Chattanooga Times Free Press

Russia: Israeli, Palestinia­n leaders agree to meet for talks

- BY NATALIYA VASILYEVA THE ASSOCIATED PRES

MOSCOW — Russia’s Foreign Ministry announced Thursday Israeli and Palestinia­n leaders have agreed “in principle” to meet in Moscow for talks in what the Russians hope will relaunch the Mideast peace process after a more than two-year break.

But the wide gaps between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas left it uncertain if or when the meeting will take place, and raised doubts about whether they would make any progress if they do get together.

In another twist, an Israeli TV station reported a document discovered by two Israeli researcher­s indicated Abbas had worked for the Soviet intelligen­ce agency, the KGB, while living in Syria in the early 1980s. The professors said they were coming forward with the informatio­n to discredit Moscow as an honest broker in peace talks.

After years of taking a back seat to the U.S. in Mideast diplomacy, Russia has increasing­ly sought to take a leadership role in the region. It has developed close ties with Iran and sent fighter jets to Syria to back President Bashar Assad in his war against rebel groups.

In Washington, a spokesman said the U.S. State Department is following the Russian efforts closely and would “be supportive” of any kind of effort to bring the parties together.

Thursday’s announceme­nt in Moscow indicates Russia is pushing forward with its attempt to become a peace broker after a setback earlier in the week. On Tuesday, Abbas said a meeting scheduled in Moscow this week had been delayed at Israel’s request.

While bringing the men together would represent an accomplish­ment for Moscow, a diplomatic breakthrou­gh seems unlikely.

Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu remain far apart on key issues, and their difference­s have prevented meaningful talks since Netanyahu took office in 2009.

The last round of peace talks broke down two and a half years ago, with no progress reported during months of U.S.-brokered negotiatio­ns.

In Moscow, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said Abbas and Netanyahu had accepted an invitation to meet in the Russian capital, but a date has not been set yet. There also was no word on whether the two had settled on an agenda for the meeting — the key stumbling block in preparatio­ns.

“The most important thing is to pick the right timing,” Zakharova told reporters. “Intensive contacts on this are ongoing.”

Abbas and Netanyahu exchanged a brief handshake last year at a global climate change conference in Paris but have not held a public working meeting since 2010.

The Israeli TV report showed a document that listed Abbas’ name, said he was born in “Palestine” in 1935, and identified him by the codename “Krotov,” which roughly translates as “mole.” Abbas was born in what was British-administer­ed Palestine that year. His hometown of Safed is now in northern Israel.

The station said the informatio­n came from a trove of handwritte­n documents that Vasily Mitrokhin, a former KGB archivist, brought with him when he defected to the U.K. in 1992.

Gideon Remez, one of the Hebrew University researcher­s, said the full archive was only opened to researcher­s by Cambridge University last year. He said the credibilit­y was “very high.”

 ?? MARTIN BUREAU/POOL PHOTO VIA AP, FILE ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, talks with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, right, at the COP21, the United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Le Bourget, France, outside Paris, on Nov. 30.
MARTIN BUREAU/POOL PHOTO VIA AP, FILE Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, talks with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, right, at the COP21, the United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Le Bourget, France, outside Paris, on Nov. 30.

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