
in peace talks.
Ramallah insists that it should not have to grant any such recognition.
Last week, US Secretary of State John Kerry told American lawmakers that the Israeli condition was a “mistake.”
“We know that’s an issue that the Israelis
have spoken about, but we will let those issues remain discussed behind
closed doors,” State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said Monday
shortly after Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas met with US
President Barack Obama.
Meeting at the White House, Abbas said that
“since 1988 and into 1993, we have been extending our hands to our
Israeli neighbors so that we can reach a fair and lasting peace to this
problem. Since 1988, we have recognized international legitimacy
resolutions and this was a very courageous step on the part of the
Palestinian leadership. And in 1993, we recognized the State of Israel.”
During his
meeting with Obama, Abbas said that from the Palestinian perspective,
“we don’t have any time to waste. Time is not on our side.”
He discussed March 29 as the target date for
the final release of Palestinian prisoners to which Israel committed as
part of the agreement for a nine-month period of talks. That period,
which began in July, is set to expire in April. Abbas said that the
release of prisoners “will give a very solid impression about the
seriousness of the Israelis on the peace process.”
Israeli ministers said last week that they
would have difficulty approving the release if an agreement was not
reached to extend the peace talks.
Israel committed to the release of 104
Palestinian prisoners when talks were launched in July. It has so far
released 78 of those in three phases, with Palestinians demanding that
the fourth — scheduled for later this month — also include Arab
Israelis, something Israel has rejected.
A major effort is underway in Washington to
make sure that both sides remain at the negotiating table after the
conclusion of the nine-month period, and Abbas’s statement indicated
that the release would be a critical factor in a decision to continue
talks.
Rebecca Shimoni Stoil, AP and AFP contributed to this report.
Lazar Berman
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/pa-official-well-consider-jewish-state-issue-at-end-of-talks/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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