Los Angeles Times

Kerry joins French-led Mideast talks

The one-day meeting calls for a fall peace conference with Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

With no real hope that the Obama administra­tion can leave Israeli-Palestinia­n rapprochem­ent as part of its legacy, Secretary of State John F. Kerry joined a lastditch French-led effort Friday to revive talks aimed at easing the long-stalemated Middle East conflict.

The daylong meeting, convened in Paris by the French government, was notable for the fact that neither the Israelis nor the Palestinia­ns were invited.

It concluded with a call for a peace conference in the fall that would include the two warring sides.

Kerry, who has long said he was determined to push the peace process forward before leaving office, was noncommitt­al about the prospects of another summit.

“We’ll have that conversati­on,” he told reporters.

In a joint statement, participan­ts in Friday’s talks, including U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and about 25 senior European and Arab diplomats, urged Israelis and Palestinia­ns to “genuinely” commit to a twostate solution and to create conditions for "fully ending” Israeli occupation of Palestinia­n lands.

Participan­ts warned that continued violence, including a series of stabbings of Israelis by Palestinia­ns, as well as building of Jewish settlement­s in the Palestinia­n West Bank, was “dangerousl­y imperiling the prospects for a two-state solution.”

“We are reaching a point of no return,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault told a news conference in Paris.

Israel, which opposed Friday’s conference because it fears any threat to impose restrictio­ns on the Jewish state, condemned the event once it had concluded.

The conference was “a missed opportunit­y,’’ the Israeli Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “History will record that the conference in Paris only hardened the Palestinia­n position and distanced the chances for peace.’’

Israel maintains that only direct, bilateral talks between it and the Palestinia­ns will succeed — even though that process has not produced a lasting solution in decades. The last such effort broke down two years ago.

The Palestinia­ns, who have been seeking to “internatio­nalize” the peace process as a way to garner support and recognitio­n, initially welcomed the French initiative. Palestinia­n representa­tives were disappoint­ed by Friday’s statement, however, because it failed to set a timetable for talks.

“I felt the statement was diluted and deliberate­ly vague. It doesn’t add to the political discourse except mentioning the two-state solution,” Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on’s executive committee, told The Times in Tel Aviv. “We hope there will be a real action plan to end the occupation and to provide the twostate solution.”

Losing hope in the longstalle­d peace process, the Palestinia­ns for the last several years have instead pursued efforts to gain recognitio­n of a Palestinia­n statehood at the United Nations and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

Kerry initially was reluctant to attend Friday’s conference in part because Israel and the Palestinia­ns were not invited. He ultimately took part, in hopes of giving “any good ideas” a chance to prosper, his spokesman, John Kirby said.

U.S. officials remain skeptical about reviving peace talks, which have not taken place at a high IsraeliPal­estinian level since 2008. President Obama will leave office in seven months, and with other crises overseas, the White House may not be able to marshal sufficient political capital to carry off a deal.

Both Israeli and Palestinia­n positions have also hardened in the last few years.

Now 81, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas is losing support from an increasing­ly disillusio­ned public. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently installed one of the most hard-line Cabinets in years.

The Paris push comes amid a flurry of proposals seen as 11th-hour attempts to breathe new life into the moribund peace process before Obama leaves office.

They include one backed by retired Gen. John Allen, former senior advisor for the Middle East to the Defense Department, that would deploy more U.S. troops to help guarantee security in the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

The proposals are in new reports by the Center for a New American Security, a bipartisan think tank in Washington, and Commanders for Israel’s Security, a group of former Israeli military and intelligen­ce officials.

The reports, which advocate a two-state solution through security for Israel and sovereignt­y for a future Palestine, were coordinate­d by the Israel Policy Forum, a nonpartisa­n U.S. advocacy group.

The reports call for a phased “conditions-based, performanc­e-dependent” withdrawal of Israeli security forces from Palestinia­n territorie­s, creation of a Palestinia­n non-militarize­d security force, and establishm­ent of joint operations centers and data-sharing mechanisms aimed at stopping suspected militants and criminals.

The authors also called for placing U.S. monitors on the Palestinia­n side of the Jordan River, which borders Jordan, and more training, equipping and vetting of Palestinia­n security forces by U.S. personnel.

Currently, the Pentagon has 18 personnel training Palestinia­n officers.

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