Sunday, May 18, 2014

Liberman: US 'dead wrong' to blame Israeli settlements for collapse of Mideast peace talks

JPOST.COM STAFF

The foreign minister said that he will present his own alternative proposals for solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

liberman kerry
Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman meets with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Washington, April 9, 2014. Photo: US STATE DEPARTMENT
Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said on Saturday that while he acknowledges the special relationship between Israel and the United States, he is convinced that “the Americans have erred in the past regarding settlements, and they are erring big time today.”

Liberman’s remarks to Channel 2’s main political talk show “Meet the Press” came against the backdrop of more reports regarding Washington’s dissatisfaction with Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank. One report by a US-based online newspaper quoted a source as saying that Martin Indyk, the State Department’s envoy to the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, placed full responsibility for the failure of the negotiations on Israel.

“Israel and the United States are the truest of friends,” the foreign minister told Channel 2. “This cooperation has yielded tremendous results to this day. [But] the Americans have been wrong in the past, and they are dead wrong today because Jewish settlement activity has never been an obstacle to peace, neither in the agreement with Egypt or in the peace treaty with Jordan.”

“We need to do everything smartly, and not to allow ourselves to be provoked and lash out,” Liberman said. “You need to explain your position and be consistent. There’s no need to clash with the Americans, but you can’t capitulate either. Instead, what you could do is offer an alternative and persuade the Americans.”

The foreign minister said that he will present his own alternative proposals to Netanyahu and Secretary of State John Kerry. These proposals will presumably include his plan for “territorial swaps” which would see Israeli Arab townships currently within the boundaries of Israel proper offered to the Palestinians in exchange for Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria.
Read more here

No comments: