Israel
on Thursday suspended U.S.-sponsored peace talks with the Palestinians
in response to President Mahmoud Abbas's unexpected unity pact with the
rival Islamist Hamas group. The negotiations had
appeared to be heading nowhere even before Wednesday's reconciliation
agreement between the Palestinian groups plunged them deeper into
crisis. The United States had been struggling to extend the talks beyond
an original April 29 deadline for a peace accord. "The government of Israel
will not hold negotiations with a Palestinian government that is backed
by Hamas, a terror organization that calls for Israel's destruction,"
an official statement said after a six-hour meeting of the security
cabinet. Asked to clarify
whether that meant the talks were now frozen or would be called off only
after a unity government was formed, a senior Israeli official said:
"They are currently suspended." In
Washington, a U.S. official said the United States would have to
reconsider its assistance to Abbas's aid-dependent Palestinian Authority
if the Western-backed leader and Hamas formed a government. U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry spoke by telephone with Abbas on Thursday
and expressed his disappointment at the reconciliation announcement. Kerry
stressed that any Palestinian government must abide by the principles
of nonviolence, recognition of the state of Israel, and acceptance of
previous agreements and obligations, State Department spokeswoman Jen
Psaki said. Kerry, who has shuttled repeatedly to the Middle East to push peace efforts, said he was not giving up hope. "There's always a way forward, but the leaders have to make the compromises necessary to do that," he told reporters. "We
will never give up our hope or our commitment for the possibilities of
peace. We believe it is the only way to go. But right now, obviously,
it's at a very difficult point and the leaders themselves have to make
decisions. It's up to them." U.N.
Middle East envoy Robert Serry offered support for the Palestinian
agreement after meeting Abbas on Thursday, saying in a statement it was
"the only way to reunite the West Bank and Gaza under one legitimate
Palestinian Authority". The
deal envisions a unity government within five weeks and elections six
months later. Palestinian divisions widened after Hamas, which won the
last general ballot in 2006, seized the Gaza Strip from forces loyal to
Abbas in 2007. 'DOOR WAS NOT CLOSED' In
an interview with MSNBC after the security cabinet meeting, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to leave open a window for
future talks if Abbas reversed course or reconciliation with Hamas, seen
by the West as a terrorist group, fell through. "I
hope (Abbas) changes his mind," Netanyahu said. "I will be there in the
future if we have a partner that is committed to peace. Right now we
have a partner that has just joined another partner committed to our
destruction. No-go." Israeli
chief negotiator Tzipi Livni said she hoped a way could be found to
return to talks. "The door was not closed today," she told Israel's
Channel 2 television. Wasel
Abu Yousef, a top Palestine Liberation Organization official, rejected
what he called "Israeli and American threats" and said a unity
government would be made up of technocrats. But Netanyahu dismissed any notion that Hamas would not be the real power behind the bureaucrats. The
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, championed by Kerry and aimed at
ending decades of conflict and creating a Palestinian state in the
occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, began in July amid strong public
skepticism in Israel and the Palestinian territories. The
two sides were also at odds over Israeli settlement construction in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem, activity most countries deem illegal in
areas captured in the 1967 Middle East war, and over Abbas's refusal to
accept Netanyahu's demand he recognize Israel as a Jewish state. For
Netanyahu, Abbas's approach to Hamas offered an opportunity to withdraw
from the negotiations with a reduced risk of a rift with the United
States, Israel's main ally, which also refuses to deal with the Islamist
militant group. A
suspension of the talks, while casting blame on the Palestinian
reconciliation venture, is also likely to calm far-right allies in
Netanyahu's governing coalition who oppose the creation of a Palestinian
state and territorial compromise. For
Abbas, whose official mandate as president expired five years ago, an
alliance with Hamas leading to a new election potentially strengthening
his political legitimacy could outweigh the prospect of any
international backlash. Palestinians
have also been angered by Israel's announcement during the negotiations
of thousands of new settler housing units and what they say was its
failure to tackle substantive issues such as the borders of a future
state. SANCTIONS The
next immediate steps stemming from the collapse of the talks seemed
likely to be Israeli sanctions against the Palestinian Authority, which
exercises limited self-rule in the West Bank. "The sanctions will be measured. We will not cause the Palestinian Authority to collapse," Livni said on television. Palestinian
leaders have already made clear they would seek to further their bid
for nationhood via unilateral moves to join various international bodies
and United Nations agencies. The
biggest threat for Israel could come in the shape of the International
Criminal Court, with the Palestinians confident they could prosecute
Israel there for alleged war crimes tied to the occupation of lands
seized in 1967. "Israel
will respond to unilateral Palestinian action with a series of
measures," said the Israeli statement issued after the security cabinet
meeting, without going into detail. The
talks had moved close to a breakdown this month when Israel refused to
carry out the last of four waves of prisoner releases, demanding that
Palestinians first commit to negotiating after the April deadline. Abbas
responded by signing 15 international treaties, including the Geneva
Conventions on the conduct of war and occupations. Israel condemned the
move as a unilateral step towards statehood. Asked
whether the reconciliation with Hamas would incur promised U.S.
sanctions, PLO Deputy Secretary Yasser Abed Rabo told Palestinian radio
it was too soon to penalize a government that had yet to be formed. "There's
no need for the Americans to get ahead of themselves over this. What
happened in Gaza in the last two days is just a first step which we
welcome and want to reinforce," he said. "But
this step shouldn't be exaggerated, that an agreement for
reconciliation has been completely reached... We need to watch the
behavior of Hamas on many details during the coming days and weeks on
forming a government and other things."
Israel suspends peace talks after Palestinian unity bid
Reuters
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