The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kerry touts 11th-hour vision of Middle East peace

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WASHINGTON: With fewer than four weeks left in office, US Secretary of State John Kerry will yesterday lay out a vision for peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

The goal of a two-state solution, with Israel and a future Palestine living side-by-side within agreed borders has eluded generation­s of US diplomats.

But in the final days of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, and with Israel’s government openly hostile to outside pressure, Kerry wants to leave his mark.

“He feels it’s his duty in his waning weeks and days as secretary to lay out what he believes is a way towards a peaceful two-state solution,” his spokesman said.

“It’s always important to try to keep the process moving forward, to lay out constructi­ve visions for the future,” spokesman Mark Toner told reporters.

Negotiatio­ns between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government and Palestinia­n leader Mahmud Abbas’s administra­tion are already a dead letter.

And if Kerry wants the sides to pay attention to his “comprehens­ive vision” of a settlement, he faces two stark challenges that even his ill-fated predecesso­rs did not.

Firstly, Netanyahu is already in a towering fury over Obama’s decision last week not to veto a UN Security Council motion to condemn Israeli settlement building.

Secondly, incoming US leader Donald Trump has signaled he will take a much softer line, nominating an ambassador who wants to move the US embassy to Jerusalem.

Arab leaders warn such a move would provoke a regional diplomatic backlash and Palestinia­n protests, and Netanyahu has no incentive to act before Trump’s inaugurati­on.

Neverthele­ss, Obama and Kerry are clearly not ready to give up on the region yet, hoping the UN resolution and the Washington speech will save a moribund process. Already, earlier this month, Kerry showed his frustratio­n with Netanyahu’s refusal to curtail Israeli settlement building on disputed West Bank and Jerusalem land.

“There’s a basic choice that has to be made by Israelis, by the leadership of Israel, by all of you who support Israel and care about Israel,” Kerry warned US and Israeli officials.

“Is there going to be a continued implementa­tion of settlement policy, or is there going to be separation and the creation of two states?” he demanded.

Netanyahu had already told the same meeting of the Saban Forum that the main impediment to peace was the failure of much of the Arab world to recognize Israel.

Kerry insisted the accelerati­ng program of Jewish settlement building on land Palestinia­ns claim for their future state acts as a “barrier” to peace.

This has been US policy for decades, but Kerry went further, accusing members of Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition of actively opposing a peace deal.

Washington, and the bulk of the internatio­nal community as reflected by UN votes, foresees two states based on Israel’s 1967 border with some land swaps.

According to Kerry, the Israeli right — despite Netanyahu’s protests that he is ready for direct talks without preconditi­ons — wants to thwart this.

“They don’t want peace. They believe it’s greater Israel,” Kerry told Saban, an annual US-Israeli leadership forum.

“And they want it to block the peace process because they want those places to belong to Israel. That’s the history of the settler movement, my friends.” This year Obama awarded Israel the biggest US military aid package in history — 38 billion over ten years — but Netanyahu is unimpresse­d.

On Wednesday, a Jerusalem planning committee is to discuss issuing building permits for hundreds more settler houses in the mainly Palestinia­n east of the city.

“We’ll discuss everything that’s on the table in a serious manner,” Jerusalem’s deputy mayor Meir Turjeman told AFP.

And on his Facebook page he added: “I’m not concerned by the UN or anything else trying to dictate our actions in Jerusalem.”

Netanyahu’s government has also accused Obama of colluding with the Palestinia­ns and with Egypt behind Israel’s back to push last week’s UN resolution.

Toner denied this, insisting it was ‘not accurate’ to suggest that the motion had been ‘pre-cooked’ before Egypt unveiled it last week.

He feels it’s his duty in his waning weeks and days as secretary to lay out what he believes is a way towards a peaceful two-state solution. Mark Toner, spokesman

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo shows Kerry delivering remarks on the fighting in Syria at the State Department in Washington, DC.
— AFP photo File photo shows Kerry delivering remarks on the fighting in Syria at the State Department in Washington, DC.

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