Obama calls for Palestinian state based on 1967 borders
By News Wires the 19/05/2011 - 19:23

US President Barack Obama has said the boundaries of Israel and a future 
Palestinian state should be based on 1967 borders and warned against efforts to 
isolate Israel at the UN, setting out a new vision for the Middle East in a 
speech in Washington.

 
REUTERS - U.S. President Barack Obama on Thursday threw his weight behind the 
tumultuous drive for democratic change in the Arab world and presented his most 
detailed vision yet on the path to elusive Israeli-Palestinian peace.
 
Obama, in his much-anticipated "Arab spring" speech, hailed popular unrest 
sweeping the Middle East as a "historic opportunity" and said promoting reform 
was his administration's top priority for a region caught up in unprecedented 
upheaval.
 
He also ratcheted up pressure on Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, saying for the 
first time that he must stop a brutal crackdown or "get out of the way," and 
prodded U.S. allies Yemen and Bahrain as well for democratic transformation.
 
Obama's bid to reset ties with a skeptical Arab world was aimed at countering 
criticism over an uneven response to the region's uprisings that threaten both 
U.S. friends and foes and his failure to advance Israeli-Palestinian 
peacemaking.
 
His blunt language toward U.S. ally Israel about the need to find an end to its 
occupation of Arab land could complicate his talks on Friday with Israeli Prime 
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu while easing Arab doubts of his commitment to 
even-handed U.S. mediation.
 
"The dream of a Jewish and democratic state cannot be fulfilled with permanent 
occupation," Obama told an audience of U.S. and foreign diplomats at the State 
Department in Washington.
 
Most of Obama's speech focused on the unrest convulsing the Arab world, though 
he did not abandon his approach of balancing support for democratic aspirations 
with a desire to preserve longtime partnerships seen as crucial to fighting al 
Qaeda, containing Iran and securing vital oil supplies.
 
"The people have risen up to demand their basic human rights. Two leaders have 
stepped aside. More may follow," he said.
 
Seizing on a decades-old conflict long seen as a key catalyst of Middle East 
tensions, Obama went further than he has before in offering principles for 
resolving a stalemate between Israel and the Palestinians.
 
But he stopped short of presenting a formal U.S. peace plan -- an omission that 
could disappoint many in the Arab world—after having failed to make progress on 
the Israeli-Palestinian front since taking office in 2009.
 
Among the parameters he laid down was that any agreement creating a state of 
Palestine must be based on borders that existed before Israel captured the West 
Bank in a 1967 Arab-Israel war but "with mutually agreed swaps" of land.
 
Though not a U.S. policy shift in itself, Obama's insistence on that point—plus 
his criticism of continued Israeli "settlement activity"—sends a message to 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that that Washington expects the 
Jewish state to make concessions.
 
Obama will host Netanyahu, who has had strained relations with the U.S. 
president, at the White House on Friday, with the prospects for progress on 
peace moves considered dim.
 
Commitment to Israel
 
Obama also reaffirmed an unshakable commitment to Israel's security and 
condemned what he called "symbolic actions to isolate Israel at the United 
Nations," referring to the Palestinians plan to seek General Assembly 
recognition for statehood in September.
 
But he acknowledged that a new reconciliation deal between the Palestinian 
Authority and the Islamist group Hamas raised "legitimate questions" for 
Israel, which has condemned the accord as blocking any new peace talks.
 
"I recognize how hard this will be. Suspicion and hostility has been passed on 
for generations, and at times it has hardened," Obama said. "But I'm convinced 
that the majority of Israelis and Palestinians would rather look to the future 
than be trapped in the past."
 
Struggling to regain the initiative in a week of intense Middle East diplomacy, 
Obama seized an opportunity to reach out to the Arab world following the death 
of Osama bin Laden at the hands of U.S. Navy SEAL commandos.
 
"We have dealt al Qaeda a huge blow by killing its leader," Obama said. "Bin 
Laden was not a martyr, he was a mass murderer ... Bin Laden and his murderous 
vision won some adherents but even before his death al Qaeda was losing its 
struggle for relevance."
 
Seeking to back democratic reform with economic incentives, Obama announced 
billions of dollars in aid for Egypt and Tunisia to bolster their political 
transitions after revolts toppled autocratic leaders.
 
Obama's speech was his first major attempt to put the anti-government protests 
that have swept the Middle East in the context of U.S. national interests.
 
"Their voices tell us that change cannot be denied," Obama said.
 
He has scrambled to keep pace with still-unfolding events that have ousted 
long-time leaders in Egypt and Tunisia, threatened those in Yemen and Bahrain 
and engulfed Libya in civil war where the United States and other powers 
unleashed a bombing campaign.

 
Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20110519-obama-calls-mideast-plan-based-1967-borders-israel-palestinian-territories




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