Obama opens long-shot talks on Mideast peace

By Robert Burns | The Washington Times | September 1, 2010

Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Obama at the White HouseOpening Mideast peace talks under the shadow of fresh violence, President Barack Obama vowed on Wednesday not to allow "extremists and rejectionists" to undercut long-stalled negotiations on creating a sovereign Palestinian state beside a secure Israel.

Standing with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House, Obama condemned the killings on Tuesday of four Israelis who were shot while traveling near the West Bank city of Hebron. Hamas, which rejects Israel's right to exist and opposes peace talks, claimed responsibility.

"There are going to be extremists and rejectionists who, rather than seeking peace, are going to be seeking destruction," Obama said. "I want everybody to be very clear. The United States is going to be unwavering in its support of Israel's security. And we are going to push back against these kinds of terrorist attacks. And so the message should go out to Hamas and everyone else who is taking credit for these heinous crimes that this is not going to stop us."

Netanyahu thanked Obama for condemning the West Bank attack, saying the killings were carried out by people who don't respect human life and who "trample human rights into the dust and butcher everything they oppose."

Both leaders said their opening talks on Wednesday morning — part of a series of separate discussions that also were to include Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas — were productive. Obama said he would comment in more detail later in the day.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud AbbasA spokesman for Abbas, Nabil Abu Redeiheh, told reporters before the Palestinian leader went to the White House that negotiations with the Israelis would fail almost immediately unless Israel extended a moratorium on construction in Jewish settlements in the West Bank. The moratorium is to expire in less than four weeks.

The West Bank is supposed to make up the bulk of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel, with precise borders to be drawn at the peace table. Expansion of Jewish housing makes those borders ever more complicated.

After Obama's sessions with the leaders of Jordan and Egypt, the five men were to gather for dinner.

Formal negotiations between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders are to begin Thursday at the State Department, with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as host. Clinton has spent months coaxing the parties back to the bargaining table.

It will mark the first face-to-face negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians since December 2008. But the two sides are far apart on all key issues, so major progress in the early going is seen as unlikely.

The killing of the four Israeli settlers pointed up the tensions that will probably test Obama's diplomacy.

West Bank settlers said Wednesday they will break a government freeze on construction in their communities to protest the attack.

In addition to his sessions with Abbas and Netanyahu, Obama was meeting with Jordan's King Abdullah II and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Jordan and Egypt are the only two Arab nations that have peace agreements with Israel.

Former Sen. George Mitchell, Obama's special Mideast peace envoy, said Tuesday that the goal of reaching a Palestinian-Israeli deal within one year is intended to counter a sense among many in the Mideast that years of inconclusive negotiations mean the process is never-ending.

"It's very important to create a sense that this has a definite concluding point," Mitchell told reporters at the White House. "And we believe that it can be done."

American officials are hopeful they can at least get the two sides to agree to a second round of talks, likely to be held in the second week of September in Egypt. That could be followed by another meeting between Obama, Netanyahu and Abbas on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly near the end of the month, they said.

Talking to reporters on his plane heading for Washington, Abbas called for decisive American involvement in the talks. He said that if the two sides reach a deadlock, the Obama administration should present "proposals to bridge the gap between the two positions."

One major immediate challenge in the talks will be the Palestinians' demand that Israel extend a 10-month freeze on settlement construction in the West Bank. The freeze expires on Sept. 26.

The Palestinians want a state in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem — territories Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war.

Netanyahu, under pressure from his right-wing Likud Party and hawkish coalition partners to resume building inside West Bank settlements when the freeze ends, has made no such pledge. Palestinian officials have warned that without one, the talks in Washington may be nothing more than a two-day excursion to the U.S. capital.