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Clinton-Netanyahu Statement Focuses on Security, Avoids Mentioning
Illegal Israeli Settlement Activities
Clinton: “Israel’s Security Needs Will Be Guaranteed Under
Any Peace Deal”
Friday November 12, 2010 11:17 by Ane Irazabal, Saed Bannoura - IMEMC
& Agencies
U.S. Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton, assured the Israeli
occupation government prime
minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, that all of Israel’s security needs will
be taking into full consideration under any future peace deal with the
Palestinians
Clinton said that the United States is committed in
Israel’s security, peace and stability in the whole region.
Her
statements came after an extended round of talks with Netanyahu, on
Thursday, in Washington.
During their
joint statement to the press, the two leaders
avoided talking about Israel’s settlement
activities in the occupied territories, and only stated that the
two sides agree on the importance of direct peace talks.
Clinton
stated that peace talks still have the chance to lead to an agreement
that ensures the establishment of an independent Palestinian state
living in peace next to Israel, with clear borders and while ensuring
Israel’s security needs.
The joint statement also indicated that
any future Palestinian state must be established in the 1967 areas while
allowing land swap based on Israel’s security needs, and that Israel
might keep control of certain West Bank lands.
The statement
failed to address Israel’s insistence to continue the construction and
expansion of Jewish settlements in the occupied territories and in
occupied East Jerusalem.
Netanyahu and his government insist on
what they call “Israel’s right” to construct settlements in the occupied
territories.
During this week, Clinton and the President Obama
criticized Israel's proposal to build 1,300 new units for Jewish
settlers in occupied East Jerusalem. Obama said that he was aware of the
"enormous obstacles" that were obstructing the peace process.
However, Clinton made it clear that the U.S. would not support any
unilateral step, referring to this week's announcement made by
Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, regarding intentions to call on the
United Nations Security Council to debate the Israeli settlement
activties.
In Ramallah, where the main event commemorating the
sixth anniversary of late president Yasser Arafat's death, Abbas stated
that unilateral acts are taken by both sides:
"We are thinking
of heading to the Security Council, and this is considered a unilateral
act on our part, but when [the Israelis] take unilateral actions like
the Wall, invasions, assassinations, and uprooting olive trees, that
isn't considered unilateral!" he added.
Abbas also stated that he
would consider Obama's words in September to seek the creation of a
Palestinian state within a year, and that he would continue reclaiming
east Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinian state, as well as the
Right of Return for refugees.
"We consider this statement to be a
commitment by President Obama, not just a slogan, and we hope that next
year he won't say to us "we apologize, we can't do it".
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