Post by Paddy by Grace on Apr 6, 2009 10:49:21 GMT -7
www.aljazeerah.info/News/2009/April/3%20n/White%20House,%20Obama%20backs%20Arab%20Peace%20Initiative.htm
Date: 03 / 04 / 2009 Time: 16:17
Bethlehem - Ma'an -
US President Barack Obama reiterated his support for the Saudi-backed Arab Peace Initiative in a meeting with the country's king on Thursday night, the White House said in a statement.
The Arab Peace Initiative offers Israel full recognition by every Arab country if it withdraws from territories occupied in 1967, including East Jerusalem, and agrees to a just settlement for refugees displaced from Palestine in 1948.
Obama and Saudi King Abdullah "reaffirmed the long-standing, strong relationship between the two countries," according to the statement. "They discussed international cooperation regarding the global economy, regional political and security issues, and cooperation against terrorism."
Meanwhile, US State Department spokesperson Robert Wood insisted the US would push for the establishment of a Palestinian state, saying, "We're going to be working hard to see what we can do to move the process forward. But we're under no illusions. It's not going to be easy."
Wood went on to say that the US supports a two-state solution "because we believe it's in the best interests of all the parties in the region." "We have to engage constantly and remind the parties of their obligations and to try to set up a framework, a process for getting us toward that goal of a two-state solution," Wood added.
The State Department spokesperson also said that Israel's new foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, "is well aware" of the US position on the matter.
But on Wednesday, Lieberman announced that "there is one document that obligates us - and that's not the Annapolis conference; it has no validity." "We will never agree to jump over all the clauses and go to the last one, which is negotiations over a final status agreement," Lieberman said.
The new US special envoy to the Middle East, former Senator George Mitchell, is expected to visit Israel and Palestine soon, the State Department spokesperson said. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is also expected to visit Washington, possibly as early as next month, according to Reuters.
Date: 03 / 04 / 2009 Time: 16:17
Bethlehem - Ma'an -
US President Barack Obama reiterated his support for the Saudi-backed Arab Peace Initiative in a meeting with the country's king on Thursday night, the White House said in a statement.
The Arab Peace Initiative offers Israel full recognition by every Arab country if it withdraws from territories occupied in 1967, including East Jerusalem, and agrees to a just settlement for refugees displaced from Palestine in 1948.
Obama and Saudi King Abdullah "reaffirmed the long-standing, strong relationship between the two countries," according to the statement. "They discussed international cooperation regarding the global economy, regional political and security issues, and cooperation against terrorism."
Meanwhile, US State Department spokesperson Robert Wood insisted the US would push for the establishment of a Palestinian state, saying, "We're going to be working hard to see what we can do to move the process forward. But we're under no illusions. It's not going to be easy."
Wood went on to say that the US supports a two-state solution "because we believe it's in the best interests of all the parties in the region." "We have to engage constantly and remind the parties of their obligations and to try to set up a framework, a process for getting us toward that goal of a two-state solution," Wood added.
The State Department spokesperson also said that Israel's new foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, "is well aware" of the US position on the matter.
But on Wednesday, Lieberman announced that "there is one document that obligates us - and that's not the Annapolis conference; it has no validity." "We will never agree to jump over all the clauses and go to the last one, which is negotiations over a final status agreement," Lieberman said.
The new US special envoy to the Middle East, former Senator George Mitchell, is expected to visit Israel and Palestine soon, the State Department spokesperson said. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is also expected to visit Washington, possibly as early as next month, according to Reuters.