http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1243346500378&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Obama says Israel must stop settlement construction

May. 29, 2009
Associated Press , THE JERUSALEM POST 

Gingerly trying to advance Mideast peace, US President Barack Obama on Thursday 
challenged Israel to stop settlement construction in the West Bank on the same 
day the Israelis rejected that demand. Obama pushed Palestinians for progress, 
too, deepening his personal involvement. 

"I am confident that we can move this process forward," Obama said after 
meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas at the White House. 
The president said that means both sides must "meet the obligations that 
they've already committed to" - an element of the peace effort that has proved 
elusive for years. 

Abbas told The Associated Press after the session with Obama that no meetings 
with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu are on the horizon. He said there are no 
preconditions for such a meeting but "obligations" on Israel through the 
so-called road map for ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 

Abbas said he is meeting his commitments under the road map and that Israel 
should do the same. He cited continued settlement construction as a commitment 
Israel is not meeting. 

Earlier in the day, Israel rejected blunt US requests to freeze Jewish 
settlement construction in the West Bank, a territory that would make up the 
Palestinian state, along with the Gaza Strip, as part of a broader peace deal. 

In strong language, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had said 
Wednesday that Obama wants a halt to all settlement construction, including 
"natural growth." Israel uses that term for new housing and other construction 
that it says will accommodate the growth of families living in existing 
settlements. 

Government spokesman Mark Regev responded Thursday by saying some construction 
would go on. 

"Normal life in those communities must be allowed to continue," he said, noting 
Israel has already agreed not to build new settlements and to remove some tiny, 
unauthorized settler outposts. Regev said the fate of the settlements would be 
determined in peace negotiations with the Palestinians. 

With that as a backdrop, Obama said part of Israel's obligations include 
"stopping settlements." But he also struck a hopeful tone. 

He said he had pressed Netanyahu on the settlement matter just last week at the 
White House, and that the prime minister needs to work through the issue with 
his own government. 

"I think it's important not to assume the worst, but to assume the best," Obama 
said. 

The president also pushed Palestinians to hold up their end, including 
increased security in the West Bank to give Israelis confidence in their 
safety. 

Obama said he told Abbas the Palestinians must find a way to halt the 
incitement of anti-Israeli sentiments that are sometimes expressed in schools, 
mosques and public arenas. "All those things are impediments to peace," Obama 
said. 

The Palestinian leader said "we are fully committed to all of our obligations" 
under the road map. Doing so, Abbas said, is "the only way to achieve the 
durable, comprehensive and just peace that we need and desire in the Middle 
East." 

Obama, like predecessor George W. Bush, embraces a multifaceted Mideast peace 
plan that calls for a Palestinian state alongside Israel. 

The president refused to set a timetable for such a nation but also noted he 
has not been slow to get involved in meeting with both sides and pushing the 
international community for help. 

"We can't continue with the drift, with the increased fear and resentment on 
both sides, the sense of hopelessness around the situation that we've seen for 
many years now," Obama said. "We need to get this thing back on track." 

Abbas is working to repackage a 2002 Saudi Arabian plan that called for Israel 
to give up land it has occupied since the 1967 war in exchange for normalized 
relations with Arab countries. Abbas gave Obama a document that would keep 
intact that requirement and also offer a way to monitor a required Israeli 
freeze on all settlement activity, a timetable for Israeli withdrawal and a 
realization of a two-state solution. 

"The main purpose of presenting this document to President Obama is to help him 
in finding a mechanism to implement the Arab peace initiative," Abbas told the 
AP. 

Asked about his impression of the meeting with Obama, Abbas said: "It was a 
serious and open meeting and President Obama seems determined on what he has 
said to us and to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu about the necessity of 
implementing the road map, and we have agreed to continue our communications." 

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Obama affirmed to Abbas that Israel has 
an obligation to freeze settlement expansions, including natural growth. 

Now more than 120 settlements dot the West Bank, and Palestinian officials say 
their growth makes it increasingly impossible to realize their dream of 
independence. More than 280,000 Israelis live in the settlements, in addition 
to more than 2 million Palestinians in the West Bank. An additional 180,000 
Israelis live in east Jerusalem, where the Palestinians hope to establish their 
capital. 

Israelis will be anxiously watching Obama's June 4 speech in Cairo, where he 
will deliver a message to the Muslim world to try to repair relations that 
frayed badly under the Bush administration. Obama will also visit Saudi Arabia 
before he goes to Egypt. 

"I want to use the occasion to deliver a broader message about how the United 
States can change for the better its relationship with the Muslim world," Obama 
said of his Egypt speech. "That will require, I think, a recognition on both 
the part of the United States as well as many majority Muslim countries about 
each other, a better sense of understanding, and I think possibilities to 
achieve common ground."


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