Rs. 16130 (INR)


Opinion Poll
Can India avoid inning defeat against S Africa?
Yes
No
Can't say

hyderabad india local guide
World

Obama, Netanyahu meet on Mideast crisis

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Bookmark and Share

Washington, November 10: US efforts to revive the Middle East process floundered Tuesday with no progress reported after closed door talks between Obama and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu.

Netanyahu left the White House after spending an hour and forty minutes inside, without making the customary public appearance with the US president.

“The president reaffirmed our strong commitment to Israel’s security, and discussed security cooperation on a range of issues,” the White House said in a brief statement.

“The president and prime minister also discussed Iran and how to move forward on Middle East peace.”

Ahead of the meeting, Netanyahu said he was ready to immediately engage in peace negotiations, but prospects of renewed talks appear dimmer than ever.

The summit was announced late Sunday only after Netanyahu had arrived in Washington, forcing officials on both sides to deny the last-minute invitation reflects US frustration with the hawkish premier.

Israeli prime ministers hardly ever go to Washington without meeting the US president, usually holding a high-profile press conference.

Israel’s ties with the Obama administration had been strained over Netanyahu’s refusal to heed the US demand for a full settlement freeze in the occupied West Bank ahead of a resumption of peace talks with the Palestinians.

The White House appeared wary not to present Monday’s end-of-day meeting as a backing of Netanyahu’s stance.

“The policy of the United States government for many decades has been: no more settlements, that’s not something that is new (with) this administration,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said hours before the talks.

Netanyahu on Monday urged moderate Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, who last week announced he would not run for re-election in January, to immediately renew peace negotiations.

“I say today to Mahmud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority, ‘let us seize the moment to reach an historic agreement. Let us begin talks immediately,’” he told a conference of North American Jewish leaders.

But Washington’s efforts to relaunch Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, a goal the US administration has made the cornerstone of its Middle East policy, have recently encountered serious setbacks.

The first crisis came when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Netanyahu’s offer of a limited easing of settlement construction as “unprecedented” during a visit to the region last week, triggering Palestinian and Arab fury.

The declaration marked a stark break from months of US support of the Palestinian demand for a total Jewish settlement freeze ahead of renewed talks.

Clinton later backtracked, but her statements were widely interpreted as a U-turn by Washington which, after months of pressing Israel on settlements, appeared to back off and pile the pressure instead on the Palestinians to restart talks without preconditions.

easy way to solve this lifelong problem

this issue can easily be resolved if all the muslims unite together. but, these arabs are afraid, and in the grip, of the big demon, usa. if the muslim ummah becomes one nation as it should be, then no one would dare enslave us. it is our own fault. when Iraq got attacked, everyone of us was enjoying a nice sleep that morning at 3 am.

Post new comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.

Shopping | Matrimony | Photos | Videos | Forums | Search | Polls
Archives | RSS Feeds | Sitemap | Advertise | Letters | Muslim Names

© The Siasat Daily, 2004. All rights reserved.
Jawaharlal Nehru Road, Abids, Hyderabad - 500001, AP, India
Tel: +91-40-24744180, Fax: +91-40-24603188
contact@siasat.com
Designed and developed by iGreen Systems