NY Times December 7, 2010
U.S. Ends Push to Renew Israeli Freeze on Settlements
By MARK LANDLER

WASHINGTON — After three weeks of fruitless haggling with the 
Israeli government, the Obama administration has given up its 
effort to persuade Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to renew an 
expired freeze on the construction of Jewish settlements for 90 
days, two senior officials said on Tuesday.

The decision leaves Middle East peace talks in limbo, with the 
Palestinians refusing to resume negotiations absent a settlement 
freeze and the United States struggling to find another formula to 
bring them back to the table. It is the latest setback in what has 
proven to be a tortuous engagement for President Obama.

Officials said the administration decided to pull the plug because 
it concluded that even if Mr. Netanyahu persuaded his cabinet to 
accept an extension — which he had not yet been able to do — the 
90-day negotiating period would not have produced the progress on 
core issues that the administration originally hoped.

“There were different expectations on the terms of moratorium, the 
issues to be discussed during the moratorium, and what would 
happen after the moratorium expired,” said a person briefed on the 
decision.

The administration’s abrupt decision could also fray relations 
with Israel. The United States had offered Mr. Netanyahu a 
lucrative package of security and other incentives to agree to a 
90-day extension. Those inducements are now off the table, an 
official said, and Mr. Netanyahu could face renewed pressure from 
the United States and the Palestinians as the hurdle to resumed talks.

Administration officials did not immediately offer a Plan B, even 
though Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is expected to 
sketch out new American proposals in a speech on Friday at the 
Brookings Institution.
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