CNN.com 

Obama rejects controversy over his stance on Middle East peace talks

Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama said Sunday that any controversy 
over his remarks last week that Israel-Palestinian negotiations should start 
from pre-1967 borders and include land swaps was "not based in substance."

In his first speech as president to the main American-Israeli advocacy group, 
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), Obama sought to reassure 
the vital U.S. Jewish lobby of his administration's commitment to Israel's 
security while also making clear his desire to kick-start the stalled 
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks at a time when the entire Middle East landscape 
is changing amid the so-called Arab Spring demonstrations.

Obama acknowledged that he expected some controversy from his call last 
Thursday for negotiations to be based on border demarcations from before the 
six-day war of 1967, in which Israel seized the West Bank, Gaza Strip and other 
territory.

However, he said, his policy on the border issue "means that the parties 
themselves -- Israelis and Palestinians -- will negotiate a border that is 
different than the one that existed on June 4, 1967," the eve of the war. Those 
negotiations will involve "mutually agreed-upon" land swaps to deal with 
changing conditions of recent decades, he said.

"That's what mutually agreed-upon swaps means. It is a well-known formula to 
all who have worked on this issue for a generation," Obama said to applause. 
"It allows the parties themselves to account for the changes that have taken 
place over the last 44 years," including the new demographic realities on the 
ground and the needs of both sides.

His proposal contained "nothing particularly original," he said, adding that 
"this basic framework for negotiations has long been the basis for discussions 
among the parties, including previous U.S. administrations."

"If there is a controversy, then, it's not based in substance," Obama said.

The Thursday remarks drew a chilly response from Israeli Prime Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu, who used a joint appearance with Obama on Friday to reject 
any possibility that Israel could return to its pre-1967 borders. Netanyahu 
said such borders would be "indefensible" and noted that major Israeli 
population centers now lie outside them.

On Sunday, a statement by Netanyahu responding to Obama's AIPAC speech was more 
conciliatory, saying: "I share the president's will to promote peace and I 
value his current and past efforts to achieve this goal."

"I am determined to act together with President Obama in order to find ways to 
resume the negotiations for peace," Netanyahu's statement said. "Peace is a 
vital need for all of us."

Maen Areikat, the chief Palestinian representative to the United States, told 
CNN on Sunday that his Palestine Liberation Organization also welcomed the U.S. 
support for restarting the peace talks.

At the same time, Areikat called for concrete steps by Israel that showed "they 
are genuine and sincere about the ending the conflict with us," instead of what 
he labeled "nationalist, ideological" slogans and steps such as continuing to 
expand housing settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

In his speech Sunday, Obama repeated a line from Thursday that the "status quo" 
in the Israel-Palestinian conflict is unsustainable. He listed a series of 
reasons why conditions on the ground dictated the need for a revitalized peace 
effort now.

"First, the number of Palestinians living west of the Jordan River is growing 
rapidly and fundamentally reshaping the demographic realities of both Israel 
and the Palestinian Territories," Obama said. "This will make it harder and 
harder -- without a peace deal -- to maintain Israel as both a Jewish state and 
a democratic state."

He also cited the increasing difficulty for Israel to defend itself against 
regional enemies, and the "new generation" of Arabs reshaping the entire region 
through the protest movement that already has toppled governments in Tunisia 
and Egypt.

"A just and lasting peace can no longer be forged with one or two Arab leaders. 
Going forward, millions of Arab citizens have to see that peace is possible for 
that peace to be sustained," Obama said, adding that a growing regional and 
international impatience with the Israel-Palestinian peace process is leading 
some to look for other options, such as a U.N. resolution in September to 
recognize an independent Palestinian state.

Even though such a U.N. General Assembly resolution would be non-binding, Obama 
told the AIPAC meeting that the United States would oppose any effort to 
isolate Israel in international forums.

He also repeated U.S. criticism of Hamas, the Palestinian group that governs 
the Gaza Strip and is considered a terrorist organization by Washington.

Hamas and the other main Palestinian group, the Fatah party of Mahmoud Abbas 
that heads the governing authority in the West Bank, agreed on May 4 to work 
together to set up unifying elections in May 2012.

Areikat said that under the agreement, Fatah would continue to negotiate on 
behalf of the Palestinians until they can elect their own leaders and 
representatives next year.

"Hopefully, come May 2012, the Palestinian people will be able to choose those 
people who are committed to negotiating a peaceful resolution with Israel," 
Areikat said, conceding that Hamas would be a voice in any Palestinian unity 
government that emerges from next year's vote.

Obama said Israel cannot be expected to negotiate with Hamas until it renounces 
violence and recognizes Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state. The audience 
applauded loudly when Obama called for Hamas to release Gilad Shalit, an 
Israeli soldier captured five years ago.

In response, Hamas Spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri told CNN that the U.S. government 
has "a clear preference for Israel" at the expense of freedom for the 
Palestinian people and their right to establish a sovereign state.

In the United States, political opponents criticized Obama for what they 
described as harming Israel's negotiating position with the Palestinians.

Republican presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich labeled the Obama policy a 
"disaster" and "extraordinarily dangerous" in an appearance Sunday on the CBS 
program "Face the Nation."

"A president who can't control his own border probably shouldn't lecture Israel 
about their border," Gingrich said.

While a few boos and groans were heard in the AIPAC crowd when Obama raised the 
border issue Sunday, he received consistent applause throughout the speech and 
a vigorous standing ovation at the end.

In Israel, about 150 right-wing activists protested Sunday against Obama's 
policy in front of the American Embassy in Tel Aviv, with some bearing slogans 
that declared: "Obama, Israelis are not willing to commit suicide."
 
 
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