Thursday, September 11, 2008

Walles: Sides agree to negotiate J'lem


Israel and the Palestinians have agreed to negotiate on the issue of Jerusalem, as well as parts of the Dead Sea, US Consul-General Jacob Walles said in an interview published by the Palestinian daily, Al-Ayyam on Thursday. According to the interview, which was cited by Israel Radio, the consul-general said that negotiations would be based on the 1967 borders, with changes to those borders being possible should both sides agree.

Walles told the paper that the other core issues, including that of the refugees, were also expected to be discussed.

Last week, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert met with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak to discuss the progress of the negotiations with the Palestinian Authority.

Olmert has continued to say that he is committed to reaching a "shelf agreement" with the PA by the end of US President George W. Bush's term in January, but has acknowledged that the issue of Jerusalem may be delayed to a later date. Both Livni and Barak have indicated that the time element should not be a controlling factor.

One diplomatic official said that whether or not US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice planned another trip to the region would be a good indication of how much more the Bush administration was willing to push on the issue.


Rice was here last week for a 24-hour visit that yielded no dramatic breakthroughs, and the next key event is a meeting of the Middle East Quartet - the US, Russia, EU and UN - expected to take place on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly Meeting later this month in New York.

During his interview, Walles said although the goal of the Bush administration was to have a working agreement between the Palestinians and the Israelis by the end of the US president's term, should that deadline fail to be achieved, all progress which had been made up until that point would pass over to the next administration.

Herb Keinon contributed to this report

No comments: