Clinton: US wants Israel settlement halt 'forever'
By ROBERT BURNS
AP National Security Writer
CAIRO (AP) - Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton defended
the U.S. stance toward Israeli settlement building to worried Arab
allies on Wednesday, saying Washington does not accept the
legitimacy of the West Bank enclaves and wants to see their
construction halted ``forever.''
Still, she said an Israeli offer to restrain - but not halt -
construction represents ``positive movement forward'' toward
resuming Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.
Clinton met for an hour with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
during a hastily arranged stopover in the Egyptian capital to
soothe Arab concerns that Washington is backing off demands for an
Israeli settlement halt. The fears were sparked on Saturday when
Clinton, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at her side
in Jerusalem, praised his government's offer as unprecedented.
She has since tried to clarify the remarks, saying that the
Israeli offer does not got far enough. Still, she has indicated
that the Palestinians should resume negotiations with Israel
without a full settlement halt as they demand.
On Wednesday, Clinton insisted ``our policy on settlement has
not changed.''
``We do not accept the legitimacy of settlement activity. Ending
all settlement activity current and future would be preferable,''
she told reporters after talks with Mubarak.
Of the Israeli offer, she said, ``It is not what we would prefer
because we would like to see everything ended forever.''
``But it is something that I think shows at least a positive
movement forward toward final status issues being addressed,'' she
said.
Egypt appeared reassured by Clinton's visit, and Egyptian
Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit called for a resumption of
negotiations.
``The Egyptian vision is that we have to concentrate on the end
game and we must not waste time adhering to this issue or that as a
start for the negotiations,'' Aboul Gheit said at a press
conference with Clinton. ``The United States did not change its
position that it rejects the settlement building,'' he said, but
``the United States wanted the parties to start the talks.''
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is sticking to his refusal
to resume negotiations until Israel stops building settlements. He
rejected the Israeli plan to complete 3,000 housing units in Jewish
settlements in the West Bank, and to continue to construct public
buildings and other construction in east Jerusalem - a territory
Palestinians hope will be their future capital.
After Arab criticism of her comments in Jerusalem on the Israeli
plan, Clinton delayed her return to Washington after attending an
international conference in Marrakech, Morocco, and flew instead to
Cairo.
In a new twist Tuesday, Clinton made what appeared to be an
inadvertent slip of the tongue in a television interview with the
Al-Jazeera network, referring to the goal of ``an Israeli capital
in east Jerusalem.''
It has not been U.S. policy to favor including east Jerusalem in
an Israeli capital; the Palestinians claim it as their capital, and
the issue is one of the most important and delicate points that
would have to be settled in any final peace deal between the two
parties.
In the Al-Jazeera interview, Clinton reiterated that Obama has
clearly stated his desire for a halt to settlements. But she added
that the Israeli offer of ``restraint,'' to include an end to
establishment of new settlements and other measures that limit
settlement growth, might be close enough to the ultimate U.S. and
Palestinian goal to merit embracing in the near future.
``It is nowhere near enough, but I think when you keep your eye
on what we want to achieve, it is a better place to be than the
alternative, which is unrestrained (growth),'' she said.
11/04/09 11:13
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